The Mix : What are people talking about today?

Popularity of Kevin Keller Leads to First Ever Archie Comics Second Printing

Archie Comics’ Kevin Keller– the first openly gay character in Riverdale– has been welcomed enthusiastically by Versace, the New York Times, and fans from every corner of the world. To celebrate the sold out first printing of Kevin Keller’s debut issue, Veronica #202, Archie Comics is going back to the press for a special limited edition variant cover print run.

Already selling for double the cover price on online auction sites like eBay, Kevin Keller’s debut issue has become highly coveted world-wide. The special limited edition variant cover print run of Veronica #202 will feature a remastered and recolored cover.

“We never thought Kevin Keller would become so hot so fast!” exclaimed Archie Comics Co-CEO Jon Goldwater. “It’s been a thrill to see how well people have welcomed Kevin into their lives. His introduction was always just about keeping the world of Archie Comics current and inclusive. It just made sense at the time and we couldn’t be happier to have such widespread and enthusiastic support behind Kevin’s continued presence at Archie Comics!”

Kevin’s limited edition variant cover issue of Veronica #202 will be available through ArchieComics.com and in comic shops beginning October 6th and in limited quantities at the 2010 New York Comic Con taking place October 8-10.

Kevin’s next appearances will take place in Veronica #204 & #205.

The Point Radio: BEING HUMAN U.K. VS U.S??

The Point Radio: BEING HUMAN U.K. VS U.S??


It appears that BEING HUMAN will be the next British show to get an American makeover, but how does the original cast feel about that? And what can they leak about Season 3 which is being filmed right now? Plus your favorite DC Comics set to music?  Does Warner Brothers know?

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MOONSTONE MONDAY-JAMES REASONER, Author and contributor to GREEN HORNET anthology, Moonstone Books

JAMES REASONER, Author and contributor to GREEN HORNET anthology, Moonstone Books

AP: Tell us a little about yourself and your pulp interests.

JAMES: I was born and raised in a small town in Texas and still live near that same town. I’ve always been an avid reader and have been making up stories for as long as I can remember. My introduction to the pulps came when I picked up a copy of the Doc Savage novel METEOR MENACE from the paperback spinner rack in one of the local drugstores when it was new. Shortly after that I found copies of THE MAN OF BRONZE and THE THOUSAND-HEADED MAN and devoured them just as eagerly. I had read other things that first appeared in the pulps, most notably books by Edgar Rice Burroughs and Max Brand, but I wasn’t really aware of their origins at that point. Along about the same time I found a copy of an actual pulp in a used bookstore, a 1931 issue of DETECTIVE FICTION WEEKLY, and then I picked up a paperback edited by Ron Goulart called THE HARDBOILED DICKS, which reprinted stories from BLACK MASK, DIME DETECTIVE, etc. I started reading the Jim Hatfield Western novels in paperback, which were reprinted from the pulp TEXAS RANGERS. From all of those things that happened in the mid-Sixties, my interest in the pulps just grew and grew. I bought everything from them that was reprinted in paperback, which was a lot in those days.

AP: Just how many books have you written anyway? No, seriously. I lost count. Ha. Ha.

JAMES: The book I’m working on is #256. That includes one non-fiction book about Old West gunfights, and the rest are novels. I started out thinking that if I wrote a hundred books in my career, that would be pretty good. I’ve had to keep revising that number upwards until I don’t worry about such things anymore. I’ll write however many I write.

AP: Your books have spanned multiple genres including westerns, the Civil War, World War II, mystery, frontier times, pulp adventure, and more. Do you have a favorite genre to write?

JAMES: I started out to be a mystery writer and had in fact written and sold more than a million words of mystery fiction before I ever wrote a Western. So mysteries are my first love, but I’ve been very lucky in that I’ve found things to enjoy in everything I’ve written. I love the variety and I’m grateful that I get the chance to switch back and forth between genres.

AP: Is there a genre you’ve not written that you would like to at some point?

JAMES: Not really, but I’ve done very little science fiction, fantasy, and horror and would love to write more in those genres. Plus I really enjoyed the three World War II novels I did and would like to get back to that sometime.

