On the comic spoiler of the day
I’m going to be writing a longer rant about the subject, but for now I just want to remind you what we got the last time this happened.
<obvious spoiler alert> (more…)
I’m going to be writing a longer rant about the subject, but for now I just want to remind you what we got the last time this happened.
<obvious spoiler alert> (more…)
ALL PULP is glad to introduce any of you who don’t know already to one of the best publishing houses for books on pop culture icons and various mediums, including old time radio ,movies, tv, and more. Bear Manor Media has been producing top notch publications for years and is a little known resource for research and inspiration for pulp writers and creators! Many of the subjects they address, primarily actual entertainers and movers and shakers, were at the heyday during the period many pulp writers choose to write in. These works also give great insight into not only what people did for entertainment, but they provide glimpses into what life was like in various eras, always good stuff for a Pulp writer to have on hand. Bear Manor Media will be sending press releases to ALL PULP and reviews and interviews will be forthcoming. To welcome Bear Manor to ALL PULP, there will be several snippets today about books already in their catalogue…If interested in any of them just make your way to http://www.bearmanormedia.com/ and order today! There’s a ton to choose from…like this jewel here-
WHAT IF THEY LIVED?
They were the big screen royalty that left us too soon – the brilliantly talented icons whose premature deaths continue to fill the hearts of movie lovers with rue and pain. From Robert Harron and Rudolph Valentino of the silent era to Heath Ledger and Natasha Richardson of today’s cinema, the history of movies is filled with too many legends and rising stars who died before fulfilling their career destinies.
But what would have happened if fate had been kinder? What could have been the careers of Jean Harlow, James Dean, Marilyn Monroe, Dorothy Dandridge, Bruce Lee, John Belushi, River Phoenix, Chris Farley, and many other screen luminaries who died too soon?
What if They Lived? offers a speculative trajectory for the careers that the late, great stars never had. Piecing together pending film projects, industry trends and wider shifts in popular culture, What if They Lived? considers what could have happened to the beloved movie actors who never had a chance to enjoy a long and fruitful professional output.
About the Authors
Phil Hall is the author of four books, including Independent Film Distribution (2006) and The History of Independent Cinema (2009). He is a contributing editor for Film Threat and his writing has appeared in the New York Times, Wired Magazine and American Movie Classics Magazine. He is a member of the Governing Committee of the Online Film Critics Society.
Rory Leighton Aronsky has written movie reviews since early 1999, first for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, in the Teentime pages of their weekend Showtime section, then The Signal newspaper in the Santa Clarita Valley in Los Angeles County, and for the online sources Film Threat and Screen It. He has been a member of the Online Film Critics Society, and served for three years on its Governing Committee. This is his first book.
THIS WEEK ON MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION-
Moonstone Books and ALL PULP are proud to present a jungle action adventure tale from MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION featuring Lee Falk’s THE PHANTOM! This is another slam bam tale by Mike Bullock, longtime writer of THE PHANTOM for Moonstone and current writer of BLACK BAT, SAVAGE BEAUTY, and creator and writer of DEATH ANGEL! This tale can be found in the THE PHANTOM: GENERATIONS trade paperback available from Moonstone at http://www.moonstonebooks.com/
I sat there and gazed upward into the baleful eye of the full moon, wondering how I would get out of this one. The beast had gotten the best of me, and only through divine intervention was I able to escape a quick and final death at his claws. I had struck a lucky blow, temporarily blinding the monster, but he would not let be for long.
Yet, even though I still drew breath, each ragged gasp brought with it a finality. My son would soon don this mask, as I had the day after my Father’s passing lo those many years ago.
The thought of my son brought a smile to my lips. To see how he’d grown into a great man before my eyes was a wondrous blessing. I prayed that he would not be as grief stricken as I had been on that dark day.
My reverie was soon shattered, as the roar of the beast shook the very earth upon which I sat.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
My heartbeat quickened at that primal sound. It echoed deep within my very being, touching on something inside that answered with a voice lesser men might cultivate into fear. The roar spoke volumes, letting all who heard it know that the King of Beasts was angered- woe unto those who crossed his path.
There had been a time when these majestic creatures lived alone, atop the food chain. Yet, as always, man had found a way to usurp that throne, employing tools, weapons and blood. With that thought in mind, my one good hand clutched at my Father’s sword, knowing that it was all that stood between me and the slathering death that sought me out that night.
I’d heard the phrase ‘deafening silence’ whilst on a trip to Europe many years ago. At the time, I found those words puzzling, as are many things parroted by ‘civilized’ men who have not the intellectual grasp on the words they bandy about, simply reciting them as if it gives their station in life merit and meaning. Such men would not last a day in the Deep Woods.
However, on that night the silence in the jungle was deafening. Neither insect, nor bird, nor frog, nor babbling brook seemed to issue forth with any audible evidence of their existence. It was as if the roar had stolen the voice of all who called the Woods home.
I strained my ears against the silence, as if I could will my hearing to detect even the faintest of noises, which would grant me knowledge of the beast’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’s passing lo those many years ago.
The thought of my son brought a smile to my lips. To see how he’d grown into a great man before my eyes was a wondrous blessing. I prayed that he would not be as grief stricken as I had been on that dark day.
My reverie was soon shattered, as the roar of the beast shook the very earth upon which I sat.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
My heartbeat quickened at that primal sound. It echoed deep within my very being, touching on something inside that answered with a voice lesser men might cultivate into fear. The roar spoke volumes, letting all who heard it know that the King of Beasts was angered- woe unto those who crossed his path.
