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Interview with Sun Koh Author and Book Cave Co Host, ART SIPPO!!!

ART SIPPO, Writer/Podcaster

AP: Art, thanks for stopping by ALL PULP to visit with us about you and your adventures as a pulp fan, writer, and podcaster. First, though, give us some insight into who Art Sippo is.

AS: I am 15 years old with 42 years experience.

I started reading comics in 1958 shortly after I learned to read. By the time I was 10 years old, I found the plots in comics too fantastic and longed for something more realistic. My Aunt Helen introduced me to Doc Savage in the Bantam reprints on a bus trip to Florida in 1965 and I was hooked. I later went to Xavier Military Institute in Manhattan for High School in the late 1960s. It was there where I developed my love for books and for the pulp genre of literature. I attended St. Peter’s College in Jersey City, NJ and graduated Magna cum Laude with a Bachelor’s of science in Chemistry in 1974. On Military scholarship, I went to Vanderbilt University Medical School and after graduation in 1978, I was an Intern at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington DC. I spent three years as a Flight Surgeon with the 101st Airborne division before entering an Aerospace Medicine residency. I received a Masters in Public Health form Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health in 1982 and completed training at the School of Aerospace Medicine, Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio Texas. I got Board Certified in Aerospace Medicine in 1984. For three years, I was a medical researcher at the US Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory and eventually became the Director of the Biodynamics Research Division there. I next spent three years as an exchange officer in England at the RAF Institute of Aviation Medicine in Farnborough, Hampshire. I married my lovely wife Katherine in 1987 and we took off to England to start our family.

In 1990, I returned to civilian life but remained in the National Guard. I was a partner in the Occupational Care Consultants of Toledo and was Board Certified in Occupational Medicine in 1994. In the Guard I eventually commanded the 145th MASH Hospital at Camp Perry, OH. In 1995, I was appointed the Assistant State Surgeon.

For 36 years I wore the uniform of the US Army until I retired in 2000 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. I currently work full time in the Emergency Room at the John Cochran VA Medical Center in St. Louis Missouri.

I have had a lot of adventures along the way. I had been on assignment in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean. I even was one of the physicians trained for rescue and egress for the Space Shuttle program and worked 2 launches in 1985.

All during that time I was an avid reader of adventure fiction and more serious topics in science, religion, and philosophy. I think all of these experiences developed a deep regard for the concept of the hero.

The single defining moment in recent times occurred in September of 2003 when a lumbar disc in my spine ruptured and crushed my spinal cord leading to paralysis and numbness below the waist. I had an emergency decompression done, but I still have lost function and sensation in my legs. It took me three months to learn to walk again, but at the end of that time, I went back to work in the ER. During my down time I began writing stories and they helped to keep me sane during a very frightening time.
Kathy and I have been married for 24 wonderful years. We have two girls and one boy all of college age and we are currently raising Kathy’s teenaged granddaughter.

AP: You’re a pulp writer. What have you written and published that falls within the pulp field?

AS: I have published several stories in the last 7 years that would count as pulp stories.

I have written 3 stories in what I call my “Loki Companions” series which has been published in the Zine of Bronze #3, #4, & #5. These are about a group of six men (who may be familiar to pulp fans) during their service in World War I. His Last Hand is about a poker game at the Moulin Rouge in Paris as the six companions prepared to return to the United States after the Armistice. It is really a character study with a twist at the end based on a little known fact. Long Tom Robber relates the true story what really happened when a certain electrical genius used an antique cannon to thwart a German advance during that same war. Andy and Ted’s Excellent Adventure is about the friendship that developed between two very different American soldiers serving with the French Foreign Legion and how the practical jokes they played on each other changed their friendship.

I also wrote a short story for the collection Two Fisted Tales of LaPlata, Missouri that was entitled The Supreme Adventurer. It is a fantasy about a young Lester Dent growing up in LaPlata that shows how his experiences there may have contributed to the creation of Doc Savage.

I also have written 5 short stories about the German pulp character, Sun Koh who was the Aryan equivalent of Doc Savage. Three of these were originally published in Professor Stone Magazine # 1 and #2, and Thrilling Adventures #140. These have all been collected in a single volume Sun Koh: Heir of Atlantis, Vol. 1.

