The Mix : What are people talking about today?

HAVE A PULPY CHRISTMAS AND AN ACTIONY NEW YEAR FROM ALL PULP!

Each of the Spectacled Seven wish you and yours the best of holidays, regardless of what and how you celebrate!  As a gift from us (as well as all the pulp writers, artists, and otherwise involved), ALL PULP will be posting sneak peeks, excerpts, and all sorts of goodies throughout the day as presents to you, teasers and such for the pulp to come!

Chuck Miller, author and creator of THE BLACK CENTIPEDE, DOCTOR UNKNOWN, and other various characters, provides a Christmas tale at his website-http://theblackcentipede.blogspot.com/2010/12/christmas-encounters-of-merry-yuletide.html- that ALL PULP now offers you a glance at here-

“Christmas Encounters of a Merry Yuletide Holiday Kind”

NOTE FROM VIONNA VALIS: Season’s greetings to all our readers! It’s Christmas, and that is traditionally a time of year when people in the public eye, like me and Mary, try to come up with some way to profit from it. I cannot help but notice all the Christmas stories that pop up all over everywhere—movies, TV shows, comic books, novels, etc. Unfortunately, we don’t really have any Christmas cases for me to write about. It just hasn’t happened yet. But there’s a bright side. Since I write these things and you read them, And I’m here and you’re there, you really have no way of knowing whether or not any of it is true. Now, I’m not going to just sit down and totally make something up that never happened. I have standards. But I see nothing wrong with a little seasonal marketing, as long as I’m honest about what I’m doing. So, I have taken the story of my and Mary’s first case, which actually happened in the summer, and turned it into a Christmas story. No major overhaul, I just added a few things here and there to give it a bit of a holiday flavor. I knew you wouldn’t mind, and I’m sure you’re going to love it. You have my permission, if you want to, to make it a tradition in your family to sit around and read this story every year. I might talk to a TV producer and see if I can get it made into a claymation program to be shown on the network each year. For the purists out there, I have highlighted in red all the stuff I added in. Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and all of those other things!

Your Friend,
Vionna Valis

Christmas, 2010

“CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF A KIND WE’D RATHER NOT THINK ABOUT”or “Maybe We Should Just Let the Truth STAY Out There”

BY CHUCK MILLER

COPYRIGHT 2010, CHUCK MILLER/BLACK CENTIPEDE PRESS
Download FREE non-Christmas version PDF file:
http://www.mediafire.com/?dqvrpxdpdge7zfs

INTRODUCTION

Merry Christmas! My name is probably Vionna Valis. I don’t know what nationality that is, so don’t ask. I don’t know, and I’ve never heard of anyone else that has it for a name. Either one of them– Vionna or Valis. They seem to have come from nowhere. Just like I myself sometimes seem.

I am, as my adopted brother Jack says, something of an enigma, even to myself. I believe I am approximately nineteen years old, but I can’t be sure of that, any more than I can be absolutely sure my name is really Vionna Valis. I have a birth certificate that proves both of those things, but that could have come from anywhere. I can’t vouch for anything because I have these huge holes in my memory. Also, I tend to get confused because I am not alone inside my head.

I don’t remember much of anything about my own life prior to a couple of years ago. Not even all the wonderful Christmases I’m sure I had. I don’t know why. That’s strange enough, but on top of that, I have some kind of something living inside my head that makes me know and remember things that never happened to me. I always find out later that the things I remember really did happen at some point in the past, but I was nowhere near them at the time. Often, I wasn’t even born yet. Whatever he or she or it is, this thing, I call it my “roommate.”

And that’s enough about all THAT for right now. I have a WHOLE lot of what they call “backstory,” and so does everybody else I hang out with. But most of it is not really necessary for you to know in order to read and follow this story.

Not too long ago, I and five of my friends opened up our own detective agency. My five friends have some fairly awesome psychic powers, which are very helpful, and I have whatever it is that I’ve got, which is sometimes helpful, so we figured we might as well do something with all that. Especially around Christmas time.

The name of our agency is the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee. I better explain why that is. This is more backstory, but I’ll make it quick.

My five friends’ names are Mary Jane Kelly, Catherine Eddowes, Annie Chapman, Liz Stride and Polly Nichols. If those names sound familiar to you, it is because they were all murdered back in 1888 by Jack the Ripper. There have been tons of books about the Ripper, and their names have appeared in all of them.