There had been a time when these majestic creatures lived alone, atop the food chain. Yet, as always, man had found a way to usurp that throne, employing tools, weapons and blood. With that thought in mind, my one good hand clutched at my Father’s sword, knowing that it was all that stood between me and the slathering death that sought me out that night.
I’d heard the phrase ‘deafening silence’ whilst on a trip to Europe many years ago. At the time, I found those words puzzling, as are many things parroted by ‘civilized’ men who have not the intellectual grasp on the words they bandy about, simply reciting them as if it gives their station in life merit and meaning. Such men would not last a day in the Deep Woods.
However, on that night the silence in the jungle was deafening. Neither insect, nor bird, nor frog, nor babbling brook seemed to issue forth with any audible evidence of their existence. It was as if the roar had stolen the voice of all who called the Woods home.
I strained my ears against the silence, as if I could will my hearing to detect even the faintest of noises, which would grant me knowledge of the beast’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’d grown into a great man before my eyes was a wondrous blessing. I prayed that he would not be as grief stricken as I had been on that dark day.
My reverie was soon shattered, as the roar of the beast shook the very earth upon which I sat.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
My heartbeat quickened at that primal sound. It echoed deep within my very being, touching on something inside that answered with a voice lesser men might cultivate into fear. The roar spoke volumes, letting all who heard it know that the King of Beasts was angered- woe unto those who crossed his path.
There had been a time when these majestic creatures lived alone, atop the food chain. Yet, as always, man had found a way to usurp that throne, employing tools, weapons and blood. With that thought in mind, my one good hand clutched at my Father’s sword, knowing that it was all that stood between me and the slathering death that sought me out that night.
I’d heard the phrase ‘deafening silence’ whilst on a trip to Europe many years ago. At the time, I found those words puzzling, as are many things parroted by ‘civilized’ men who have not the intellectual grasp on the words they bandy about, simply reciting them as if it gives their station in life merit and meaning. Such men would not last a day in the Deep Woods.
However, on that night the silence in the jungle was deafening. Neither insect, nor bird, nor frog, nor babbling brook seemed to issue forth with any audible evidence of their existence. It was as if the roar had stolen the voice of all who called the Woods home.
I strained my ears against the silence, as if I could will my hearing to detect even the faintest of noises, which would grant me knowledge of the beast’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’s sword, knowing that it was all that stood between me and the slathering death that sought me out that night.
I’d heard the phrase ‘deafening silence’ whilst on a trip to Europe many years ago. At the time, I found those words puzzling, as are many things parroted by ‘civilized’ men who have not the intellectual grasp on the words they bandy about, simply reciting them as if it gives their station in life merit and meaning. Such men would not last a day in the Deep Woods.
However, on that night the silence in the jungle was deafening. Neither insect, nor bird, nor frog, nor babbling brook seemed to issue forth with any audible evidence of their existence. It was as if the roar had stolen the voice of all who called the Woods home.
I strained my ears against the silence, as if I could will my hearing to detect even the faintest of noises, which would grant me knowledge of the beast’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’d heard the phrase ‘deafening silence’ whilst on a trip to Europe many years ago. At the time, I found those words puzzling, as are many things parroted by ‘civilized’ men who have not the intellectual grasp on the words they bandy about, simply reciting them as if it gives their station in life merit and meaning. Such men would not last a day in the Deep Woods.
However, on that night the silence in the jungle was deafening. Neither insect, nor bird, nor frog, nor babbling brook seemed to issue forth with any audible evidence of their existence. It was as if the roar had stolen the voice of all who called the Woods home.
I strained my ears against the silence, as if I could will my hearing to detect even the faintest of noises, which would grant me knowledge of the beast’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’s whereabouts.
Try as I might, I heard nothing.
All my life, I had been accustomed to working alone. That is the lot of The Phantom. A life destined to solitude, for who can share such a burden when there is but one of us in every generation?
Yet, that night, I felt more alone than ever before. Even my guns, which had always accompanied me like the best of friends, were now gone – lost in the initial struggle with the monster.
It was as if the very jungle cried out to me, demanding that I realize the extent of my isolation.
Then it came again.
ROOOOOAAAAAARRRRRRR!
It is truly strange what thoughts trample through your mind in moments such as these. I’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’d defeated countless blackhearts, endured unbearable pain, soul crushing hardship and more injuries than I cared to remember, but not once had I questioned my own mortality.
Yet, in that instant, for the first time in my life, one fraught with more danger than most men would ever dream of, I considered my own end. Would I die there, back against that ancient tree with none to know of how I met my maker?
Would there be a final chronicle in the life of the fourteenth man to don the mask? Or would the books on my shelf simply cease to continue after my last adventure? History would announce me as the missing Phantom, the first to simply disappear from the jungle. What legacy would that leave for my son?
From memory alone, I could recite tale after tale of my father’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’s adventures. Many a night, whilst he was away doing his duty, I would sneak into the Chronicle Chamber. By candlelight, I would devour every word penned by his hand in those majestic tomes. Once I’d read all that he had written, I moved on to my Grandfather’s tales and then his Father before him.
What a grand life we are called to lead!
From the darkest jungles to the high seas to the finest palaces in Europe, the adventures of Phantoms past took me on limitless flights of fancy as a boy. Every night I could hardly wait for my sweet mother to fall fast asleep so that I might read yet another tale of excitement and daring do.
I still recall the night my father, just returned from his latest mission, found me curled up, sleeping soundly with a book of the Eighth held in my arms. He would later tell me he had known of my passion for the Chronicles for several years, but for some reason, that night he chose to wake me and allow me to watch as he chronicled his latest tale.