I had another short story in the Glimmerglass Writer’s Annual entitled Destiny or Choice: Shall Any Valiant Act Gainsay Extinction. It is about a child genius who confronts a great evil during a Archaeology convention in St. Louis in 1908.

My latest pulp story is The Perils of Patricia which in the Zine of Bronze #7 & #8. It is an adventure of a certain bronze-haired spa owner whose famous cousin is a well known world-wide troubleshooter.

All of my stories have homages to other action characters and some pulp crossovers. Some even have references to some of my own characters I haven’t yet written about.

AP: A project you undertook and have completed one volume on and are working
on the second for concerns a character of some controversy. Before we discuss that, share with our audience who the character Sun Koh is historically.
 
AS: Sun Koh; Heir of Atlantis! Sun Koh was a character created by Paul Mueller for Germany’s pulp magazines who was based on Doc Savage. He was intended to be the Nietzschean Übermensch. He was an Aryan prince from ancient Atlantis who came to the future and descended out of the sky to land in London. He had come to prepare for the coming of the next Ice Age when Atlantis would rise gain from the ocean. He would save all those who were fit to survive and use them to repopulate the lost continent. Of course, those he considered to be most fit were of Aryan/German extraction according to the theories of the Theosophists whose mythology had been taken over by the Nazis.

Sun Koh went to Germany and collected around him a colorful group of aides that included science detective Jan Mayen, buckskin wearing Alaska Jim Hoover, WWI veteran Sturmvögel, and an Afro-American Boxer James “Nimba” Holigan. Sun Kho became to Germans what Doc Savage was to Americans.

Between 1933 and 1938 there were 150 Sun Koh stories published. Sun Koh epitomized the Aryan ideal and fought all sorts of villains and super-science threats very similar to those from the Doc Savage stories.

Strangely enough, the Nazis found these stories frivolous and in some cases subversive. Nazi censors made Mueller kill off Nimba because it was unseemly for an Aryan hero to have a black associate.
Eventually they forced the series to end and Mueller had Sun Koh discover and conquer the newly risen Atlantis inside the Hollow Earth in 1938. That brought an end to the series.

The Sun Koh stories were full of adventure imagination and racial slurs. Expurgated versions were republished after WWII at least 3 times. Currently the original versions with annotations are being printed in Germany.

Sun Koh was the most successful of all the Doc Savage clones (if we exclude the comic characters like Superman and Batman). I was fascinated by the idea of such a character having so many adventures in a language that I could not read. I became frustrated and decided to write my own stories about Sun Koh preserving as much of the original adventure ideas as possible and excluding all the Nazi nonsense.

AP: Now, to the controversy. Have you had anyone complain or attack your direction with the character, that being your decision to write about a character who many identify with a Germany many would like to forget?

AS: Well, Jess Nevins who is a world-wide pulp expert was appalled that I was resurrecting the Sun Koh character whom he considered to be a poster child for Nazi ideology. My publisher for the Sun Koh series is Wayne Judge from Age of Adventure. He has had problems finding artists to do illustrations and covers for the Sun Koh stories because of the character’s roots.

I find it kind of funny to have such an edgy character. I am a very conventional person and I have no love for the Nazis and their dysfunction system of hatred. I like the noir ambience that you can get with this setting. It gives you a truly heroic character seen from a different perspective which raises ambivalence in the reader. It is the same experience you get while watching movies like The Usual Suspects, LA Confidential, and Payback.

It also gives me a chance to do a dark kind of Doc Savage-like character and explore what it would have been like to be a real superman in a culture that allegedly revered such beings. As my Sun Koh has been finding out, the dreams of the German leadership were delusory and did not match up to his own standards.

AP: What are your plans for Sun Koh? Will you redeem him and if you do, what then?

 
AS: Sun Koh was never part of the Nazi war effort. He was long gone before the invasion of Poland. I am intending to show how a true superman would not remain deceived by Hitler and his cronies for very long. It would soon become apparent to him that the Nazi were degenerates. I envision Sun Koh being part of the conspiracy in the Wehrmacht before Neville Chamberlain signed the pact with Hitler allowing the occupation of the Sudetenland. Had Chamberlain stood up to Hitler, the planned coup would have toppled the Nazis and Word War II might have been avoided. It will have been Sun Koh’s involvement in this conspiracy that leads him to disappear from Germany in 1938. Where he went at that point is still not know at this time.