AP: There seem to be many different opinions about what can be defined as pulp. How do you define pulp and what do you look for in a pulp story as a writer and a reader?

JAMES: As far as calling something pulp fiction, I’m sort of a purist and like to limit that definition to stories that actually appeared in pulp magazines, although I think you can fudge a little in the case of pulps that became digests, like ASTOUNDING and WESTERN STORY. And certainly the digest-sized issues of DOC SAVAGE and THE SHADOW are still pulps. Now, as for pulp-inspired fiction or pulp-influenced fiction, that category is much, much wider. A number of contemporary adventure novelists have acknowledged the influence that pulp fiction had on their work, like James Rollins saying that he has all the Bantam editions of the Doc Savage novels in his office. My Gabriel Hunt novel, HUNT AT THE WELL OF ETERNITY, has a strong Doc Savage influence in it, and some of my Westerns were directly inspired by the pulps, such as the Cody’s Law series that I wrote under the name Matthew S. Hart. Those are Texas Ranger novels and are very much an homage to the Jim Hatfield series. As both a writer and a reader, the things that appeal to me about the pulps are the fast pacing, the colorful settings and characters, and the sense of adventure and fun that they convey. Pulp stories were written to entertain the readers, and that’s always been my primary goal as well.

AP: Where can readers find information on you and your books?
JAMES: My websites can be found at www.jamesreasoner.com and www.jamesreasoner.net. Both include bibliographies that list many of my books. For more current happenings, my blog is located at http://jamesreasoner.blogspot.com and is updated almost every day with book and movie reviews and links that interest me, along with news about my writing career.

AP: What upcoming projects do you have coming up that you can tell us about at this time?

JAMES: I have a story in the Green Hornet anthology that will be out from Moonstone any time now, and it was great fun to write. Other anthologies coming out soon that include stories by me are BEAT TO A PULP, ROUND ONE (a World War II story), ON DANGEROUS GROUND (a Western noir yarn), and DAMN NEAR DEAD 2 (“geezer noir”, I guess you’d call it, in my case a Depression-era suspense tale). I’ve done the introduction for NOMAD’S TRAIL, a collection of Simon Bolivar Grimes stories by E. Hoffmann Price which will be out soon from Black Dog Books. I’ll be writing one of the books in the RANCHO DIABLO ebook series under the house-name Colby Jackson, which should be out before the end of the year. Next spring Berkley Books will publish my Western novel REDEMPTION, KANSAS, the first in a new series.

AP: Do you have any shows, signings, or conventions coming up where your fans can meet you?

JAMES: I plan to be at Cross Plains, Texas, next summer for the annual Robert E. Howard Days get-together. I’m a long-time fan of Howard’s work and try to make it to Cross Plains most years. I don’t have anything else planned at the moment. I tend not to get very far from home because my writing schedule is so busy.

AP: And finally, what does James Reasoner do when he’s not writing?

JAMES: I’m still an avid reader after all these years and probably will be as long as I’m around. My reading is about equally divided between older and current (or at least newer) books, and I blog about most of what I read. I watch quite a few movies and probably too much TV. We live in the country, so I like to get out and walk whenever I can find the time. With my schedule, though (a million-plus words a year of fiction for going on six years straight now), most of my time is spent in my office.

AP: Thanks, James. Much appreciated.

JAMES: Thanks for having me here at All Pulp!

_____________________________________
Fan-Made ‘Walking Dead’ Opening Credits Are Scary-Good

Fan-Made ‘Walking Dead’ Opening Credits Are Scary-Good

Daniel M. Kanemoto is an award winning writer/director whose diverse body of work
(from feature films to national commercial campaigns) has been featured
on television channels and film festivals around
the world.  After attending this year’s Comic-Con and being taken by Drew Struzan’s “Walking Dead” poster for the series, he was inspired to animate a spec version of the opening credits, using the original art straight from the comics by illustrators Charlie Adlard and Tony Moore.  What he completed is an amazing professional opening credits sequence that should, quite honestly, replace whatever AMC has planned for their sequence.  And while this is utterly and completely a fan-made work, it has already garnered the attention of Tony Moore who said on the Vimeo page featuring the work “this seriously blows my mind. i’ve scarcely seen
my artwork brought to life like this, and never with such style.”  Check it out for yourself, and if Robert Kirkman or Frank Darabont get wind of this…see if you guys can pull some strings to get this on the show when it airs Halloween Night at 10pm EST.  Or at least hire this guy.  Oh, and the choice of “Fresh Blood” by Eels is FANTASTIC.