ROOOOAAAAARRR!
That terrible sound, like living thunder, throttled the very tree against which I laid. It also shook me from my reminiscing. Perhaps my blood loss had rendered my ingenuity useless, for it was at that moment that I realized continuing to languish in my memories was sure to spell my end.
But, I thought my memories might hold the key to salvation. Surely, I was not the first Phantom to face defeat at the hands of such a monster! In the vault of memories this experience had opened, I scoured for a tale of such an encounter.
My father, the finest swordsman to ever live, found himself more often than not ‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…‘pon the decks of ships, fighting off wave after wave of brigands, buccaneers and raiders. While many were monstrous in their deeds, none held the distinction of brute physicality my current foe possessed.
What of the twelfth? Certainly, he might have faced such a foe! If not him, then possibly the Eleventh or Tenth?
ROOOAAAAARRRRR!!
The dull pain in my skull reverberated with every bellow from the beast. The power of his latest spoke volumes to me: he was much closer than before.
The throbbing made concentrating far more difficult than I had ever experienced. Perhaps I’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’d lost more blood than I’d first guessed?
Regardless, I was unable to deftly finger through the memories of my ancestor’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer…’s tales with any clarity or function. It seemed a fore drawn conclusion that my end would come before I had discovered that one memory that scratched at my mind like a loose tooth.
Blurry thoughts, half-remembered imaginings and jumbled word pictures fought for control of my mind, each vying to take control from the true master of the moment: pain. If I could just put aside the anguish long enough to concentrate, I would solve this riddle of remembering and know how my ancestor had felled the beast that stalked him on that far away night. But, I was no longer the ruler of my own mind and because of that, thoughts I could not control shot through bringing with them a dream like haze of twisted musings and smoky visions.
At that moment, I realized I must gather my wits and honor my legacy. No Phantom would simply wait for death to slink upon him, with slathering jaws and hot breath, rank with the smell of decaying meat.
NO!
Those men who regaled me with their escapades as a child were not the timid variety. They would rise to the occasion and face their foe, staring right into the maw of their own destruction with little more than a wry smile and fierce determination to give their best, even if the odds were insurmountable.
With that thought in mind, I firmly planted my right fist in the ground, and by sheer force of will, gathered my legs beneath me and pushed myself erect.
There I stood, ready to do battle as the thirteen who had come before me would have done. I could no more dishonor their memory than they could do so to those who preceded them. Nevertheless, if I were to rest a moment longer……
NO!
I was Phantom! I would stand my ground and face the beast with all the fury I could summon from within my soul. This would not be the day that my blood ran out. This would not be the day that issued the age-old cry “The Phantom is dead, long live the Phantom!”
And there I stood, trembling from pain and exhaustion, light headed from blood loss and hunger, battered by the beast who seemingly had slunk up from the very pits of hell. Ready to die, as many had at the claws of this monster. But, I would not falter.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
As the thundering sound shook the earth underneath me yet again, I raised my Father’s sword, ready to do battle with the beast. He had bested me before, but this time he would learn that even a mighty predator such as himself stood no chance against The Man Who Cannot Die!
It was then I heard something else in the night. At first, my mind went wild, as if I’d just regained my hearing from a spell of deafness. What was that sound I heard? It was familiar, somehow, reminding me of a more peaceful place, and a time of solace.
Plap! Plap!
The sound had a rhythmic sense to it and in that rhythm was a serene peace brought on from a faint memory. What was it? Where had I heard that sound before?
My mind faded into reverie for the briefest of moments. There she was, standing in all her beauty alongside the brook that ran behind the Skull Cave. The mother of my child, the love of my life… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!mon from within my soul. This would not be the day that my blood ran out. This would not be the day that issued the age-old cry
NO!
I was Phantom! I would stand my ground and face the beast with all the fury I could summon from within my soul. This would not be the day that my blood ran out. This would not be the day that issued the age-old cry “The Phantom is dead, long live the Phantom!”
And there I stood, trembling from pain and exhaustion, light headed from blood loss and hunger, battered by the beast who seemingly had slunk up from the very pits of hell. Ready to die, as many had at the claws of this monster. But, I would not falter.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
As the thundering sound shook the earth underneath me yet again, I raised my Father’s sword, ready to do battle with the beast. He had bested me before, but this time he would learn that even a mighty predator such as himself stood no chance against The Man Who Cannot Die!
It was then I heard something else in the night. At first, my mind went wild, as if I’d just regained my hearing from a spell of deafness. What was that sound I heard? It was familiar, somehow, reminding me of a more peaceful place, and a time of solace.
Plap! Plap!
The sound had a rhythmic sense to it and in that rhythm was a serene peace brought on from a faint memory. What was it? Where had I heard that sound before?
My mind faded into reverie for the briefest of moments. There she was, standing in all her beauty alongside the brook that ran behind the Skull Cave. The mother of my child, the love of my life… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!mon from within my soul. This would not be the day that my blood ran out. This would not be the day that issued the age-old cry “The Phantom is dead, long live the Phantom!”
And there I stood, trembling from pain and exhaustion, light headed from blood loss and hunger, battered by the beast who seemingly had slunk up from the very pits of hell. Ready to die, as many had at the claws of this monster. But, I would not falter.
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
As the thundering sound shook the earth underneath me yet again, I raised my Father’s sword, ready to do battle with the beast. He had bested me before, but this time he would learn that even a mighty predator such as himself stood no chance against The Man Who Cannot Die!