To put it all in a nutshell, a while back me and some other friends of mine—My brother Jack, a man called the Black Centipede, and a young woman known as Doctor Unknown– were having trouble with something we thought was the ghost of the actual Jack the Ripper. We needed to find him and do something about him, and one of my friends got the idea that we ought to try to summon up the spirits of his victims in the hope that they might lend a hand. So we did this weird magic ritual, sort of like a séance, and it worked. And because of a strange set of circumstances, the girls returned, not as bodiless spirits, but as real flesh and blood human women. (Editor’s note: See The Optimist, Book One: You Don’t Know Jack, 2010 Black Centipede Press)

The girls don’t remember anything about being dead. They say they don’t think they blocked it out of their minds because it was unpleasant or scary or anything. They figure there are just some things that won’t fit inside a person’s head when they’re on this side of the line between life and death. The human brain is wired up for just so much and no more.

Anyhow, I was explaining the name of our agency. Whitechapel is an area in the city of London, England, in which the girls were all murdered by Jack the Ripper in 1888. All before Christmas. The Whitechapel Vigilance Committee was a committee that was formed at that time in order to be vigilant over Whitechapel. Obviously they didn’t do all that great a job. But the girls say the people who did it meant well, and one of them, George Lusk, had a pretty traumatic experience on account of it—the Ripper mailed him half of the kidney he cut out of Cathy Eddowes—so they thought the name should be given a second chance to redeem itself or something, which is fine with me, I didn’t have any better ideas.

Mary Kelly, the last victim that got killed, is the most outgoing of the girls and the smartest one, too. She is a natural leader, and that is the role she has in the agency. I am a natural person who does a lot more than she gets credit for but doesn’t complain about it because she doesn’t really care, just so she gets the job done, so I am like a combination of secretary and second-in-command, even though I do more actual work than Mary. But I don’t mean that in a bad way, because, like I said, I’m a natural.

Well, I guess that’s pretty much all you need. So let’s get going.


ONE

It was 4:30 on a Friday afternoon, very close to Christmas, when the peculiar Mister Keel left our office. Our brand new office, to which he had been the first genuine paying client visitor. I got up from my desk and went to the wall safe to put away the cash retainer he’d given us. Two thousand dollars in twenty-dollar bills! I would be able to buy a lot of wonderful Christmas presents with that!

Mary Kelly, sitting at her desk, messing with her computer, turned to me and said, “What a queer fellow.”

“What makes you say that?” I asked, closing the safe and going back to my own desk. “He’s married. To a woman and everything.” I held up the eight by ten glossy portrait Mr. Keel had given me of his wife Janet.

“I don’t… Oh, I see. “ Mary sighed. “Vionna, I shall never get accustomed to the way certain innocuous words from my era have been hijacked into conveying more… controversial meanings. The other day when I told Jack he was looking exceptionally happy—using a word I had every reason to believe meant that and nothing more—he looked at me as though he might like to take my head off.”

“Oh, I knew what you meant, I was just joking.” (I don’t like to tell lies, but since I knew Mary didn’t believe me, it didn’t really count.)

And she was right about our visitor. Client, I should say. Mister Keel had been a real oddball. He’d shown up out of the blue at 3:45, knocking on our door and asking if this was the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee Detective Agency. I told him it was, because it is, though we have not yet put up our little sign on the door. I thought he might be someone collecting donations for poor people for Christmas.

“I have a rather embarrassing problem, and I hope you might be able to render some discreet assistance,” he said, after I had answered the door and he had introduced himself and wished me a Merry Christmas. I said I bet we could, that’s what we’re here for, and why don’t you come into the office?

I should mention that our headquarters is in an old brownstone house downtown on West 35th Street. It actually belongs to Dr. Dana Unknown, a great friend of ours, who rents it to us for practically nothing compared to what people charge for apartments and things these days. It’s a great house, and it is very close to an important place that is so secret, I can’t even tell you what it is, much less where it’s located.

Anyhow, Mr. Keel followed me a short way down the hall and into our business office. I’m not very tall, and Mister Keel was shorter than me. In fact, he seemed kind of delicate all over. Very skinny, not much color in his face. I was really surprised when I shook hands with him and found out that he had a good, solid grip, even though his hands were small and looked about as rugged as bone china. Not only did he have a grip, but I got the idea he wasn’t using much of it, and if he chose to apply the whole thing, I might end up being the one with a hand that looked like some fine china that had been dropped onto a hard floor. I handed him a nice candy cane and a cup of eggnog.