THE WALKING DEAD “Opening Titles” from Daniel Kanemoto on Vimeo.

MOONSTONE MONDAY-ALL PULP INTERVIEWS PULP HISTORIAN WILL MURRAY!!!

AP:  Will, ALL PULP really appreciates this opportunity to visit with you.  Let’s pretend that there are people reading this who know little to nothing about pulps and don’t know who you are.  Give us some personal and professional background on Will Murray.

WM: I am this lost soul who stumbled into the world of The Shadow, Doc Savage and the pulps and never found my way back to my True Path. Consequently I am the author of over 50 novels, most featuring the indomitable Remo Williams and Chiun. A smattering star Doc Savage and his merry misfits, The Executioner, and others. Somehow, through diligent research and omnivoracious reading of pulps, I am became an expert on All Things Pulp.

AP:  This interview is a part of our MOONSTONE MONDAY.  What specifically have you written/are you writing for Moonstone?

WM: I’ve contributed to many of the Moonstone hero anthologies of the last few years. Right now, I’m trying to finish my third Spider prose story, “Clutch of the Blue Reaper,” for Spider Chronicles Vol. 2. It’s my favorite so far, being full of frenetic Norvell Page-style hyper-action in which for a change Nita van Sloan ends up in slammer, charged with being the infamous Spider!

Also on the horizon, I’m pleased that my Green Hornet tale, “The Night Car,” leads off The Green Hornet Chronicles Vol 1. I tried to write it exactly like an episode of the ’66 TV show, and it appears that I pulled it off. What happens when a computer whiz designs a program which will track the Black Beauty back to its lair?

I came up with a really wild premise for my contribution to Avenger Chronicles Vol. 2. Originally, the character of Smitty was a Black guy. What if, I thought, a Black Smitty shows up at Justice Inc. HQ, acting like he’s the real deal? Then what if he WAS the real deal? I called that dark tale “The Changeling.”

There’s a Sherlock Holmes story scheduled for in a Holmes crossover anthology. Rather than team him up with another fictional character, I matched him with Colonel Richard Henry Savage, the real-life inspiration Doc and The Avenger. Savage was so larger than life that he plays well as an semi-fictitious person. That’s “The Adventure of the Imaginary Nihilist.” It’s based on a true event in Savage’s remarkable life.

My first Secret 6 story, “The Meteor Men” will reintroduce Robert J. Hogan’s intrepid band of adventurers as they plunge into a maelstrom of horror which results after a green meteorite crashes near their Long Island headquarters and suddenly the surrounding towns are filled with green-eye Zombies shooting death beams from their unblinking eyes. For the sequel, it will be up to the Canadian border for an old-fashioned Wendigo hunt. After that, Mole Men start pouring out of caves and cracks in the Earth. Life is never dull for the wanted fugitives who call themselves the Secret 6!

AP:  You are closely associated with Doc Savage and the Lester Dent estate.  Can you share a little background on “Doc Savage: The Lost Radio Scripts of Lester Dent” recently published by Moonstone.  Many pulp fans may not be aware of scripts actually written by Dent.  How were they ‘lost’, were they ever recorded, could you just share a bit about this project?

WM: Doc creator Lester Dent scripted back in 1934 26 episodes of a syndicated Doc radio show. No recordings survive, but I have the scripts. We put them all together, including some unproduced scripts, like the one adapting The Man of Bronze, in a nice fat illustrated book of Doc Savage tales that never made it into the pulp magazine. It’s a must-have for all Doc fans. I’m really proud of it.