It was then I heard something else in the night. At first, my mind went wild, as if I’d just regained my hearing from a spell of deafness. What was that sound I heard? It was familiar, somehow, reminding me of a more peaceful place, and a time of solace.
Plap! Plap!
The sound had a rhythmic sense to it and in that rhythm was a serene peace brought on from a faint memory. What was it? Where had I heard that sound before?
My mind faded into reverie for the briefest of moments. There she was, standing in all her beauty alongside the brook that ran behind the Skull Cave. The mother of my child, the love of my life… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!’s sword, ready to do battle with the beast. He had bested me before, but this time he would learn that even a mighty predator such as himself stood no chance against The Man Who Cannot Die!
It was then I heard something else in the night. At first, my mind went wild, as if I’d just regained my hearing from a spell of deafness. What was that sound I heard? It was familiar, somehow, reminding me of a more peaceful place, and a time of solace.
Plap! Plap!
The sound had a rhythmic sense to it and in that rhythm was a serene peace brought on from a faint memory. What was it? Where had I heard that sound before?
My mind faded into reverie for the briefest of moments. There she was, standing in all her beauty alongside the brook that ran behind the Skull Cave. The mother of my child, the love of my life… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!’d just regained my hearing from a spell of deafness. What was that sound I heard? It was familiar, somehow, reminding me of a more peaceful place, and a time of solace.
Plap! Plap!
The sound had a rhythmic sense to it and in that rhythm was a serene peace brought on from a faint memory. What was it? Where had I heard that sound before?
My mind faded into reverie for the briefest of moments. There she was, standing in all her beauty alongside the brook that ran behind the Skull Cave. The mother of my child, the love of my life… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!… My nostrils involuntarily flared as I took in the scent of her who owned the heart that beat within my chest.
Plap! Plap!
A voice in my head urged me to look around for the source of that sound, but I could not take my eyes off her fine, chiseled features, like that of a porcelain doll. I drank in her beauty as I had every time I’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!’d set eyes upon her since the moment we first met. To this day, she was still able to steal my breath away. Her fair ivory skin, smoldering blue eyes, long silken black hair-
Plap! Plap!
There it was again, the rhythm had become annoying, like a fly who evades every attempt to shoo him off. Yet, that sound prevented me from focusing solely on the vision of my bride. My eyes fell away for the briefest of moments and alighted upon a drop, falling rhythmically from a leaf near the brook, splashing ever so gently on a river rock below.
Plap! Plap!
My gaze once again rose to her face, but something was not right. A painful darkness clouded her features and her mouth voiced silent words as she extended her alabaster arm, gesturing ever so gently with her finger in the direction of my feet.
The pulse in my veins jumped at the sight of her anguished visage. Then my eyes followed her motion as the lines between memory and reality blurred. I looked down, and there it was, the source of the sound. On the ground between the roots of that ancient tree. There, on my left boot.
Plap! Plap!
A crimson puddle that seemed almost tranquil at first, before it was violently interrupted-
Plap!
ROOOOOAAAAARRRR!
Moonstone Entertainment, Inc. is releasing interviews done with the creative staff behind its upcoming CHICKS IN CAPES anthology. The first of these is with noted comic writer and herstorian, Trina Robbins!
Trina Robbins-CHICKS IN CAPES Contributor/Herstorian/Writer/Creator
1.Trina, can you share some of your experience, both in general where writing is concerned as well as specifically relating to comics and super heroes?
TR: I was very lucky to have a schoolteacher mother who taught me to read and write at the age of 4, and I’ver been doing both with great gusto ever since. I’ve been writing professionally for over 30 years, books and comics, and there’s nothing I’d rather do. Just sitting at the computer and pressing those keys is for me a pleasurable experience.
I was thrilled when Lori invited me to contrinute to Chicks In Capes, because I feel that for the most part, comic books don’t “get it” when it comes to superheroines, so this was my chance to do it right! It frustrates me that a potentially great character like Wonder Woman can be written really well by one writer, but then someone else can take over and make a mess of her. But Witchwoman is MINE, all mine, and nobody can mess with her!
2. You have a story featured in the Moonstone anthology, CHICKS IN CAPES. What’s it about?
TR: It’s a little bit political and a little bit feminist, because it takes place in a (I hope not!) possible future where the extreme Christian right wing has taken over. And of course, as expected, one of the things they do is oppress women. It’s a world in which women are encouraged to go back to the kitchen and be good little wives and mothers, nothing more, and any woman who breaks those rules is in danger of being considered a witch. And yes, they burn witches! I will say no more!
3. You’re also known as an authority on comics, referred to as a ‘herstorian’ by some. Do you think an anthology such as CHICKS IN CAPES has the potential to be significant in publishing history, specifically relating to the portrayal of female characters?
TR: Yes! We need to see more creative concepts of superheroines, and we need to see them from a woman’s point of view. I’m not saying men can’t write good women, many men do — the Hernandez brothers immediately come to mind — but I do believe that women tend to know what women like, because, being women, it’s what THEY like, no? But it’s revolutionary, by golly, to see not just a woman’s take on an already established superheroine, but to see a woman create her own superheroine. As a comics herstorian, I can tell you that that’s only been done once before, by the incredible Tarpe Mills, who created Miss Fury in her own image in 1941.
4. What are the ingredients to building a good super hero character and/or telling a good super tale in prose?
TR: First of all, to tell a super tale you need a whole helluva lot more than page after page of fight scenes, you need something called a plot. Plots have beginnings, middles, and ends, and it amazes me how some comics writers don’t seem to know that.