AP: You’re also quickly becoming a podcasting legend. You are one half of the hosting team for THE BOOK CAVE (ALL PULP’S official Podcast, by the by). This is your chance, Art-How did you come to team up with your partner Ric Croxton and why do you think the relationship you two have works so well for a pulp podcast (It actually works very well, ALL PULP just wants to know why you think it works).
 
AS: Ric and I met at the 2006 LaPlata DocCon. The folks at that Con formed a bond and we have kept in touch over the years. When Ric launched The Book Cave podcasts, he had me on as a guest to talk about Sun Koh and some other topics. We worked well together and we got positive feedback from the audience and so Ric made me his permanent co-host.

The Book Cave is a show by fans for fans. We cover mostly pulp fiction but we also talk about Sci-Fi, Wold Newton, Lovecraft, comics, movies, TV-shows, and other things that adventure fiction fans really enjoy. I have been kicking around for a long time and I have had an interest in these things for almost 50 years… Let’s be honest. It has been OVER 50 years. I have taken these things very seriously and I love to talk about them.

This also gives us an opportunity to talk to the authors, producers, and creators of these entertainments and get to know them. I have always been interested in the creative process and how these stories came to be written. The fan base seems to enjoy this as well. And one thing about writers is that they LOVE to talk about themselves.

Ric and I have been privileged to meet and get to know folks like Will Murray, Ron Fortier, Andrew Salmon, Barry Reese, Paul Malmont, Derrick Ferguson, Josh Reynolds, William Preston, Jeff Deishcer, Win Eckert, Tommy Hancock, Jean Marc L’Officier, Tom and Ginger Johnson, Jim Campanella, Wayne Reinagel, Chris and Laura Carey, Paul Spitieri, Mike Croteaeu, James Sutton, and so many others who are creative forces in this field. These folks are great people and it is fascinating to talk with them. I learn so much and it gives me greater insight into the work they do.

I think the formula works because we come to the interviews with respect for the people and their work and I think our enthusiasm shows. We also remind our guests that we advocate them to give “shameless plugs” for any things they want to let the fan base know about. We also make it clear that we are a friendly show that is upbeat and pro fun. That is why we are all here.

AP: Ric often picks on your ‘special ability’ to know major details about your guests. Seriously, what sort of prep work do you put into getting ready to interview a guest in The Book Cave?
 
AS: It is amazing what you can find out from Googling someone’s name. Even before the internet, I was very good at ferreting out information. I also have a relatively good memory (not as good as it used to be, I’m afraid) and I tend to link together all sorts of disparate facts.

Ric and I always read the material we are going to discuss and we try to do some other background checking as well.

AP: Do you think podcasting in general and your podcast in specific is having any positive impact on pulp? If so, what? How can that impact be increased or improved upon?

AS: Podcasting allows us to do some things we never could before. It is now possible to do interviews with folks anywhere in the world record them, edit them, and put them on the world-wide web for anyone anywhere to listen to at their leisure. This means that pulp aficionados can hear their favorite authors talk about themselves and their work and send them feedback. Plus we can bring information about future projects to the pulp audience and help to spread the word about good books and how to get them. We have links on the podcast website that fans can follow for more information.
Back in the 1960s I was the only Doc Savage fan that I knew. Today, I know dozens of Doc fans and pulps fans and we converse regularly. And information moves quickly through the pulp community. Our podcasts are routinely mentioned at Bill Thom’s Coming Attractions web site which is a gold mine of information for pulp and adventure fiction fans.

In the future, we may add video links to the show. I am not too keen about this since I don’t look all that good in real life and I do not dress smartly for the shows.

Another possibility is to have live call-in shows where fans can call in and talk to our guests. This would be a chancy thing and would require some kind of time delay so that we could weed out the disruptive calls.

AP: Another area of interest you have that falls squarely in the pulp field is the work of Philip Jose Farmer. Would you share how you came to be a fan and devotee of Farmer and his work?