I introduced him to Mary Kelly, who was the only other member of the agency present at the time, other than myself. The rest of the girls were busy that day getting enrolled at a community college. Having assimilated the fact that they are now in the 21st century to stay, they decided they wanted to get the most out of it. One way in which we are better than 1888 is that women are allowed to do more things. Mary Kelly, who got more education than most girls did back when she was alive in the 19th century, decided to work with the detective agency full-time and further her education later on.

Mr. Keel’s eyes darted around the office in a strange way. He reminded me of a rabbit, or possibly a small dog. I had the idea that he’d like to go around sniffing everything if he could get away with it. In fact, he gave our Christmas tree such a look, I ran out and got an armful of newspapers, just in case.

I told him to sit down, and he sat. Sort of like a dog.

“I don’t really know how to say this, so I’ll just say it,” he said, making it sound like he was apologizing for something. “I’ve never had… Well, It’s my wife, you see. Here, I have a picture of her.”

He opened a large manila envelope he was carrying and handed me the photo I described earlier.

He cleared his throat and said, “To be quite blunt, miss, I suspect that she is being unfaithful.

“For almost a year now, there have been peculiar occurrences. Since last Christmas, in fact. They seem to happen about once a month. I will awaken in the morning feeling peculiarly groggy, as though I had a hangover. However, I do not drink and never have.

“On these same mornings, my wife will invariably be in a state of some disarray. More than once, her feet have been muddy, as though she were walking around barefoot out of doors. She denies any knowledge and does not even bother to offer a plausible explanation.”

“Have you any other grounds for suspicion?” Mary asked.

“My dear,” he said, “if what I have told you so far is insufficient, I don’t know what else I should be expected to produce.”

“But why do you suspect adultery, specifically? Surely these things could admit of other explanations.” Mary is really good at this stuff.

“Perhaps. But, whatever is at the root of it, I think one would be hard pressed to find a benign explanation for these events. Whatever is happening, I’d like to know about it.”

He had a point.

“You have a point,” I said. I turned to Mary, who was multi-tasking by putting tinsel on our tree while listening to our client. “He has a point, Mary. What you sound like you’re suggesting, Mr. Keel, is that your wife drugs you in your sleep and then sneaks out for whatever, knowing you won’t wake up and notice she’s gone.”

“That crossed my mind, yes.”

“Have you asked her?” Mary wanted to know.

“I have. She admits nothing and denies nothing. Nor, as I say, does she even bother to fabricate some innocent explanation. When I speak of it, she says nothing at all.”

“Hm,” I said. “Curiouser and curiouser. It sounds like the game’s afoot.” (I picked up those phrases from a couple of Jack’s books that I read. I like the way they sound, and I think it impresses people when you talk like that.)

“Well,” Mr. Keel said, “if things run true to form, we are due for another incident within the next week at most. Are you interested in taking the case?”

“Yes,” I said. “Even though it is so close to Christmas and all.”

“I don’t…” Mary said.

“YES,” I said louder, giving Mary a look. “We’d be glad to.”

“Splendid,” he said, rubbing his hands together. He reached into his pocket and produced the wad of bills I told you about earlier. Along with them, he gave me the photo of Janet Keel, which is what his wife’s name was, and a card with directions to his house.

After he left, wishing Mary and me a Merry Christmas before he stepped out into the snow, and also after the little scene that started this chapter, Mary presented me with her misgivings.

“I don’t know that I approve of this, Vionna,” she said. “A divorce action? Adultery? Isn’t that rather tawdry?”

“I can’t say, since I don’t know what that word means. But I do know the meaning of the word lucrative, and that is what we have in our safe right now. “

“You have a mercenary streak that surprises me.”

“Heck, Mary, we’re just starting out. We can’t afford to turn anybody away who comes to us suggesting anything that isn’t illegal. He isn’t asking us to kill her. Plus which, it’s almost Christmas!

She said nothing to that. I could see she was working on swallowing the whole idea, like a hard, sticky chunk of Christmas candy. Once she got it down past her windpipe, she asked, “How do we go about this?”

“We put her under surveillance,” I said.

“How does that work?”

