Welcome to the March 11, 2013 installment of All Pulp’s New Pulp Best Seller List, originally created by Barry Reese! Before we get to what you’re all waiting for, here are the rules by which this little list comes together.
1) This list only tracks sales through AMAZON. It does not keep track of sales through Barnes and Noble, face-to-face or anything else!
2) This list only tracks PRINT sales. Exactly how Amazon calculates these thingsis mostly a trade secret and they vary wildly from day to day. If we checked this tomorrow, the list could be very different. This list reflects salesranks as of Monday morning March 11, 2013.
3)In order to keep the focus on new releases, eligible works must have been published within the last three months. So, since this list is being done on March 11, 2013, we are only looking at books published since December 11, 2012. Please keep that in mind before complaining that Title X is not listed. Also, keep in mind that for the most part, we are tracking sales from smaller and mid level press publishers who actively publish New Pulp material. We won’t generally track sales from Simon and Schuster or places like that — they have the New York Times Bestseller List for that. If one of the major publishers starts doing The Shadow or something, we’ll track that, but some publishers will not be listed here in order to keep the focus on the publishers activelyworking to produce and promote New Pulp.
4) Like the name suggests, we’re tracking “New” pulp —not sales rankings for reprints of classic material. In order for something to qualify for this list, it has to be at least 50% new material that has not been printed in bookform before.
5)We are human. If you are aware of a title that should be listed below (keeping in mind all the rules above), please let us know and we will make sure to remedy the situation.
6) This information is garnered mostly from All Pulp, New Pulp, the Pulp Factory mailing list and a few other sites. If you think we might miss yourrelease, let us know in advance — drop All Pulp a line and tell us when it’s being released.
Without further ado, here’s the completely and totally unofficial New Pulp bestseller list as of right now (title, then publisher, then release date, then sales rank):
1)Doc Savage: Skull Island by Will Murray (Altus Press, February 26, 2013) – 9,255
2)Sherlock Holmes and the Texas Adventure by Dicky Neely (MX Publishing, December 14, 2012) – 55,070
3)The Detective, The Woman, and the Winking Tree by Amy Thomas (MX Publishing, January 22, 2013) – 78,832
4)Monster Earth by Various (Mechanoid Press, January 18, 2013) -82,461
5)Cadaver Island by Kevin Rodgers (Pro Se Productions, March 6, 2013) – 116,913
6)Fourteen Western Stories by Lloyd Fonvielle (Lloyd Fonvielle, January 23, 2013) – 249,402
7)Prohibition by Terrence McCauley (Airship 27 Productions, December 15, 2012) 283,483
8)Finn’s Golem by Gregg Taylor (Autogyro, January 10, 2013) – 298,810
9) Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective, Volume 4 by Various (Airship 27, January 19, 2012) – 450,526
10) The City of Smoke and Mirrors by Nick C. Piers (Pro Se Productions, February 22, 2013) 499,083
Will Murray’s revival of The Man of Bronze has returned to the top of the list (with the help of a big primate type), a position he and Altus Press will most likely maintain for the book’s entire time of eligibility for the list. As a character, Sherlock Holmes still has a strong showing on the list, Dicky Neely’s ‘Texas Adventure’ making a huge reentry in its last week. Another title on its way out this week, Airship 27’s ‘Prohibition’ by Terrence McCauley also holds its own, a consistent performer on the list. Pro Se makes a top five entry with the debut of Kevin Rodger’s ‘Cadaver Island’, a futuristic horror thriller.
As for publishers this week, Pro Se Productions, Airship 27, and MX Publishing lead the way with two titles each, while Altus Press, Mechanoid Press, Lloyd Fonvielle, and Autogyro each have one title inthe Top Ten. It’s Monday, folks! Enjoy this list with your weekly grain of salt!
A two-day KINDLE giveaway for March 17 & 18 of the Western ebook, RANCHO DIABLO: SHOOTERâÂÂS CROSS. àhas been set up. àThe book is the first in a series created and written by Bill Crider, James Reasoner, and Mel Odom under the name COLBY JACKSON.