AS: I first ran across Phil Farmer in the late 1960s as I began reading science fiction. The themes of his books seemed to be very controversial and I was put off by them. Then in the old Bookmaster’s store at Times Square in 1969, I saw a paperback by Mr. Farmer with two naked men on the cover who looked suspiciously like Doc Savage and Tarzan. It was entitled A Feast Unknown and it purported to be the memoirs of Lord Grandrith and his epic battle with Doc Caliban. The book is not tame fare. There was plenty of gratuitous sex and violence, but also a fascinating story. I was hooked. I began to read more of Farmer’s work. That was also the beginning of his Pulp Period where he was writing pastiches on pulp characters and themes. This period would last for over a decade and Phil became my favorite SciFi author.

AP: On the Book Cave, you often speak of how you became a fan of pulp, initially with the Doc Savage books and such. How has pulp helped shape you as a person, if its had any impact at all?

AS: For 36 years I wore a uniform and thought of myself as a soldier. My understanding of what that meant was shaped very much by the heroes I read about in books and comics. Doc Savage was in many ways my ideal and I tried to emulate him especially in academics. He was my inspiration for going into medicine. I attended Johns Hopkins for my masters because that was where Doc Savage had gone for his medical degree. (In fact I have a story in mind about Doc as a medical student in Baltimore in the 1920s.) Above all, Doc Savage and the pulps in general were ‘good guys’ who consciously sought moral uprightness. They did not always play by the conventional rules but in the end, their actions benefited more than themselves.

AP: You’re a doctor. Has your career contributed in any way to your ability as a pulp writer?

AS: You learn a lot in medicine about human nature and human limitations. You also learn a lot about science and math along the way. I have tried to make the fantastic elements in my stories at least plausible. I have also travelled the world and practiced medicine in some unusual circumstances. It all has contributed to the background in many of my stories.

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AP: So, what does the future hold for Art Sippo? Any writing projects in the works you want to talk about? What about Book Cave plans?

AS: I have a Sun Koh novel currently under way. I eventually want to write the story of how Sun Koh is ultimately saved from Nazism and what becomes of him. I also plan to do some more Loki Companion Stories for Renny and Johnny and at least one more Pat story. And there is the story of Doc Savage at Johns Hopkins and the girl that ALMOST stole his heart. When I have enough of them, I’d like to publish them in a single volume along with some essays from my Speculations in Bronze website.

Ric and I plan to continue doing the Book Cave as long people enjoy it. We are always seeking new authors to interview and new material to pass on to the fans.

Ric and I both plan to be at the PulpArk con in the Spring of 2011 and to do shows from there.

AP: Dr. Sippo, it’s been a wonderful time talking to you. Thanks for the opportunity!

AS: It has been my pleasure as well. Folks should drop by the Book Cave site and drop us a line. We love to hear from the fans. Keep reading!

National Graphic Novel Writing Month Day 20: The Inspiring Power Of Deadlines

Day 20. Late at night. And I’m still working on today’s article for NaGraNoWriMo.

Why? I mean, isn’t it okay if I miss a day? It’s just funny books, after all. Can’t I just blow a deadline?

Are you crazy?

Yes, stuff happens. The kid has to go to the emergency room, the computer crashes, that person you had a crush on in high school is in town for the night following a painful divorce and they were thinking of you and…

I don’t want to hear it.

Do you know National Novel Writing Month got started? Because for most participants, they had an idea for a novel but never took the time to write it. And do you know why most of those novels never got written? No
deadline.  No pressure.

Would be writers would think about the plot for years on end, twiddling
their thumbs. They’d come up with brilliant twists while showering, which they’d never get down on paper. They’d make
vague plans about renting a cabin at Yaddo someday to actually write the damn thing.

And it never happened. Because there was no deadline, and consequently, no pressure.

And understand, in comics, it’s not just you.

Your collaborators are waiting on you to finish. If you’re late, you’re cutting into the time they have to draw your book. Which means they’re going to rush to finish your masterpiece.

Editors aren’t going to want to hire you if you blow deadlines– they have lots of other people they can hire who won’t give them that trouble. 

And finally, do you really want to deal with the people like me on the Internet complaining how the last issue of your miniseries is months late?