AP:  It was announced sometime back that you would be working on new Doc Savage novels? Can you discuss anything about where you are in terms of that project currently?

WM: I’m talking to two publishers right now. The reintroductory novel, The Desert Demons, is finished. Joe DeVito has painted a magnificent cover, using a 1960s photo of model Steve Holland as Doc. Horror in Gold is drafted and Joe is working on that cover. Five other Docs are in various stages of construction. It’s only a matter of landing a deal that works for everyone. Stay tuned.

AP:  Although Doc is tied to your name quite tightly, you are also noted as an overall Pulp Historian as well as a writer.  You’ve written stories for Moonstone centering around two other pulpy type characters that never actually appeared in the pulps: The Phantom and The
Green Hornet.  What about heroic characters in masks appeals to the prose writer in you?

WM: If you are what you eat, you become what you read as a kid. I was always a fan of comic book superheroes and similar supermen. So I naturally gravitated to their literary ancestors, the pulp heroes. Writing about ordinary people bores me, I guess, because I’m not very ordinary. So out of my imagination have come novels and stories starring characters ranging from The Destroyer to Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD. It’s a living. I’m not sure the mask is key, since Doc Savage is my favorite character. But I do like mystery men. They never disappoint.

AP:  In no way are you sexist when it comes to pulp.  You are the creative force behind HONEY WEST, a revival of a character, yet again for Moonstone.  Who is the ‘historical’ Honey West?

WM: Honey was a hot LA private eye back in the 50s and 60s, and the star of a series of top-selling paperback originals by the husband and wife team who called themselves G. G. Fickling—the true creative force behind Honey. She had her own TV show which I watched faithfully back in ’65. When Joe Gentile offered me a menu of characters to write, I skipped over favorites like The Spider to do Honey, Why? Well, I had written the first new Honey West story in almost 40 years for Moonstone’s planned Honey West Chronicles, and it just wrote itself. That fact that they are told in the first person meant that I could do a better job in the short story length than say, Operator #5, another favorite of mine.

I agreed to pen 3 prose stories and 3 comics scripts per year. I had done one of each, and out came the HW comic book by Trina Robbins! So I don’t know where my stuff stands at the moment. But I will resume writing them once Joe figures it all out. I have plotted ‘em all, btw.

AP:  Now that we know where Honey West came from, where do you plan to take her now that you’re writing her adventures? 

WM: Well, I’d like to take her out to dinner. But Moonstone’s license prohibits fraternization between writers and characters. J Since I’m setting these new stories back in her heyday and they are petty lean, my sole focus is in getting her right and keeping her real. If the series goes anywhere, it will be because Honey is leading me. J Stories written so far are “Cat’s-Paw in Heat,” “Seer Suckers,” and “Tapestry in Teal.”

AP:  The term ‘pulp historian’ is associated often with your name.  This may seem like a silly question, but what do you do as a ‘pulp historian’?

WM: Over the years, this has covered activities such as interviewing survivors of the pulp era to get their stories, and reading through decades of old magazines like Writer’s Digest and Author & Journalist to ferret out cool pulp lore. All of this is poured into articles for the Sanctum Books’ Doc and Shadow reprints, not to mention introductions to volumes like Altus Press’ massive Norvell Page collection, When the Death-Bat Flies, just about out. I’ve written about 30 intros for Altus, Black Dog Books and Off-Trail Books in the fast three or four years. I’m a busy historian.

AP:  Why is pulp relevant at all?  I’m not asking in terms of time periods, really, just overall.  Why is pulp relevant?

WM: Pulp is relevant because entertainment is always relevant. Prose styles, means of delivery, types of heroes and their opposite numbers may change with each half-decade, but pulp stories and pulp heroes will always be with us. Always. Check back in a 100 years and you’ll find I am correct.

AP:  You have been involved with multiple pulp characters.  Are there any you haven’t worked with/researched enough/been involved with in some way that are on your to do list?

WM: I suppose The Shadow is the top one. But with so many unreprinted Walter Gibson Shadow novels, why bother? Still, it’s my dream to write an authentic Doc Savage-Shadow crossover novel. Maybe some day….. I once plotted a Bill Barnes novelette with original author Chuck Verral. I’d love to write that one. A Spider novel would be fun too.