As for creating your character, I happen to be a fan of Joseph Campbell and his writings on the universal hero of myth. You’ll find that all mythic heroes, from whatever culture, have certain things in common. They need to be orphaned, they need to be demi-gods, with one mortal parent and one divine parent, they need to die, at least symbolically, by going underground to the land of the dead, and they need to emerge again and heal the land. Not every hero bears all these traits, but (s)he has to have some of them in order to resonate in our collective unconscious. Superman, Wonder Woman, batman, and Captain Marvel all contained these traits, which is why they have survived so long while lesser superheroes fell by the wayside. I think my Witchwoman also bears these traits.

Savage Beauty # 1
Moonstone Books
Written by Mike Bullock
Art by Joe Massaroli
$2.99
Let me preface this review by saying that in my eyes Mike Bullock is the greatest Phantom scribe since Lee Falk himself. When I heard that Moonstone was going to no longer produce Phantom comics, I figured that I would no longer find stories that mixed real-world problems with high adventure in the way that Bullock routinely did on the Phantom.
I’m glad to say that I was wrong. Bullock’s new series is entitled Savage Beauty and from the early promotional artwork it seemed that this would be a jungle girl type series. It is that — but it’s also much more. The series stars two sisters who both embody the spirit of a jungle goddess (shades of the Ghost Who Walks). They spend this issue taking care of a pedophile and slavers. It’s very much the kind of issue that I would have associated with Bullock’s run on the Phantom — in fact, I kept thinking that I couldn’t wait for Kit to meet up with these two new heroines.
The art is good — a bit scratchy at times but it adds a dose of gritty realism to the proceedings.
I know it’s only the first issue but I would have liked to have seen more of an origin story here — it’s very much a “here are the characters, here’s an adventure” kind of thing and while it’s exciting enough to make me want to come back for more, I’m left with all kinds of questions.
Still, this is a remarkable debut and one that should appeal to fans of jungle girls, The Phantom or modern adventure.
I give it 4 out of 5!
Strong female super-heroine characters from all walks of life are included in this stellar anthology: a parking valet, an archeologist, a bike messenger, a nurse, a holocaust survivor and many more. Also new stories featuring Lady Action and Domino Lady are included in this fantastic collection!
For immediate release — January 24, 2011
THE GHOST WIND – COMBINING PULP and MANGA INSPIRATIONS from GRANTON CITY PRESS
The Ghost Wind is the first spin-off title for Granton City Press.
Following on the heels of The Ghost Wind, The Ghost Wind operates in the same fictional locale of Granton City, being a force of good in the city’s Chinatown district, a place where the magic of the Far East is still a force.
In a remote monastery in the mountains of Japan young Yoshi Kobayashi is trained in the ways of the ninja, forged into a deadly weapon, his instincts and fighting prowess honed to perfection. He is the ultimate warrior. He is the Ghost Wind.
Indentured into the service of Japanese Crime Lord Hideki Yakamura Yoshi is sent halfway across the world to the glamour and madness of 1920s America and the gritty streets of Granton City. Plunged into a seedy underworld of gangsters and speakeasies Yoshi soon realizes nothing and nobody are really what they seem.
Yakamura is no mere mobster but in reality an ancient sorcerer and the target of powerful supernatural forces hungry for his power. Yoshi becomes embroiled in a dark and terrible war beyond the Veil between worlds which only he alone can put an end to.
In the climactic battle to come Yoshi is forced to choose between his duty as Ghost Wind and the woman he loves. Supported by strange allies and beset by monstrous enemies is he strong enough to stop the legions of darkness from conquering the earth when the Veil is finally torn?
The story comes from the co-writing team of Canadian Calvin Daniels and Brit Mitchel Rose, who have yet to meet face-to-face.
Daniels said the social networking site Facebook actually proved an important networking tool for Granton City Press, and The Ghost Wind.
“Mitchel is another writer I connected with on Facebook. I saw he had an interest in Manga and thought he might be a good fit for Ghost Wind, and he has been perfect,” said Daniels.
Rose said the book, and it’s follow-up The Runaway Princess which is nearing completion, has been fun.
“I’ve really enjoyed writing for Ghost Wind. I love pulp style adventures and I had the freedom to take it to down some pretty strange and fantastic avenues.” added Mitchel.
Ghost Wind is a young ninja who owes hie life to a local crime lord and community leader in the ‘Chinatown’ of Granton City in the 1920s.
“It’s sort of Green Hornet and Big Trouble In Little China meets The Untouchables,” said Daniels. “It’s quite unique from the other books, but has the same terms of reference.”
“A real roller coaster ride of a story.” added Mitchel.
In preparation for the book’s release, Granton City Press did some pre-selling which Daniels said was important to bolster interest in the book,and to offset initial costs. People were provided a chance to pre-purchase the book, however, not just a regular copy of the book.
Instead, the first 100 pre-sales were sold as signed &_numbered copies of the book. They were numbered 1/100, 2/100, 3/100 etc., and signed by both Daniels and Mitchel.
Anyone purchasing a book through the offer will have an opportunity to purchase signed &_numbered editions of future Black Wolf novels with the same sequence number. That will mean ensuring every book you purchase has a matching number such as 3/100, said Daniels, adding there are a few S&N copies of The Torn Veil still available.
For further information or interviews contact:
Calvin Daniels 306-782-1783
or
email calmardan@sasktel.net
THE BLACK WOLF – A NEW PULP-INSPIRED HERO from GRANTON CITY PRESS
A noted mechanical engineer has gone missing in Granton City, as has a professor with a past live as an inventor of miraculous machines.
That puts The Black Wolf on the case.