“Well, we go where they live and we just sit and watch.”

“That seems simple enough. Have you done this often?”

“Never. But how difficult can it be? We go and keep an eye on the house. If she sneaks out, we follow her. We have cameras, and if we catch her doing, you know, whatever, we take a picture of it.”

Mary shook her head. “That seems awfully sordid.”

I had to agree.

“I have to agree,” I said, “but sometimes you have to do stuff you’d rather not. Anyhow, if she really is deceiving her husband, he has a right to know, don’t you think? After all, ’tis the season.

“I suppose…”

IDEAS LIKE BULLETS GOES HOLIDAY!!!

Design by Ali

It is the time of year that thoughts most often turn to good will, generosity, sugar plums, what you’re gonna get from under the tree, and just how many sales you can hit.  But for a pulp writer, especially one like me who sniffles and comes up with an idea, it’s a time ripe for thinkin’, creatin’, and reimaginin’.  Christmas provides a lot of fodder for that.

And who am I to turn down free fodder??

Let me state that this is one of those ideas that I am only posting on here because I do not have time to do it right now.  If someone comes along and wants to pitch a story within the universe I’m going to briefly touch on here or wants to write this story or this in this version (you’ll see why I specify in a minute), then I will want to at least plot and probably co write with them, simply cuz, this is one I want to give some attention to when time allows.  So, having said that, this idea is copyright me today and thereforth and hencewhen.  This is my intellectual property, but wouldn’t mind someone hollerin’ at me for permission to play with it.

THE ADVENTURES OF NICHOLAS SAINT

That’s right…I did it….I went and turned the fat guy in the red suit and rosy cheeks into a Doc Savage pastiche.  Yup, you heard me…I mean, come one, he practically IS Doc if you look at him just right and besides, I’m not the first to go this particular direction…. Let’s review the key points.

First, in this version of the world, as in any other I’ve ever read, there is an eternal struggle going on between good and evil.   As this struggle has been eternal, members of both sides of the fight have come into being that are representative of legends, myths, and stories passed from generation to generation, people to people.  By the 1930s, these heroes and villains, though largely considered story and fable, are alive and well and still fighting.  The most vigilant and diligent of the heroes in this massive war, the one who stands on guard 365 days a year even though he is associated most notably with one particular day, the one who, even though the world doesn’t know it, gives the gift of justice and security every minute of every day.  That’s right…Nicholas Saint, The Man up North.

Nicholas Saint is the world’s foremost inventor, engineer, explorer, scientist, you name it, this guy standing just over six feet tall and weighing in at a muscular 300 pounds can do it.  He also has so much mental and physical control of his body that he can actually shrink himself a few inches, reposition his muscles to give him the appearance of a bigger belly, and even will his cheeks to be rosy and his normally close trimmed white beard to grow a bit if given a few minutes.  That’s right, kids, if he’s ever caught out in public, he just converts to look like jolly old St. Nick…or another disguise if that’s more appropriate. 

Hailing from nowhere in particular, Saint makes his headquarters up near the North Pole.  Using technology of his own design, he conceals a vast complex of workshops, research facilities, and other structures almost in plain sight on the snowy terrain.   Lending him assistance are his ‘elves’, actually members of the Pantunuik tribe, a long lost Eskimo people believed to be legends themselves, largely because they are all diminuitive, no more than four feet tall. 

Saint also has a bestiary up there at the Pole, one containing long thought extinct and even mythical creatures and then some of his own experiments into genetic engineering.  Yes, this includes most notably a herd of reindeer with many abilities, including flying.  He even has one reindeer that gives off a phosphorescent light, although all everyone seems to see is his muzzle.

He is married to Eva, a woman of human origins who found herself drawn to investigate cases of  a strange hero coming and going and finally finding herself both in love with and taking on a part of his essence and mission, therefore being as long lived as he is.

As far as how long they live, they are not immortal.  They can be harmed by extraordinary means, such as magic, massive explosions, lightning…or they can be harmed very easily at the hands of another like them, another legend taken life that represents good or evil. 

The first story in my head is directly related to Christmas, although all of them will not be.  Nick can be saving the world on a daily basis, even when it’s not Christmas.  He often just hides in plain sight and people say, ‘Mom, look, he could be Santa if he were fatter.’