So get it done. Stop procrastinating. You’ve got pages to write.

And if you haven’t started writing your graphic novel yet, you now have the focus of a very condensed deadline. Ten days instead of a month. You don’t have the luxury of putting it off any more, you have to buckle down and write the dang thing. You’ve eaten up your slack time. So get to it.

Use that pressure! No more time to put it off, no more tweaking– just get it down and get it done.

If you need tips, remember: you can follow all the NaGraNoWriMo posts here!

Review: ‘Wolverine and the X-Men The Complete Series’

Wolverine and the X-Men was created to capitalize on the anticipated success of the Hugh Jackman Wolverine movie. The series aired on Nicktoons and freely adapted stories taken from the decades of [[[X-Men]]] stories. Despite being the title character, Wolverine was often taking a step back to let the army of mutants take on the stories.

Lionsgate has been releasing the episodes in low priced sets, but now, in time for the holidays, the entire series has been put in one set, now on sale. ComicMix has previous reviewed the final three releases in the series and overall, I have not been overly impressed. Visually, the animation designs are satisfactory but Marvel has never gotten a good handle on their voice casting and the show suffers for it.

Structurally, I previously noted “this has fewer sub-plots that require episode to episode viewing. On the other hand, there are plenty of sub-plots running through the 26 episodes comprising the first season. There are also dozens of characters to meet and recall and often they arrive unnamed or their powers unspecified. As a result, you’re required to watch knowing which version of the x-verse you’re paying attention to.”

Despite reasonably good ratings, the second season was canceled after work had begun so this set is all you will get. If you’re a fan of the characters or really liked the series, then this is for you.  Frankly, you’re better off with the original source material, all of which has been collected in one form or another.

Steve Gordon, Greg Johnson, Craig Kyle, Joshua Fine, Nick Filippi, and Boyd Kirkland mastermind the series and bring their previous Marvel animation experience with them. The writing is sharper than before In reviewing the final volume, I noted, “All the threads and main players throughout the season turn up and have their moment as the conflicting timelines and threads are woven together into a massive climax.” There’s even a final scene hinting at the direction of the second season that will never be.

Other than trailers, there are no special features on this set so it’s for collectors and fans only.

THE TALL TALE OF PAUL BUNYAN Wins the 2010 Moonbeam Golden Award!!

THE TALL TALE OF PAUL BUNYAN Wins the 2010 Moonbeam Golden Award!!

FROM MARTIN POWELL’S BLOG-

I can hardly believe it. After a zillion various award nominations I finally actually win one of the dang things. Amazing. Wednesdays, for some weird reason, are always nice to me.

Many thanks to artist Aaron Blecha, editor Donald Lemke, designer Bob Lentz, editorial director Michael Dahl, and Stone Arch Books for making this book a real winner.

Also, I need to mention that my soon-to-be eighty-six year old father loves this book (in fact, it’s the only one of my books that I’m certain he has read). He’ll be very happy to hear this news from me, later today.

Lastly–thanks Paul and Babe! Since I was six years old, you’ve both always been there for me.

 

 

ALL PULP FOCUS-SECOND REVIEW TO ANSWER THE QUESTION…KIDS’ PULP…YAY OR NAY?

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Reviews by Tommy Hancock
“THE TALL TALE OF PAUL BUNYAN”
Writer-Martin Powell
Artist-Aaron Blecha

Second of Four Reviews of ALL PULP FOCUS-KIDS’ PULP, YAY OR NAY?

Pulp fiction requires a few things.  A hero, able to do amazing feats of some sort somehow; a villain and/or villains that are as or more over the top than the hero and defeated in the end; bright, engaging supporting characters who might be able to carry a tale or two on their own; and imagination gone wild as seen in the art, the turn of phrase, the crazy innovations and creations scattered throughout the story.

“THE TALL TALE OF PAUL BUNYAN” has all of that in spades.