The Wolf is a vigilante with a pair of Colt .45s, and the attitude that the cops in 1920s’ Granton City can too easily be bought, so he has appointed himself sheriff, judge, jury and at times executioner.
But can even a bad attitude and a loaded gun solve the newest mystery before the world is threatened by a diabolical menace?
To find out you will have to read The Black Wolf #1 – Metal Monsters of Doom, the first release from Granton City Press, and Canadian authors Calvin Daniels and Kevin Lee. The book was released in 2010, and has already been followed by Book #2 – The Demon Door.
A third volume of The Black Wolf will appear later this year.
Creator Calvin Daniels said the idea of doing pulp-era novels sort of popped into his head one day while trolling through Facebook.
“I’ve always had a soft spot for the purple clad Phantom from reading his stories in the old Charlton Comics line, and of course The Shadow, and Batman,” said Daniels who has been a journalist for more than 20-years. “But, that interest really never coalesced into wanting to write a pulp book until early last year (2009).”
So Daniels, who has previously published three books with a hockey theme, one fiction the others non-fiction, came up with a broad concept, then went looking for a co-writer.
“I had a basic idea for The Black Wolf,” he said, adding, “I thought it would be fun to share the writing.”
That’s where Kevin Lee came on-board.
“I’ve known Kevin casually for a while, and I had written stories for Yorkton This Week on his fantasy trilogy TRIO, so I thought why not ask him,” said Daniels. “Thankfully he said yes.”
Lee said he decided to take on the project because it was a story quite different from his fantasy world.
“Black Wolf sounded like fun when Calvin first pitched the idea of being a co-writer with him on it, and it was an entirely different universe in comparison with my fantasy trilogy TRIO. Black Wolf is a lot shorter in length as well, which makes the story move along rather quickly. It’s been fun and challenging at the same time because Calvin tends to work at a much faster rate than I do!,” he said.
Co-writing The Black Wolf has been a great experience, said Daniels.
“It’s great because we use a pretty simple system, basically taking turns writing chapters,” he said. “It really keeps you focused because you feel obligated to get back to writing every time a chapter comes in.
“It also keeps ideas flowing, because we feed off each other. You never know what the other will do in their chapter. It’s fascinating to watch characters and plots develop.
Lee said he too finds the process an interesting one from a writer’s perspective.
“By working on a pulp style of story instead of a fantasy setting it gets the imagination working on a completely different level because you’re not thinking of sword and sorcery but more along the lines of those old crime TV shows, heroes and villains that are from our own world. Not to mention by switching up on the two stories the creative energy gets renewed each time!” he said.
The process has resulted in books the pair are proud of.
“The first book is great! After it was all said and done I found it to be fun romp and now as my third TRIO novel is nearly done my focus is back on Black Wolf #2 and the creative ideas are already beginning to roll! It should be just as fun if not better on the second go around,” said Lee.
“They may not win a Pulitzer, but pulps are supposed to be quick, easy and fun reads, and I think The Black Wolf is all three,” added Daniels.
Metal Monsters of Doom and The Demon Door both have cover art by Daniel Bradford, who is the artist of the indie comic Robot 13 from Blacklist Studios (www.blackliststudios.com).
“I fell in love with his art when reviewing his comic for Yorkton This Week,” said Daniels. “He was a friend on Facebook, so it was a natural to ask him to come on board.
For further information or interviews contact:
Calvin Daniels 306-782-1783
or
email calmardan@sasktel.net
NINE FOR THE NEW (New Creator Spotlight)
ROBERT BUTT-Writer/CreatorWriter/Creator
AP: Robert, welcome to ALL PULP! First, can you tell us about yourself, some personal background?
RB: Hey, thanks guys. Well, let’s see, I live right smack in the middle of the country in Kansas City, Missouri. During the day, I’m just a regular guy working in a hospital pediatric unit helping people find their way around and entertaining the little ones. After I clock out things are different. Then I become that crazy writer guy who spends his off days and nights writing himself silly. I thoroughly enjoy having crazy amounts of projects to work on at once, and having insane deadlines to meet. It’s my adrenaline rush.
AP: As a writer, what influences have affected your style and interests the most over the years? Do you have a particular genre/type of story you prefer to write?
RB: I’d say the things that have influenced me the most are horror and psychological thriller movies. I love to write those types of stories. Not necessarily the flat out straight forward hack ‘n slash stuff, but more so the types of things that make you stop for a minute and think, “Wow, what if that actually happened” and then get up and look out your windows and check the locks on your doors.
AP: What about genres that make you uncomfortable? What areas within pulp are a little bit intimidating for you as an author?
RB: Love interests. I know a lot of pulp stories include the “damsel in distress” bit, but it’s just hard for me to write those into stories.
AP: Are you a pulp fan? If so, how has that affected you as a writer of pulps. If you aren’t a longtime fan, then why pulp?
RB: Honestly, pulp is a bit of a new thing for me. I knew of a few titles such as ‘The Spider’, and ‘Doc Savage’, but didn’t really know they were “pulp”. All I knew was they were cool stories with cool guys. The reason I write pulp is because I love the stories with just the one guy on his own fighting off the evil doers. I like having that lone hero that doesn’t have all the super powers and what not. Instead he relies on his wit, fists, and the occasional six shooter or sword.
AP: What do you think you bring to pulp fiction as a writer?
RB: I’m always trying to push the envelope with stories as far as characters and the worlds they live in. I mix the “pulp era” with modern times and my idea of the future. An example would be The Divine Wraith whose world is a mix of The Great Depression meeting ‘The Crow’ (movie), and the ‘Mad Max’ post apocalyptic world.