The first story in my head is entitled ‘The Adventure of the Children Christmas Forgot’ and would involve a small midwestern town, the one case Nick Saint considers his failure, and a clash with an evil seducer of children who calls himself Mr. Hamlin. 

There ya have it, a brightly decorated red and green idea shot once again like a bullet from Yours Truly!  Have a Pulpy Christmas!!

The Point Radio: Choosing Your Christmas Movie


It’s the Day Before Christmas and all through the family room the TV is showing holiday fare. So what is your favorite Christmas movie? Alonso Durlade’s new book, HAVE YOURSELF A MOVIE CHRISTMAS, has a great list of things to watch that fit in the tradition of the season – but we’re guerssing you might not think of them as “Christmas Movies”! And he has great trivia about some of your favortite films,  too – sharing it right here with us! Plus it’s our ANNIVERSARY!

And be sure to stay on The Point via iTunes - ComicMix, RSS, MyPodcast.Comor Podbean!

Follow us now on and !

Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24 hours a Day – 7 Days a week!. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special programming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net – plus there is a great round of new programs on the air including classic radio each night at 12mid (Eastern) on RETRO RADIO COMICMIX’s Mark Wheatley hitting the FREQUENCY every Saturday at 9pm and even the Editor-In-Chief of COMICMIX, Mike Gold, with his daily WEIRD SCENES and two full hours of insanity every Sunday (7pm ET) with WEIRD SOUNDS!

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN LIVE
FOR FREE or go to GetThePointRadio for more including a connection for mobile phones including iPhone & Blackberrys.

HANCOCK TIPS HIS HAT TO FARMER’S AND ECKERT’S PEMBERLEY HOUSE!


TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Book Reviews by Tommy Hancock

The Evil in Pemberley HouseBy Philip Jose Farmer and Win Scott Eckert
Dust jacket by Glenn Orbik
Published by Subterranean Press
Length: 216 pages

If you’re a reader of All Pulp, especially recently, then you’re familiar with the concept of the Wold-Newton Family and Universe as well as knowing a bit about pulp and science fiction icon Philip Jose Farmer.  Although Farmer left this world in the last few years, a vast body of notes, ideas, completed and unfinished works remain in his fantastic wake.  THE EVIL IN PEMBERLEY HOUSE was, until recently, on the unfinished list.  Fortunately, writer and PJF expert/researcher Win Scott Eckert picked up the gauntlet unintentionally left by Farmer’s passing and THE EVIL IN PEMBERLEY HOUSE is now complete.

And, oh boy, that is a good thing.

The basic plot is that young Patricia Wildman, daughter of famed crimefigher, scientist, and general all around genius Doctor James Clarke Wildman, finds out she has inherited an estate, the Pemberley House of the title, and all the wealth and possibly titles that go with it.  Recently widowed and having lost her parents as well, Patricia welcomes the distraction of going abroad and sorting out this inheritance.  Mayhem instantly ensues with attempts on her life, introductions to rather repulsive family members and Pemberley residents, kidnapping, and rape.  Oh, wait, then there’s the curse that a ghost of long dead relative revisits for three nights on the anniversary of her death to a person in her direct lineage.  And, yes, that would be our young heroine.

Farmer and Eckert weave a gothic tale that is punctuated throughout with pulpy goodness.  Patricia Wildman is actually a thin, almost transparent mask worn by the main character who is actually the daughter of Doc Savage.  Inherent in this character is all the strength, description, and vitality that comes through in tales of Doc, tempered by a rather human fallibility, one of which I’ll speak more of in a bit.  The characters around Patricia, though most of them are repugnant and dare we say irredeemable, add gaudy, fascinating color to this tale of intrigue, family secrets, conspiracies, murder, and even on some level vengeance.  Throw in the fact that this is Wold-Newtonry at its best and you get Sherlock Holmes, Sexton Blake, Jane Austen characters, and Tarzan, among many others salted and peppered from beginning to end.  The phrasing and structure is definitely Farmer and there is mostly a seamless line between Farmer ends and Eckert begins.

The only drawback I encountered with THE EVIL IN PEMBERLEY HOUSE related to the focus on sex, especially early in the book. Now, I know that there has been and will likely always be much discussion of Farmer’s use of sexual activity and connotations in his books, starting with ‘The Lovers’ and filtering through various other works.  Patricia’s human fallibility relates to sexual issues and this is made glaringly apparent through almost the first half of the story and although reinforcement is necessary in a novel, this felt heavy handed and forced on the reader at times.   This definitely improved as the book went on and the resolution that the end brought to these issues was complete and satisfying, but there is some concern that readers who might be turned off by sexual descriptions and such would stop reading too soon.  DON’T! There is tons of action, adventure, character interaction, and dramatic tension still to come!!