àArmy Scout Sam Blaylock wasnâÂÂt looking for trouble when he rode into ShooterâÂÂs Cross, a small Texas town with a colorful history, but he found trouble in spades.àAfter being nearly killed in an ambush, Sam discovers a patch of land where he thinks he can settle his family, put down roots, and build a future.àUnfortunately, that land has poisoned water and rumors of ghosts.àSamâÂÂs figured a way to fix the water problem, and heâÂÂs never been a big believer in ghosts, but he hadnâÂÂt planned on running up against newspaperman Mitchell McCarthy, whoâÂÂs willing to kill to take Rancho Diablo now that Sam has turned the land into a profitable enterprise.
Sam enlists the aid of two friends from the army â fast talking Duane Beatty and gunhawk and fellow scout Mike Tucker â and digs in tighter than a tick to fight back.
COLBY JACKSON IS:àBill Crider, James Reasoner, and Mel Odom â cumulatively the authors of HUNDREDS of books including Westerns, mysteries, suspense stories, horror stories, and anything else that catches their fancy.àCheck them out atwww.billcrider.blogspot.com,àwww.jamesreasoner.blogspot.com, andwww.melodom.blogspot.com.
On his blog last week, Jerry Ordway wrote bravely and feelingly about being a pro in comics when your age is over 50. Hereâs a man who has been a comic book star of long standing and now finds it hard to get any work. His skill, ability, and desire havenât diminished; heâs just older (and more experienced) than he was back then. He had an exclusive contract with DC and, in its final year, the company treated him deplorably, not giving him any work but not letting him get any work elsewhere.
I completely sympathize with him and can echo many of his statements. Is there ageism in comics? Demonstrably, at least for talent. On The Other Hand⦠some of the top editors at both Marvel and DC are around our ages. If the theory is that the talent needs to be younger in order to âgetâ or appeal to the younger reader, why are the editors immune? I sometimes feel like Iâm in the âBring Out Your Deadâ segment from <a href=”
Monty Python And The Holy Grail.
Me to editor: âIâm feeling better!â
Editor to me: âYouâre not fooling anyone, you know!â
I canât claim that itâs universal. Dark Horse has been very good in giving me work and, in turn, I think Iâve given them good work in return. But I donât seem to get any replies to e-mails that I send to the Big Two. OTOH, there are writers my age (or thereabouts) who do get work. Often theyâre good friends with the given editor or Editor-In-Chief. I canât complain about that, either; itâs worked in my favor in the past and can still work for me. Randy Stradley over at Dark Horse has been a friend as well as an editor and I get work from him.
Editors are also under far more pressure these days to produce higher sales. I and others used to nervously kid that, even with companies that were large conglomerates, comics were relatively free to do what they wanted because the money their sales brought in were chump change to Corporate Masters. Thatâs changed; superhero movies and games and TV shows are all big business and rake in tons of money and with that comes greater corporate oversight. With that comes the desire for more sales (How do you determine if youâre successful in corporate America? If you sell more of whatever you make than you did before and/or more than the competition). With that comes other problems.
The comic book market has a finite number of buyers with a finite amount of money to spend on the product. Digital sales might change that and expand the market base but I donât know if the figures are in on that yet. So â how do you increase sales in a finite market?
One of the truisms of Hollywood is that âNobody Knows Nuthinâ.â Often, the folks in charge donât really know what sells or why. Oh, they have theories but most often they look at whatâs sold and try to do more of that or see who sells and try to hire them. You might think, if that held true in comics as well, that guys like Jerry Ordway would get more work.
Ah, but in comics, they believe the fans have short attention spans and what works in ânew.â Not new characters or concepts but new variations on what you have, i.e. Superman minus red swimming trunks on his costume. Thatâs new, right?
Iâm not dissing the notion. Fans, especially male fans, get bored after a few issues. They want something they havenât seen before. Thatâs where folks like Jerry and myself run into problems; itâs assumed by editors and perhaps by fans that theyâve seen all we have to offer. Doing something well is not the point; giving the fans something new with which to get excited is the point.