AP: Your first work to be published appeared in a PRO SE PRODUCTIONS magazine. Just who/what is THE DIVINE WRAITH?
RB: Ah, who is The Divine Wraith. The Divine Wraith is a man who has lead a tough life indeed. He has lived constantly torn between the good and evil within himself. After being thrown out with the trash (literally) by his biological parents shortly after birth, he was raised by a priest, Father Maglione, but found his way to the streets and petty crime. Eventually his decisions lead him off on his own to find out which side of himself to embrace.
AP: THE DIVINE WRAITH definitely falls into the category of pulp, but do you have plans for him beyond the printed word?AP: THE DIVINE WRAITH definitely falls into the category of pulp, but do you have plans for him beyond the printed word?
RB: I’m actually working with the guys over at Pro Se Productions on some different ways to develop The Divine Wraith.
AP: What is your creative process as far as developing a character? What techniques or steps do you take?
RB: I actually hardly ever start with the character themselves. I usually start with a “world” which usually comes from watching the news or looking up pictures on the internet. I’ll come up with the world and then of course we need a protagonist to live in that world. Then begins the mixing process usually combining eras of history i.e. 20’s, 80’s, and current. After that it’s off to figure out what the character looks like feature and clothing wise.
AP: What’s coming from Robert Butt? Any projects you want to discuss?
RB: I’m definitely planning more Divine Wraith stories for Pro Se Productions. I’m also working on a big project with a group called the Internation Comics Coalition. It’s a big group of really talented writers and artists. Look for that in March. I’ve also just finished a comic script called ‘Chuck & Donna’ which is now in the hands of publisher David Naughton-Shires over at a cool new indie comics publisher, KnightWatch Press. I’m always working on something, so always be on the lookout for something new from me coming to the readers.
AP: Thanks a lot, Robert!
“It was at that moment that a pounding sounded on the outside doors. It was but a second’s distraction, but when Benson looked back he saw one of The Spider’s automatics beginning to rise in his direction! With no time for thought, his finger tightened on Mike’s trigger.”
ALL PULP INTERVIEW-RIC CROXTON-PODCASTER
AP: Well, it’s about time! Ric, thanks a ton for stopping by and sharing your wit and wisdom with ALL PULP! Tell us a bit about yourself if you don’t mind.
RC: I’m just your average guy that was kidnapped by aliens to be taken back to their homeworld as a slave. On the way I was lucky enough to lead a revolt and take over the ship and become captain until it crashed on a distant planet. I quickly became Warlord and married the Princess (the most beautiful woman of two worlds)….. My wife just told me that I should just talk about my earth bound adventures.
I grew up mostly in southern Missouri in a small town of Preston, where if it wasn’t for the flashing red light you would never know it was there. My maternal grandparents would bring me a sack of old comics from an older cousin, which began a lifetime love of reading. At around the age of 12 while visiting my other cousins in north Missouri I became ill and my aunt let me read her oldest son’s Doc Savage books. Luckily this was the early 1970s and whenever I could I would buy both all the comics I could and whatever Doc Savage novels available.
At the start of my senior year in high school, my Dad decided we were going to move again (we did that a lot while I was growing up, but always moving back to Preston). We ended up in Springdale, Arkansas. While I was still in high school I opened up a used book shop in the local flea market. A few years later I bought a local used bookstore that soon became a comic book shop until I sold it in 1988 to a larger card and comic shop that started in the area. I became the manager for a time until he sold it to a chain of shops. I decided that I wanted a regular job where I wasn’t working up to 20 hours a day 7 days a week and could have a life outside of books. (What was I thinking? There is no life outside of books).
After that, I worked in the real world, met and married my wife of the last 16 years. Deborah, my wife had three brats…I mean adult kids and I soon became a grandfather to 4 monsters…I mean grandkids. We recently moved back to the Little Rock area so that we can be next to the monsters.
AP: You are most definitely a pulp fan from a long way back. What about the pulp tales intrigues you so much that you not only built a pod cast around them, but you have followed the various genres within the field for most of your life and are an avid collector?
RC: As I mentioned before I’ve been a comic book fan from the age of 7. I didn’t know at the time that I was reading Pulps with Doc Savage, Tarzan, Conan, Shadow and later, The Spider. Living in the area I was in was difficult at the time to find any Pulps. I was lucky to find the paperback reprints, even owning a bookstore. It was a little over 10 years ago when my wife and I were first living in Little Rock I bought my first Pulp at the local comic shop. It was a Fantastic Adventures issue with a Oscar the Martian Detective. “Oscar Saves The Union”. I still have it and my small collection of Pulps. My collection of Pulp reprints has taken over a bookcase and is growing. The thing I love most about Pulps is that not only does it cover my favorite, the hero Pulps, but it covers everything else like SF, mystery, crime, westerns and everything else. Plus I found out I have a connection the Pulps. My maternal grandfather (the same one that brought me comics) was a western Pulp writer of the late 1940s to 50s. He was L.C. Davis.
AP: Speaking of you collecting, describe if you would your collection of pulp and action/hero/etc. literature.
RC: As I mentioned above, I have a bookcase that is full of the hero Pulps and in another bookcase I am filling it with the comic book prose paperbacks. The house we live in I have a room of nothing but books, comics and magazines surrounding me. My wife has suggested I put another bookcase in the living room for some of my hardbacks so that I can display all my collection easier. My closet is full of drawer boxes of comics. I have 2 bookcases of nothing but comic book tpbs and hardbacks. Believe me I have more than enough paperbacks, comics, hardcovers and to read for a long time, but I am still adding more.