All in all, THE EVIL IN PEMBERLEY HOUSE stands out as a fantastic addition to the works of Farmer.  Eckert deftly delivered a complete tale with enough dangles to have another tale or two yet to tell. 

FOUR OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-Definitely one worth reading and rereading, even if the sexual references get a bit heavy early on.

TIPPIN’ TO THE RED PANDA A THIRD TIME TODAY-HANCOCK AND HIS HAT!

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Book Reviews by Tommy Hancock

TALES OF THE RED PANDA-THE ANDROID ASSASSINS
by Gregg Taylor
Published by Autogyro
148 Pages

A series of novels in any field is only as good as its basic components-Its writer, its characters, and the fact that it’s not a retread of the books that have come before in plot.   By those standards, the third novel in the TALES OF THE RED PANDA series, THE ANDROID ASSASSINS, is really good. 

Let’s take the last point first, at least in part.  Here’s the plot in short-Millionaires are being threatened and essentially blackmailed by an unseen villain.  At the same time, Toronto is beset by robotic roustabouts credited to a mechanical, maniacal madman familiar to the city.  And there to bridge the gap in both of his identities and with the Flying Squirrel at his side stands ready-THE RED PANDA!

Once more Gregg Taylor brings the stalwart pulp masked man and his spunky partner to the written page in grand style.  There is more than enough fighting, arguing, and sparring within these pages to satisfy any Decoder Ring Theatre fan and that’s just between the Panda and the Squirrel!  Taylor does a wonderful job of balancing these over the top characters with more realistic supporting cast, particularly when dealing with Red Panda’s many agents.  There are plenty of heroics to go around in this tale of justice and robots and Taylor is excellent at making sure everyone gets a chance to be either as good or as bad as they choose to be.

Taylor almost paints pictures as he constructs characters in this book.   The Panda and the Squirrel spring from the page fully realized, but this is no surprise if you’ve read the previous two books and/or listened to DRT’s shows.  What is even more stunning is how the characters that we aren’t very familiar with take on a life of their own.  There’s some ‘spoilers’ in this book on things that will take place in the Panda’s future that DRT listeners will pick up on and those hints don’t lie in the plot, but in the characters that Taylor applies liberally and lastingly to his own special canvas.

Speaking of art, although the covers on the last two TALES books were good and eye catching, the cover of ANDROID ASSASSINS by Thomas Perkins is simply…wow.  It evokes a comic book like feel, yet has something about it that reminds me of classic pulp covers.  The emotions apparent in the Panda’s face, the grace of the Squirrel’s combat, and even the raw electricity of the androids pop and live on this cover.  Well done, Mr. Perkins.

THE ANDROID ASSASSINS fell slightly short, however, of its two predecessors.  Without saying enough to spoil it, the introduction of and build up of the mystery at the center of the entire plot was a bit clunky.  Taylor’s transitions and exposition, especially in the first half of the book, lacked a touch of the smoothness of execution so evident in the first two entries in the series.  By the middle of the story, however, Taylor was in fine form once more, making the story flow like fine wine.

FOUR OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-Even if it doesn’t quite pass the bar set by Taylor already, this one definitely leans hard on said bar and is one heckuva fun read.   The Panda and Squirrel are old friends to the reader that has followed them through all three books by this point.  And it feels good to read an old friend.

HANCOCK TIPS HIS HAT NORTHWARD ONCE MORE-MORE RED PANDA!

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Book Reviews by Tommy Hancock

TALES OF THE RED PANDA-THE MIND MASTER
By Gregg Taylor
Published by Autogyro
162 pages

I think readers and reviewers alike have certain expectations about the second book in a novel series.  We, because I am one of each, always hope that the book following the debut of a series will at least equal its predecessor in quality, if the debut book was indeed good, yet we are often disappointed, not always greatly so, but usually disappointed that the follow up book just doesn’t quite stand up to what came before it.

Not this time. 