Powell takes the classic tall tale of the giant baby born to hard working parents that grows up to be the oversized hero that shaped most of what we know as geographic America today and makes it enjoyable and as pulpy as can be.  Blecha’s art, although cartoony and humorous in nature, adds an outlandish quality to a truly over the top story.  The dialogue and narration ring true with the art and make the story almost a song more than a narrative.  The villains are there and Paul’s superhuman reaction to them as well.  All in all, Powell and Blecha use the comic art form in a phenomenal way to tell a story we all think we know and turn it just enough that it could have been a prose tale once upon a time in a good ol’ pulp magazine.

Five out of Five Tips of Hancock’s Hat-Yes, yes indeed.

Hard Case Crime Returns!

Titan Books to Relaunch
Acclaimed Pulp Paperback Series
“Wickedly voluptuous.”
–Janet Maslin, New York Times
“Hard Case may be the best new American publisher to appear in the last decade.”
— Neal Pollack, The Stranger
One hell of a concept. Those covers brought me right back to the good old days.
— Mickey Spillane
New York, NY; London, UK (October 19, 2010) – Titan Books and series creator Charles Ardai announced today that they are teaming up to relaunch the popular Hard Case Crime series of paperback crime novels.  Nominated five times in five years for the Edgar Allan Poe award, the mystery genre’s highest honor, Hard Case Crime has published such luminaries as Stephen King (the book that was the basis for the new TV series “Haven”), Mickey Spillane, Ed McBain, Donald E. Westlake, Lawrence Block, Pete Hamill, Max Allan Collins, Madison Smartt Bell and Roger Zelazny, to name just a few.  Each book features new cover art in the classic pulp style, including covers painted by Robert McGinnis, the legendary illustrator who painted the original James Bond movie posters.
Hard Case Crime has won praise from dozens of major publications ranging from Time, Newsweek and The Atlantic Monthly to Entertainment Weekly, Playboy and Reader’s Digest, and has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning, NPR’s Fresh Air, and in every major newspaper in America (including repeated coverage in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, and USA Today).
First launched in 2004, Hard Case Crime published 66 titles through August 2010, at which time its long-time publisher, Dorchester Publishing, announced it was exiting the mass market paperback publishing business after nearly 40 years.  After receiving offers from five other publishers (including two of the largest in the world) to continue the line, Charles Ardai selected UK-based Titan Publishing as Hard Case Crime’s new home.
“Titan has an extraordinary record of creating beautiful, exciting books with exactly the pop culture sensibility that Hard Case Crime exists to celebrate,” said Charles Ardai, founder and editor of Hard Case Crime and an Edgar Award-winning mystery writer himself.  “Titan is one of the few publishers that loves pulp fiction as much as we do.”
Titan’s first new Hard Case Crime titles, scheduled to come out in September and October 2011, include QUARRY’S EX, a new installment in the popular series of hit man novels by “Road to Perdition” creator Max Allan Collins; CHOKE HOLD, Christa Faust’s sequel to her Edgar Award-nominated Hard Case Crime novel MONEY SHOT; and two never-before-published novels by major authors in the crime genre (both recipients of the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America).
Additionally, Titan plans to acquire all existing stock of Hard Case Crime’s backlist titles from Dorchester Publishing and resume shipping those titles to stores immediately.
“Hard Case Crime has done a remarkable job in a very short time of building a brand known for outstanding crime fiction and stunning artwork,” said Nick Landau, Publisher of Titan Books and CEO of the Titan Publishing Group.  “We are thrilled to partner with Charles and look forward to bringing Hard Case Crime to a wider audience around the world, not only through the novels themselves but also through an innovative merchandise program.”
For more information, call Hard Case Crime on 646-205-2181 or e-mail wlmailhtml:{A2CE945F-BE84-4D89-9957-6B567BA08337}mid://00000129/!x-usc:mailto:media@hardcasecrime.com; call Titan (US media) on 914-788-1005 or email ktc2000@aol.com; or call Titan (UK media) on +44 (0)20 7803 1906 or email wlmailhtml:{A2CE945F-BE84-4D89-9957-6B567BA08337}mid://00000129/!x-usc:mailto:sophie.calder@titanemail.com.
About Hard Case Crime
Charles Ardai founded Hard Case Crime in 2004 through Winterfall LLC, a privately owned media company responsible for a variety of print, film, and television projects.  The series has been nominated for and/or won numerous awards since its inception including the Edgar, the Shamus, the Anthony, the Barry, and the Spinetingler Award.  The series’ bestselling title of all time, The Colorado Kid by Stephen King, was the basis for the current SyFy television series “Haven,” on which Charles Ardai works as a writer and producer.  There have also been a number of feature film deals involving Hard Case Crime books, including “The Last Lullaby,” based on The Last Quarry by Max Allan Collins and starring Tom Sizemore as the titular hit man, and more recently Universal Pictures’ purchase of the film rights to Little Girl Lost and Songs of Innocence by Richard Aleas. 
About Titan Publishing Group
Titan Publishing Group is an independently owned publishing company, established in 1981. The company is based at offices in London, but operates worldwide, with sales and distribution in the US & Canada being handled by Random House. Titan Publishing Group has three divisions: Titan Books, Titan Magazines/Comics and Titan Merchandise. In addition to fiction, including novelizations of films such as Terminator Salvation, original novels based on TV shows such as Primeval and Supernatural and the popular computer game Runescape, and the celebrated Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series of novels launched in 2009, Titan Books also publishes an extensive line of media- and pop culture-related non-fiction, graphic novels, art and music books.