OTOH, the fan base is the fan base. Itâs getting older as well and, from what Iâve seen, itâs not growing. Isnât it reasonable to assume that they would want to see an old favorite like Jerry Ordway? The object of the game is to get the reader to part with their hard earned money to buy a given book; Jerryâs done that. Combine him with a writer like Gail Simone or Geoff Johns and you think that wouldnât sell? He knows how to do the work and how to please the fans.
Part of the problem also is, to get more sales, you need either a) for the fans to have more disposable income to spend on comics and/or b) bring in more new readers, preferably younger readers. On the latter, Iâm not so sure that ship hasnât sailed. The time to bring in new readers is about when theyâre ten. Comics didnât do that; they didnât produce kid friendly comics (they still donât) and would-be readers got lost to the video game market.
And donât get me started on how theyâve ignored female readers. Thatâs a column right there and Mindy and Martha write about more knowledgably than I. That doesnât mean I wonât add my two cents as well at some point.
In fact, this whole topic needs everyoneâs two cents. I picked this topic up because I think it needs to be pursued. If you want folks like Jerry (or, yes, me) to get more work, say so in letters, in blogs, in other columns. If you think that comics are stories, not just product, and who does them are not just widgets, say something. If the conversation dies, if no one cares, then thereâs no reason for the companies to care, either.
Tommy Hancock, Editor in Chief of Pro Se Productions and Pulp Ark Coordinator, announces that voting has closed for the open nomination 2013 Pulp Ark Awards. The Winners of the 2013 Pulp Ark Awards are-
Best Novel-
Die Glocke by Barry Reese in The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2: Die Glocke published by Pro Se Productions
Best Novella-
The Lone Ranger: Vendetta by Howard Hopkins published by Moonstone Books
Best Collection/Anthology-
The Green Hornet: Still at Large by Various published by Moonstone Books
Best Short Story-
Lucky by Tommy Hancock features in Night Beat: Night Stories published by Radio Archives
Best Cover-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Interior Art-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Pulp Revival-
The Wild Adventures of Doc Savage by Will Murray published by Altus Press
Best New Pulp Character-
Rick Ruby created by Bobby Nash and Sean Taylor as features in The Ruby Files Volume 1 Published by Airship 27 Productions
Best Pulp Comic-
The Shadow published by Dynamite Comics
Best Pulp Magazine-
Pro Se Presents published by Pro Se Productions
Best Author-
Bobby Nash
Best New Author-
Jim Beard
“The voting this year,” Hancock noted, “was exciting since it involved so many different creators, works and publishers. Six different publishers are represented in the final tally, with both the Best Author and Best New Author winners being writers for various publishers in 2012.”
The Pulp Ark Lifetime Achievement Award, according to Hancock, is still being determined by the select committee chosen to give the honor to an individual who has done considerable work in furthering Pulp in his/her lifetime.
The awards, 8X10 engraved wooden plaques, will be awarded at Pulp Ark 2013 in Springdale Arkansas , the evening of Saturday, April 27, 2013. Hancock stated that all winners as well as nominees are encouraged to attend, but any winners who could not would receive their awards by mail. Pulp Ark thanks all who nominated, all who voted, and congratulations to all the nominees and especially to the winners of the Pulp Ark 2013 Awards!