AP: You’re the founder, original host, and now co-host of THE BOOK CAVE. What possessed you to start a pod cast and what was the original intent of the show?
RC: About 4 years ago a very good friend of mine, Bruce Rosenberger was talking about podcasts on the Yahoo group we are on. He did around 12 episodes for the group before he went public and started KomicsKast. I was a guest on an early episode and became interested. Bruce mentioned other podcasts like Comic Geek Speak, SciFi Dig and others. Because I was working third shift 10 hours a night where I didn’t have to do much thinking I could listen to all the episodes I wanted.
What a lot people don’t know is that before the Book Cave I was part of another podcast called Legion of Substitute Podcasters, a Legion of Super-Heroes podcast. During that time was when I decided to start the Book Cave. Paul French, the leader of LSP was a great tech help to starting the podcast. Due to my working nights and only having the weekends off made it difficult for me to record with LSP. Like I said I worked nights and they worked days, it made it difficult for all of us to get together. They are a great bunch of guys with a fantastic podcast.
When I first thought about doing a podcast it was very different than what the first episode turned into. My first efforts I tried to script an dialog about Pulps and comics. When I recorded it and played it back, I hated it. I asked myself what I liked about podcasts and what I didn’t. I liked how Comic Geek Speak talked to the creators and got some great info. I learned that I’m not a big fan of the stick to the script podcasts. Some of their shows it felt like they were all reading the scripts and would laugh because the script says insert laugh here. My biggest influence is from Bruce’s KomicsKast, where he would talk about small press comics, comic strips and all the things he enjoyed. I thought why don’t I do a podcast talking about what I like and thus began The Book Cave.
AP: THE BOOK CAVE has grown into a fantastic venue for Pulp fiction, its writers, artists, and creators to really get out and talk about their work. Why do you think it has had the impact it has?
RC: The reason The Book Cave has had the impact is because Art and I are fans. As Art would say :This is a show by fans for fans”.
AP: There’s a ton of discussion within the pulp field these days on various topics. One of these is do we write public domain pulp characters as they were originally conceived or do we update, add to, take away from, or wholesale change them for a modern audience? Where do you fall on this?
RC: I think that if you want to write about Ki-Gor, keep true to what he is. I have no problem with a writer adding something to flesh him out. If they decide that Ki-Gor loses an arm or leg and they make him a cyborg with a laser eye and has a jetpack, this is no longer Ki-Gor. Change his name and make it your character. I’ve read other books where the writer has taken someone like the Shadow and changed him into what he wants and given him another name, but you know he is a different version of the Shadow. Remember if you are going to write the Shadow, he doesn’t wear purple tights, mask and green cape and he isn’t a head on a robot body.
AP: There’s also a lot of talk about how relevant pulp is today. Is relevance really important or is it more about telling a good tale? If the story is solid, will fans find it or does it need to impact modern society in some way?
RC: I read to escape reality, to imagine myself doing things I either never would do or never be able to do. If the story has relevance in the world, great, but the most important thing a story must do is entertain.
AP: You’ve interviewed everyone from brand new writers to legends like Tom Johnson. Anyone you haven’t had in THE BOOK CAVE yet that is sort of a dream guest for you?
RC: I’d love to have a group of Pulp greats like Tom Johnson, Will Murray and a couple of others to talk about the Pulps. Art and I could introduce them, then step back and let them have the mic for as long as they want.
AP: You’ve also added a pod cast or two to your lineup. Tell us about those, if you would.
RC: I started three other podcasts of which one Popcorn Theatre is in limbo. Ric’s Comics is my comic book podcast where I can talk about comics. I know there are a ton of comic book podcasts, but most of the hosts are much younger than me. I wanted a podcast that appealed to the older fan.
Future 4 Color started in my Ric’s Comics, but grew too big for it. F4C is podcast about Previews. While almost every comic book podcast has a Previews episode. F4C is Previews and my co-host, Bruce Rosenberger and I give some history on some of the books. Each week is a different section of Preview, DC, Marvel, major Independents and other Independents in the back of the book. The show was inspired by Bruce’s BOP (Bottom of the Pile) episodes on his podcasts. On F4C, Bruce and I and guests would chat about a book and maybe give a history or ask each other if we know anything about the creators. Sometimes we would gripe about prices.
AP: You have a co-host on the book cave. Tell ALL PULP what it’s like sharing a desk, so to speak, with Art Sippo.
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| Art Sippo, Co-Host of THE BOOK CAVE |
RC: It has been a great honor and pleasure having “The Mad Doctor” as co-host. If you think Art and I geek out during the show, you should hear us when we aren’t recording.
Art and I met in person at the 2006 La Plata, MO Doc Savage Convention. We met again in the 2007 and 2008 Cons. At the 2008 I told Art I was thinking about starting a podcast and asked if he would be interested in coming on for an episode. Art was on episode 4 to talk Sun Koh and several other episodes before becoming my co-host in 2009. My running joke on the show is where everyone else Googles, I Sippo. Art is a walking encyclopedia on Pulp. He’s a lot of fun having him on the show, plus I get to do Mad Doctor jokes when he is unable to be there.
AP: So, can you pull back the veil and share anything about future guests on THE BOOK CAVE with our readers?
RC: Coming in February is the return of Bill Preston. If you remember Art and I went nuts trying to find a copy of his story in Asimov. Bill was gracious and sent us a copy of “Helping Them To Take the Old Man Down”. This February in Asimov he has a new “Old Man” story, “Clockworks”.
AP: Ric, we really appreciate you taking the time to visit! You are now leaving ALL PULP…