AP:  There seems to be two camps when it comes to writing new adventures of established characters.  One camp feels that new adventures should simply continue on in the tradition of the original tales, preserving feel, characters, time period, etc.  The other camp, although not throwing the entire baby out with the bath water, feels that new adventures of old characters need to be modernized, made different to give them extra whatever.  As a writer, where do you fall in this discussion and why?

WM: People read certain characters—Sherlock Holmes, Doc Savage and The Shadow to name three—because they want to be taken back to the specific time period of those heroes. Other characters like Superman, Batman and James Bond have been around continuously for so long that they have naturally evolved with the times. So both approaches can work, depending on the hero. As a writer, it interests me most to step into the shoes of a dead writer and write his hero as closely to the way he would have done it as possible. It’s a bigger, better challenge. A Will Murray Doc Savage mav or may not be interesting in itself, but a Will Murray-Lester Dent Doc collaboration is, I hope, the best of both worlds. Some day I may stumble upon a vintage hero who begs to be updated. Hasn’t happened yet.

With Secret 6, I hew straight to the original stories in their time. The series didn’t last very long, so I thought I would see where it might go in its own era. You could update them, but I suspect Joe asked me to write this series because it was a weird analogue to Doc Savage. And why waste Will Murray on an update? Anybody could write that.

About Honey West, I feel the same say. She’s an expression of her time. I had never read any of the original novels, but I did for this project and I was delighted to discover that she has the same voice as Anne Francis. Another reason the stories write themselves.

When I did the Phantom, I jumped around. But the most recent version was set in the 30s—even though he’s the same Phantom sitting on the Skull Throne today.

Having written a 60s Green Hornet, I’m planning to tackle the radio version in a story I’m calling “The Black Torpedo.”

AP:  Any upcoming projects you haven’t discussed that you care to share with the readers?

WM: Yes, I can officially announce for the first time, the October 1 release on CD and in downloadable formats the 25th anniversary rerelease of Roger Rittner’s Adventures of Doc Savage radio show from 1985. Roger has remastered the series, which adapts Fear Cay and The Thousand-Headed Man, along with a Bob Larkin cover and a new audio documentary on the making of this now-classic series.
Doc Savage is rarely done right. This is one time we got it right. I say, “we” since I scripted Thousand-Headed Man. Check out Radioarchives.com for ordering info.

Beyond that, I have a lot of Cthulhu stories coming up in various anthologies like Mythos Books’ Cthulhu 2012 and others yet untitled. Watch for them.

AP:  Thank you again so much for your time on this MOONSTONE MONDAY!

WM: It’s been real. Real pulpy. J
                                                                ________________________________________

AND MEANWHILE, OUR HERO…-Pulp Character Spotlights

Ever feel like you don’t know enough about the pulp heroes and characters you love?  Maybe you don’t even know some of the best characters at all?  Well, ALL PULP is kicking off its effort to make sure that your lack of education is never our fault!  This column, appearing once to twice weekly, will turn attention to a particular  character, providing images as well as answers by the creators/handlers of said character or maybe , even sometimes by the characters themselves…hmmm… and to kick off this fantastic endeavor, it is time you met author Barry Reese’s