For any questions concerning Pulp Ark, contact Hancock at proseproductions@earthlink.net or follow Pulp Ark news at www.pulpark.blogspot.com
Tommy Hancock, Editor in Chief of Pro Se Productions and Pulp Ark Coordinator, announces that voting has closed for the open nomination 2013 Pulp Ark Awards. The Winners of the 2013 Pulp Ark Awards are-
Best Novel-
Die Glocke by Barry Reese in The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2: Die Glocke published by Pro Se Productions
Best Novella-
The Lone Ranger: Vendetta by Howard Hopkins published by Moonstone Books
Best Collection/Anthology-
The Green Hornet: Still at Large by Various published by Moonstone Books
Best Short Story-
Lucky by Tommy Hancock features in Night Beat: Night Stories published by Radio Archives
Best Cover-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Interior Art-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Pulp Revival-
The Wild Adventures of Doc Savage by Will Murray published by Altus Press
Best New Pulp Character-
Rick Ruby created by Bobby Nash and Sean Taylor as features in The Ruby Files Volume 1 Published by Airship 27 Productions
Best Pulp Comic-
The Shadow published by Dynamite Comics
Best Pulp Magazine-
Pro Se Presents published by Pro Se Productions
Best Author-
Bobby Nash
Best New Author-
Jim Beard
“The voting this year,” Hancock noted, “was exciting since it involved so many different creators, works and publishers. Six different publishers are represented in the final tally, with both the Best Author and Best New Author winners being writers for various publishers in 2012.”
The Pulp Ark Lifetime Achievement Award, according to Hancock, is still being determined by the select committee chosen to give the honor to an individual who has done considerable work in furthering Pulp in his/her lifetime.
The awards, 8X10 engraved wooden plaques, will be awarded at Pulp Ark 2013 in Springdale Arkansas , the evening of Saturday, April 27, 2013. Hancock stated that all winners as well as nominees are encouraged to attend, but any winners who could not would receive their awards by mail. Pulp Ark thanks all who nominated, all who voted, and congratulations to all the nominees and especially to the winners of the Pulp Ark 2013 Awards!
For any questions concerning Pulp Ark, contact Hancock at proseproductions@earthlink.net or follow Pulp Ark news at www.pulpark.blogspot.com
Tommy Hancock, Editor in Chief of Pro Se Productions and Pulp Ark Coordinator, announces that voting has closed for theÃÂ open nomination 2013 Pulp Ark Awards. ÃÂ ÃÂ The Winners of the 2013 Pulp Ark Awards are-
Best Novel-
Die Glocke by Barry Reese in The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2: Die Glocke published by Pro Se Productions
Best Novella-
The Lone Ranger: Vendetta by Howard Hopkins published by Moonstone Books
Best Collection/Anthology-
The Green Hornet: Still at Large by Various, edited by Joe Gentile, Win Scott Eckert, and Matthew Baugh, published by Moonstone Books
Best Short Story-
Lucky by Tommy Hancock features in Night Beat: Night Stories published by Radio Archives
Best Cover-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Interior Art-
The Adventures of Lazarus Gray Volume 2 by George Sellas published by Pro Se Productions
Best Pulp Revival-
The Wild Adventures of Doc Savage by Will Murray published by Altus Press
Best New Pulp Character-
Rick Ruby created by Bobby Nash and Sean Taylor as features in The Ruby Files Volume 1 Published by Airship 27 Productions
Best Pulp Comic-
The Shadow published by Dynamite Comics
Best Pulp Magazine-
Pro Se Presents published by Pro Se Productions
Best Author-
Bobby Nash
Best New Author-
Jim Beard
âÂÂThe voting this year,â Hancock noted, âÂÂwas exciting since it involved so many different creators, works and publishers.àSix different publishers are represented in the final tally, with both the Best Author and Best New Author winners being writers for various publishers in 2012.âÂÂ
The Pulp Ark Lifetime Achievement Award, according to Hancock, is still being determined by the select committee chosen to give the honor to an individual who has done considerable work in furthering Pulp in his/her lifetime.
The awards, 8X10 engraved wooden plaques, will be awarded at ÃÂ Pulp Ark 2013 in Springdale Arkansas , the evening of Saturday, April 27, 2013. Hancock stated that all winners as well as nominees are encouraged to attend, but any winners who could not would receive their awards by mail. Pulp Ark thanks all who nominated, all who voted, and congratulations to all thenominees and especially to the winners of the Pulp Ark 2013 Awards!