TALES OF THE RED PANDA-THE MIND MASTER is the second in the TALES series from Taylor starring his Decoder Ring Theatre character, The Red Panda, and his unflappable sidekick and chauffeur, the Flying Squirrel.   This book not only adds on what has already been established both via the audio programs and the first novel in the series ,but it pulls back curtains and allows readers sneak peeks into the Panda’s past, letting us know a little bit of what made the man behind the mask the hero we know and cheer today.

Like the first novel, this plot is pretty simple.  A new criminal force has moved into Toronto and has two goals-to charm and work his way into control of the city through the rich and mighty as well as the criminal element; and to find the one individual who may equal his very own mind centered abilities and could be the only person who might stop him.  That person turns out to be The Red Panda!

THE MIND MASTER delivers action, adventure, revelations, and the great banter back and forth between the Panda and the Squirrel, the Panda and the bad guy, the Panda and…everyone else in it that has become a trademark of DRT’s work thus far.  Something that stands out about this book, though, is the villain himself.  Not only does this character stand as a near equal to our hero throughout the novel, but he’s also a good foil, a twisted mirror image of what the Panda might be should he ever make the wrong decisions.  Seeing this sort of confrontation adds a depth to the Panda that makes the conclusion of the book that much more satisfying.   Also, the glimpses into how Panda went from pampered playboy to pulp hero were great trimming around an all in all complete adventure.

FIVE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF HANCOCK’S HAT-Pulpy goodness again.  This stands up alongside its parent book and stands there very well.

‘Spider-Man’: Threat Or Menace?

I have never felt more like I was living in a comic book than I did yesterday, seeing newspaper hawkers in New York pushing papers with these banners. Sadly, none of the newspapers ran with the classic headline, nor did any of them change their name to The Daily Bugle for the occasion.

To recap:

On Monday night, actor/stuntman Christopher Tierney was seriously injured during the performance of Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark
on Broadway when he went off a platform and was not properly tethered, falling 20-30 feet. The New York State Department of Labor, OSHA and Actors’ Equity have gotten involved, as this is the fourth actor injury connected with the show so far.

Tierney is still in serious condition at New York’s Bellevue Hospital. He is
being watched regularly and is reportedly in good spirits. Media reports have reported numerous broken ribs and internal bleeding from the accident, which have required back surgery.

Yesterday’s scheduled matinee and evening performances were both canceled while a variety of safety retests were conducted.

The show, far and away the most expensive in Broadway history at a cost of $65 million, has gotten scrutiny over everything from the cost to the difficult-to-follow storyline. The show is still in previews, and the official opening day has already been pushed back an additional month to work on story problems and to possibly add more songs from Bono and The Edge.

Previews, however, have been selling out, and performances are expected to resume this evening following the implementation of new safety procedures.

As you might expect, Rupert Murdoch, the real life imitation of J. Jonah Jameson, has been all over this story in the New York Post and on the local Fox tv stations.

scooby-doo-curse-of-the-lake-monster-6628404

‘Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster’ Comes to Home Video

scooby-doo-curse-of-the-lake-monster-6628404Scooby-Doo Continues his renaissance thanks to the well-received animated series on the Cartoon Network and his home video exploits also continue to perk along as witnessed by this press release:

BURBANK, CA – (December 21, 2010) – Mystical moonstones, creepy creatures and unlikely romances are on the docket for Mystery Inc. in Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster, an all-new, live action movie featuring an exclusive extended cut of the film with never-before-seen music sequences coming to Blu-Ray™ and DVD March 1, 2011 from Warner Premiere and Cartoon Network. A follow-up to its smash-hit predecessor Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins, Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster will be available from Warner Home Video as a Blu-Ray™ Combo Pack and single disc DVD. Order due date is January 25, 2011. The film will also be available On Demand and for Download.

Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster finds the Mystery Inc. gang heading toward summer jobs at a country club owned by Daphne’s uncle, only to stumble onto strange happenings around the local lake – including an enormous Frog Monster terrorizing the locals.  There’s mystery afoot and romance in the air that only the fearful foursome-plus-one can solve. Group leader Fred, drama queen Daphne, brainiac Velma, fun-loving Shaggy and the cowardly Scooby-Doo are on the case!