1. The Rook’s secret identity is…? 
      The Rook is actually Max Davies, a wealthy philanthropist who moved from Boston to Atlanta in 1935. He is active in a number of charities and still retains some ownership in various newspapers founded by his father, Warren Davies
      2. In five sentences or less, The Rook’s origin is…?
Max’s father was a crusader who used his newspapers to rail against corruption in local government. This made him a target for criminals, who eventually executed him in front of his eight-year-old son. Warren returned from the grave to haunt Max, sending him visions of crimes that were yet to occur. Driven to stop these crimes from happening, Max traveled the world as a youth, mastering all known forms of combat and a number of scientific disciplines. As The Rook, he’s had a love/hate relationship with his father’s ghost, whom he feels has manipulated him into becoming a living weapon of Warren’s vengeance.
3.  The Rook’s first appearance was…?
The Rook first appeared in a story titled “Lucifer’s Cage.” This was originally published in a limited edition but was eventually reprinted in The Rook Volume One, published by Wild Cat Books.
 4.  The Rook’s most recent appearance was…?
The Rook Volume Five was just released in the last week and features four stories: The Diabolical Mr. Dee, A Plague of Wicked Men, The Devil’s Spear and The Ivory Machine.
 5.  The 5 most important people in the Rook’s life are…?
The Rook has many allies in his war on crime but the most important are: Evelyn Gould Davies, his wife and confidante; Will McKenzie, Atlanta’s police chief and a frequent adventuring companion of The Rook; Leonid Kazlov, the Russian superman who has joined The Rook on numerous death-defying exploits; Warren Davies, Max’s ghostly advisor and mentor – Warren has apparently been removed from the scene for good on several occasions but always manages to return; and Max’s two children (William & Emma).
 6.  The 3 top villains the Rook has faced are…?
The Rook has appeared in nearly thirty stories to this point so he’s faced quite a few dastardly types but the worst of the lost have been The Warlike Manchu and Doctor Satan. The Warlike Manchu is an Oriental mastermind who was also once The Rook’s sensei. After revealing the depths of his evil to The Rook, The Warlike Manchu offered the hero a chance to rule his empire at his side. Max refused and the two have been bitter enemies ever since. Doctor Satan, the classic pulp villain, first bedeviled The Rook in The Bleeding Hells but he’s returned multiple times since then.
7.  The Rook likes…?
His wife, gala balls held at his old plantation home outside Atlanta and quiet Saturdays with the kids.
 8.  The Rook dislikes…?
Villains who want to rule the world; the Cthulhu Mythos and people who don’t know the difference between you’re and your. Okay, that last one is really me but I don’t think The Rook cares for it, either.
 9. Existing characters the Rook has met/had a crossover with include…?
Tons. Over the course of The Rook Chronicles, he’s teamed up with: The Black Bat, Ascott Keane, Frankenstein’s Monster, The Black Terror & Tim, Miss Masque, The Flame, Ki-Gor, Sherlock Holmes, The Green Lama and The Domino Lady.
10.  The Rook’s greatest fear is…?
That one of his enemies will strike at his family.
 11.  The Rook’s favorite food is…?
Max is basically a steak and potatoes kind of guy but he did spend several years in Paris, so he has a fondness for French cuisine, as well.
 12.  If the Rook couldn’t be there to save the day, the person he’d pick to take his place is…?
Leonid Kaslov
 13. Free-for-all-Say anything, in ten sentences or less, you want about your character.  That would be…?
The Rook is an homage to all my favorite adventure heroes – take a little bit of Doc Savage, sprinkle in some Shadow, toss liberally with Indiana Jones with a dash of Batman and Nexus… and you have The Rook. I’ve completed a novel where The Rook crosses paths with the Nazi Doc Savage, Sun Koh and that should appear sometime in 2011. Down the road, I also have plans for The Rook to team up with my Sovereign City Project hero, Lazarus Gray.
 14. Links for more of the Rook include…?
You can find a timeline of his adventures at my official website: http://www.barryreese.net Be warned, though – the timeline contains spoilers!

MOONSTONE MONDAY IS COMING!!!

AND IN HONOR OF THAT,  AN EXCELLENT PIECE OF ART FROM ROB DAVIS (AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTIONS) DEPICTING ONE OF MOONSTONE’S PULP ICONS, THE SPIDER!!!  Gander upon this and get ready for MOONSTONE MONDAY!

BEHIND THE PEN & MASK by Sarge Portera

An Introduction

When Bob Blesco, a close FB friend of mine, saw my ALL PULP 7 snapshot he instantly spotted my full Windsor knot! That’s what I call observant!! I don’t like doing anything half-way & although we live in the Deep Fried South I consider my neckties to be Florida scarves that ward off chilly weather!!! Truth is I’d feel naked without a necktie. Just ask my wonderful wife, Marci, or our daughter.