For any questions concerning Pulp Ark, contact Hancock atÃÂ proseproductions@earthlink.netÃÂ or follow Pulp Ark news at www.pulpark.blogspot.com
Journey to the far corners of your imagination with Willow, for the first time ever on stunning Blu-ray! Written and produced by George Lucas and directed by Ron Howard, the film tells a timeless fantasy tale in which heroes come in all sizes…and adventure is the greatest magic of all. In celebration of its 25th anniversary, the unforgettable classic has been fully digitally restored and debuts on Blu-ray and DVD Combo Pack March 12, 2013 from Lucasfilm Ltd. and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.
The Willow Blu-ray and DVD include a dazzling array of extras with never-before-seen exclusive content such as deleted scenes with remarks from Ron Howard, a personal video diary of Warwick Davis, matte paintings and much more. In addition, look out for Ron Howardâs new introduction for the original 1988 featurette âThe Making of an Adventure,â as well as special effect legend Dennis Murenâs new intro to his piece, âFrom Morf to Morphing: The Dawn of Digital Filmmaking.â
Special Features include:
NEW â Willow: Deleted Scenes with Ron Howard
NEW â Willow: An Unlikely Hero â Personal Video Diary of Warwick Davis
The Making of an Adventure with an all new introduction from Ron Howard
From Morf to Morphing with an all new introduction from Dennis Muren
Matte Paintings
Easter Egg
Our friends at Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment have given us two copies to giveaway. Entries must be received no later than 11:59 p.m. Wednesday, March 13. The decision of ComicMix is final. In order to win your very own copy of Willow on Blu-ray Combo Pack, simply answer the following question:
What did Ron Howard direct immediately after Willow?
A fractured, ruined world where forgotten, legendary creatures live and thrive in towering mountains, magical forests, and barren deserts. Angelique Bosc and her allies will traverse harsh, nightmarish landscapes to discover the secrets of the past, stabilize events in the present day, and unlock the ÃÂ mysteriesÃÂ of the future as they journey to CADAVER ISLAND! Pro Se Productions Proudly Presents CADAVER ISLAND, the debut novel from Author Kevin Rodgers!
In the year 2212, long after the world has been reshaped by seismic cataclysms and polar shifts, Princess Angelique Bosc recovers from a terrible Hovercraft accident, which left her injured and near death. Her friend and physician, Dr. Laurent Stine, used his skills as a robotics engineer to replace her damaged organs with android components. Angelique realizes that her mechanical heart will require a fresh battery pack within 48 hours. However, a loathed and exiled warlock, Xavier Thames, steals all of the battery packs and transports them to his castle, Thames Keep, in order to build a time machine. Angelique, Dr. Stine, and their allies are forced to embark on a long, perilous trek to Thames Keep located on Cadaver Island. Can they reach Thames Keep and replace Angelique’s battery pack before she goes into cardiac arrest?
“Kevin Rodgers,” stated Tommy Hancock, Partner in and Editor in Chief of Pro Se Productions, “is one of the strongest new voices in Genre Fiction. ÃÂ Able to write well in any genre, Kevin has excelled at the sort of cross genre mash up type stories that today’s readers enjoy. ÃÂ One of our more prolific contributors to Pro Se Presents, our magazine, Kevin can chill, thrill, and excite readers as well as any author. ÃÂ Pro Se is more than proud to be publishing not only Kevin’s debut novel, but the first in a trilogy guaranteed to Cadaver Island is the first installment of a trilogy by Author Kevin Rodgers, replete with all the horror, action, and adventure Kevin’s work is known for.”
Featuring stunning artwork by Ariadne Soares of Fitztown andÃÂ mindblowingÃÂ design and format by Sean Ali, Cadaver Island is a nonstop futuristic horror thriller guaranteed to chill and amaze! From Pro Se Productions, a leader in Genre and New Pulp Fiction! CADAVER ISLAND is now available at AmazonÃÂ HEREÃÂ and via Pro Se’s CreateSpaceÃÂ eStoreÃÂ atÃÂ https://www.createspace.com/4198141 for $15.00. ÃÂ And coming soon in Ebook for your Kindle, Nook, and other devices for only $2.99!
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