ALL PULP FOCUS-KIDS’ PULP, YAY OR NAY?

Introducing a new ALL PULP recurring event-ALL PULP FOCUS!  The purpose of this is to take up a topic within the Pulp community, much like ALL PULP  does with its panel, and broadening the focus to include other parts of ALL PULP.  This focus is on the concept of pulp for kids.  Is pulp appropriate for children?  Is there a distinct area within the genre that can be identified as ‘kids’ pulp’?  A new panel will be posted later today for the Spectacled Seven to look at this concept, but for now enjoy throughout the day reviews of stories from Martin Powell that just could be kids’ pulp….if there is such a thing..

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Reviews by Tommy Hancock
“RED RIDING HOOD: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL”
Writer-Martin Powell
Artist-Victor Rivas

One of Four Reviews of ALL PULP FOCUS-KIDS’ PULP, YAY OR NAY?

The story is the one everyone knows and that story at its most basic is a scary tale indeed.  A little girl traipsing through the woods on a humanitarian mission to her elderly grandmother, a chance encounter with a smooth talking wolf, that same wolf in grandmother’s clothing, and a slice of an axe ending the lupine evil makes the tale of Little Red Riding Hood a horror story in its own right.   What Powell and Rivas do in their graphic novel retelling of this popular legend is take that innate fear and terror to a whole new level.

Powell puts several distinct turns on this already twisted children’s tale that take it out of the realm of ‘fairy tale’ and put it squarely in the pulp area.   The story opens with an elderly woman visiting a fortune teller she’d visited before and that fortune teller giving her a warning of sorts and a gift colored in red.  The story becomes somewhat familiar at that point, the little girl wanting to visit her sick grandmother wearing the red hood made by said relative.  Where this story really takes a horrific twist is the introduction of the wolf.  Rivas’ interpretation of the wolf is basically a lot of jagged dark lines all converging into a face that is simultaneously pleasant and horrendous.  Powell continues that image by writing the Big Bad One less as a creature of the forest and more like a potential child molester grooming its prospect. 

Powell also ups the ante with Red Riding Hood, too.   She becomes the ultimate pulp heroine, facing the evil one on one and without her greatest protection even.  The final scene in the grandmother’s home and the subsequent chase through the woods on many levels had the intensity of any climactic scene in any horror movie.   Rivas’ art is as creepy as it is endearing and cute, adding to the disturbing content of a story that boils down to a little girl left alone in the woods to be ravaged by the evils in the shadows.  Well, this Red Riding Hood definitely ain’t down with that. 

The storytelling gets awkward at a couple of points and transition from scene to scene is a bit jerky, but overall RED RIDING HOOD in the hands of Powell and Rivas is a wonderfully delightful, scary ride through a children’s classic

Four out of Five Tips of Hancock’s Hat (usually reserved for heads of state, arresting officers, and little old ladies, which is pretty darn good.)

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National Graphic Novel Writing Month Day 19: Pages As Scenes

nagranowrimo-3342602Consider the simple comic book page.