When Tommy Hancock introduced my “Weapons of Choice” column he explained how I speak in “living pulp’ on my FaceBook pages!

When I was asked to describe myself at ALL PULP I explained that “with me darlin’ daughter’s able assist” we’ve created & maintained 5 pulp-related FB Groups that I’d like to briefly describe  in this column’s 1st outing so that you have a better idea of who is BEHIND THE PEN & MASK!

BRONZE PASTICHES

A pastiche is usually an imitation of a copyrighted character, which would include noncanonical exploits of a character not sanctioned by the copyright holder.

Most of the “Doc Savage” 181 published adventures from 1933 to 1949 were written by Lester Dent under the house name of Kenneth Robeson. Will Murray successfully wrote seven more using remaining notes and outlines left by Lester Dent. In 1973 Philip Jose Farmer wrote “Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life” and in 1991 he wrote a prequel to “The Man of Bronze.” The Farmer and Murray publications were authorized by the copyright holder, Conde Nast. It is the hope of this group to learn more about the high adventure heroes who follow in Doc Savage’s footsteps!

It’s on this FB Group that I have around 50 ongoing Discussion Boards dedicated to the growing number of fictional characters inspired by the Man of Bronze.

PURPLE PROSE PULP PARADE

PURPLE PROSE PULP PARADE FB Group is dedicated to the preservation & promotion of high adventure, potboilers, pulps & purple prose as a legitimate literary genre!

It’s here that we invite reviews of pulps, pulp authors’ bibliographies and host an on-going & open-ended pulp adventure entitled “The Purple Rose of Pulpdom!”

Any & all pulp writers are invited to post their own bibliography on a Discussion Board of their making &/or add a paragraph or a page to “The Purple Rose of Pulpdom.”

Pulp Artists are encouraged to join the growing ranks of the Royal Mounted Artists of Pulpdom (RMAP) and post their pulp art, too!

SERGEANT PRESTON OF THE YUKON FAN CLUB

This FB Group is dedicated to all the Mounties in the Movies and most especially to Dick Simmons and his convincingly compelling portrayal of “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon ” on CBS TV in the fifties!

SERGEANT PRESTON OF THE YUKON FAN CLUB was co-created by my daughter & myself when we challenged one another to a rollicking day long round of Yukon Challenge on the internet!

“Sergeant Preston of the Yukon ” ran from September 25th, 1955, to September 29th, 1958, on CBS TV. “Sergeant Preston of the Yukon ” Week is a 5-day countdown from the show’s last episode (9/29/58) to its eventful launch date (9/29/55)! How are you commemorating this moment in television history?

SILHOUETTE PASTICHES

Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The answer may be known by more than “The Shadow!” Although, the Shadow’s voice haunted the airwaves and Walter Gibson’s stories graced the news stands this spectral detective wasn’t alone in his battle against darkness!! SILHOUETTE PASTICHES FB Group is dedicated to exploring the fictional lives of the masked detectives that walk in the shadow of the pulp hero who could cloud men’s’ minds!!!

It’s in SILHOUETTE PASTICHES, which was created by my daughter, Alanna, that group members discuss Shadowy calling cards, Shadowy epithets, Shadowy locales, Shadowy miniatures, Shadowy proclamations, Shadowy publishers, Obscure Shadows and Shadoweapons!

WORLDS OF DOC DIAMOND

WORLDS OF DOC DIAMOND is another FB Group creation of my daughter, Alanna. Just read her description below and you’ll see why we want ta keep this pulp hero in the family!

“My grandfather, Albert, and my great grandfather, August, created an adventure hero back in the late forties. They named him Doc Diamond and copyrighted him under the name of A.J. Portera which is my name, too! Doc Diamond’s mysteries were published by their little Christian publishing house, The Olive Press. The purpose of this FaceBook Group is to relive the adventures & mysteries of yesteryears’ action hero, Justus Diamond!”

THAT’S ALL FOLKS! ALL PULP, that is!

I hope the above 5 FB Group summaries give you a better insight behind the pen & mask of 1 of the bespectacled ALL PULP 7!