Director and producer Brian Levant (Snow Dogs; The Flintstones), producer Brian J. Gilbert (The Deaths of Ian Stone; Wrong Turn) and writers the Altiere Brothers (Daniel and Steven – jkl; Dr. Dolittle: A Tinsel Town Tail; Gym Teacher: The Movie) return from their successful roles at the creative helm of Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins

The Atlas Entertainment/Telvan Productions/Nine/8 Entertainment production also features encore performances from the live action cast of Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins: Robbie Amell (True Jackson, VP) as Fred, Kate Melton (Lucy: A Period Piece) as Daphne, Hayley Kiyoko (Wizards of Waverly Place, Lemonade Mouth) as Velma and Nick Palatas (True Jackson, VP) as Shaggy. Scooby-Doo will appear via computer-generated animation courtesy of Animation Picture Company, and is voiced by veteran artist Frank Welker, a member of the original Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! voice cast.

Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster  also boasts some top line guest stars from throughout the history of entertainment, including Ted McGinley (Married With Children), Richard Moll (Night Court), Nichelle Nichols (Star Trek), and Marion Ross (Happy Days),.

(more…)

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Reviews by Tommy Hancock

TALES OF THE RED PANDA: THE CRIME CABAL
by Gregg Taylor
Published by Autogyro
167 pages

Pulp is such a wonderful field.  It reaches into so many genres, mediums, and individual lives.  And many times those things cross over, in this case mediums.

For those that don’t know, a group of stalwart, brave writers and actors have been hard at work the last few years producing top pulp audio for free out here on the wild, wooly internet.  These Canada based combination of great voices, keen storytelling skills, and overall action and adventure tinged with a bit of hilarity, is known by the nomenclature DECODER RING THEATRE!  The driving force creatively behind DRT is an actor/director/writer by the name of Gregg Taylor.  Gregg has provided DRT with their flagship character, one who screams pulp first by his name and then with your first listen of any of his DRT episodes.  That’s right, Gregg Taylor is the man behind Canada’s greatest mysteryman in the pulp tradition today- THE RED PANDA!

If you’ve ever heard the audio adventures of the Red Panda and his high kickin’, high glidin’ female sidekick, the Flying Squirrel, then you will know that translation from the art of the ear to the art of the eye was only a matter of time.  That time came in 2009 with the release of the first TALES OF THE RED PANDA novel-THE CRIME CABAL!

Let me get the synopsis out of the way first-The Red Panda and The Flying Squirrel have very nearly eliminated the organized crime element in Toronto in the 1930s.   With their last collective breath, the few remaining gangsters decide to cross villain lines of a sort and team up with two supervillains to form a crime cabal that even the Red Panda cannot stand against.  Or so they think….

OK, that’s it, that’s the walnut version of what the book is about.  And that is one of its greatest strengths as a pulp novel.  Its storyline is simple, to the point, and easily explained and understood.  Major points there.  Of course, some would say it sounds like a dozen other pulp tales.  Therein enters the proof that Taylor fills the pudding with.  The unbelievable characterizations that abound in these pages boggle the mind.  The Panda and the Squirrel come to life, both in and out of masks, and jump off the page.  Not only that, but the supporting characters, good and evil, do just what they are meant to-flesh out the story, add color where it is needed, and make this rollicking adventure roll even harder and hit even faster.  Plus, if you’re a fan of the DRT episodes before you read this, a great little ‘first meeting’ of the Panda and one of his best allies is at the center of this tale.

You want fisticuffs?  Snappy repartee?  Gangsters?  Maniacal madpeople?  And a hero who messes with minds, walks on walls, and generally can be where he isn’t when you look there?  Then Gregg Taylor deftly delivers above and beyond with this first of his TALES OF THE RED PANDA books.  Go today and find THE CRIME CABAL and get your pulp on!

FIVE OUT OF FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-This book climbs to that rare pinnacle shared by a few other works as being one of the best executed examples of modern pulp produced today.

Dirk Deppey laid off from The Comics Journal; Journalista! shuts down

Sad to say, Dirk Deppey has been laid off from The Comics Journal, leading to the end of the truly amazing ¡Journalista! His last column was today, and we’re honored to be mentioned.

I can think of no better compliment for his work than acknowledging the number of times I have shamelessly plundered his daily link fest for articles, and he will be badly missed for however long he stays away.

What worries me is what he’ll be doing now. The image at the right is taken straight from the front page of his website, and it links through to the song “Shouldn’t Have Given Him A Gun For Christmas” by Wall Of Voodoo.

Please, can we just leave the mayhem and physical injuries to Broadway?