I know, your first thought is: this isn’t my problem. I’m the writer, not the artist. This is National Graphic Novel Writing Month. National Graphic Novel Drawing Month isn’t for a while yet.

No no no. The page is important as a unit of storytelling, and as a writer for graphic novels, you should be thinking visually to prepare for it.

Think about an hour long episode of television. Many people think of it as the five act structure, with eight or nine minute acts acts being broken up by commercial breaks. (Yes, 44 minutes of television.)

But it’s often more useful to think of it as twenty-two two minute scenes. It breaks the story down into much smaller bits, with each scene delivering some useful piece of information about the story or characters, while allowing for contrasting bits and alternating plotlines.

Think of an episode of House MD, broken up into two minute scenes.

1. Meet the patient, who collapses from something strange.

ROLL CREDITS

2. Doctors sit around table, House comes in, establishes problem.

3. Doctors meet with patient, run tests, get background info needed for the patient.

4. House gets involved in wacky scheme to get Wilson and Cuddy to appear in roadshow production of Guys & Dolls to pay for new MRI machine.

5. Doctors apply cure to patient, which fails spectacularly and leads to growth of extra arm.

END FIRST ACT, COMMERCIAL

This structure also works for comics, where you can go page by page and figure out what has to go where.

Page 1: The Green Goblin is testing his equipment, then he meets with the Enforcers to hire them to help him deal with Spider-Man.

Page 2: Goblin cuts a deal with a movie mogul to get Spider-Man to appear in a film.

Page 3: Peter Parker is at school when he hears about Goblin flying over New York; he excuses himself to change.

Page 4: Spidey meets Goblin, Goblin pitches the movie deal.

Page 5: Spidey goes to movie mogul, haggles over the deal, and signs to make sure he has money for Aunt May’s medicine. The Goblin lurks in the background, noting that Spidey is falling into his trap.

Simple sounding? Sure. And yet, that’s pretty much how Amazing Spider-Man #14 introduced the Green Goblin to the world.

In addition, the end of the page is a natural break point in your story, a good place to bring a scene to an end, while your reader is turning the page.

So take a look at how other people use the page in their writing– then try it in your own work.

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p class=”MsoNormal” style=”margin-bottom: 0.0001pt;”>Remember: you can follow all the NaGraNoWriMo posts here!

ComicMix endorses Elvira– she’s not a witch either

Finally, someone who we can support– and let’s face it, she needs a lot of support.

Yes, Elvira, Mistress Of The Dark and star of stage, screen, and a few hundred comic books, has a brief announcement for you. After all… she is you.

Hat tip: Lisa Sullivan.

Review: ‘Being Human’ Seasons 1 and 2

The British approach to genre television is markedly different than the American shows. Series such as [[[Primeval, Torchwood]]], and [[[Being Human]]] take an adult approach to science fiction and horror, creating a fresh assortment of characters and settings, unencumbered by writing for frequent commercial breaks and letting their characters grow and evolve.

Over the summer months, we were given an opportunity to compare and contrast this approach as SyFy offered up the lightweight, albeit entertaining [[[Warehouse 13]]], while BBC America gave us Being Human. The series has lasted two seasons on British television and both are available in nicely packaged DVD sets released by BBC and Warner Home Video.

For those unaware, Being Human posits that a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost can try to achieve a normal life by sharing a home in Bristol. Over the course of six episodes, the first season introduced the characters, their back stories, and chronicled their attempts at leading their lives. You have your 90 year old vampire Mitchell (Aidan Turner), who left a coven bent on some form of global domination; then there’s George (Russell Tovey) who was bitten by a werewolf and now works as a hospital orderly while removing himself from human contact every thirty days or so; and finally, there’s Annie (Lenora Crichlow), a newly minted ghost, haunting the flat they share. Her story and growth as a character forms the spine of the first season.

Watching them interact with one another and with humans is a constant study in contrasts and emotions. One story in season one has Mitchell befriend a lonely young boy living across the street with tragic consequences. George also tries to have a romantic relationship with a fellow hospital worker, unwilling to share his secret with her.

Season one began slowly but grew with every episode, gaining confidence in the characters and larger supernatural world they inhabit. It is not a heavy effects-laden show, but there’s enough to remind you that there are scary things in the dark.
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