BEHIND THE PEN & MASK is my ALL PULP column that will look up & into the lives of the many pulp writers who wrote under a house name & pseudonym. My hope is to shed some light on those who have contributed to pulp literature & popular culture over the years. I also hope to learn the where-abouts of pulp writers who have went missing in recent years & will rely on our readership’s able assistance! Does Lance Curry, Steve Mitchell or Thomas Victor Powers ring a bell?

PORTERA’S P.O.P. QUIZ CENTRAL: PULP WRITERS


Did you break out in a cold sweat every time a teacher hollered, “Pop Quiz!” I know I did! My hope is that these P.O.P. QUIZ CENTRAL “tests” and their results are more insightful than the quizzes, tests and exams you’ve been coerced into taking over the years. Tests are designed not only to assess the progress of the pupil but the teacher, too! Now let’s test the waters over your preferences of pulp writers and pulp genres. What do you prefer freshwater fishing or saltwater fishing?
(Remember, to circle only one name per line. I believe you’ll see a pattern right away.)
1.        Jules Verne or Edgar Allen Poe?
2.        L. Frank Baum or Arthur Conan Doyle?
3.        H.G. Wells or Rex Stout?
4.        Edgra Rice Burroughs or Michael Avallone?
5.        Ottis Adelbert Kline or Gayle Lynds?
6.        Philip Wylie or Lester Dent?
7.        Edmund Hamilton or Walter Gibson?
8.        Andre Norton or Paul Ernst?
9.        Richard Shaver or Richard Prather?
10.     Robert Heinlien or Erle Stanley Gardner ?
11.     Arthur C. Clarke or Dashiel Hammet?
12.     Henry Kuttner or Emile Tepperman?
13.     Harlan Ellison or Stuart Woods?
14.     Ray Bradbury or Sax Roehmer?
15.     Leigh Brackett or Agatha Christie?
16.     Philip K. Dick or Mickey Spillane?
17.     Piers Anthony or Ellery Queen?
18.     Michael Moorcock or William Patrick Maynard?
19.     Jack Chalker or Calvin Daniels?
20.     Tim Salber or Martin Powell?
21.     Ray Cummings or Lee Falk?
22.     Isaac Asimov or Norvell Page?
23.     Thomas Disch or Raymond Chandler?
24.     H. Beam Piper or Ian Fleming?
25.     E.E. “Doc” Smith or Robert E. Howard?
26.     Gardner Fox or Heather Graham?
27.     Clark Ashton Smith or Ross Macdonald?
28.     Theodore Sturgeon or Joseph Tringali?
29.     Jack Vance or Dennis Lynds?
30.     Mark Ellis or Will Murray?
Now that was easy, wasn’t it? How long did it take you to find the rather obvious pattern? All the writers that wrote mostly science fiction were on the left while those on the right are best known as mystery writers. So what were your results? Do like science fiction or prefer a good who-done-it?  Maybe you like both! Of course, there’s the chance you found yourself acknowledging the writers you’re familiar with. At the least, you’re left with a list of authors whose books you can now be on the look out for?

MEMBER OF ALL PULP’S SPECTACLED SEVEN TALKS PULP ON COMIC PODCAST!


Comic Related, a popular and well known comic information website headed up by Chuck Moore, announced the debut of the latest episode of one of its podcasts, ZONE 4, on 9/24/10.   ALL PULP will let the blurb from Comic Related speak for itself-

In this episode:
Brant, Cary, and Chuck K. are back once again, this time joined by comic and pulp legend, and fellow Comic Related family member, Mr. Ron Fortier as we tackle all things pulp, and veer off into discussions about various movies and more. We bring sexy back with a nearly 2-hour episode for your listening pleasure! 
Ron indeed discussed pulp on this episode, including Moonstone Books’ RETURN OF THE ORIGINALS line of comics, ALL PULP, Pro Se Productions, Airship 27, Altus Press, Windy City Con, Pulp Fest, Pulp Ark, and tons of other things!!!  Want to listen…then go ahead and click already-