Twitter Updates for 2011-04-15
- RT @rachellecheri: Photo: ZATANNA!! Art by @JAMALIGLE; inks by Gerry Acerno; colored by moi! http://tumblr.com/xq324c4zcm #
Over at Making Light, former Valiant Comics editor Teresa Nielsen Hayden started a thread on trying to explain marketing categories in publishing, and how they’re not solely determined by the content:
Say your book features a strange and powerful device, the Transnistrian Infundibulator:
If the storyline is about the inception, interim difficulties, and eventual happy resolution of the relationship between the inventor of the Transnistrian Infundibulator and some nice young woman, it’s a romance.
If he’s a scholar studying the Transnistrian Infundibulator, she’s a governess, and his best fossil specimen of T. infundibulator falls out of his pocket during a reception at Almack’s, it’s a regency.
If one or both of them is not 100% human, they meet cute while fighting off spooky badguys, and the Transnistrian Infundibulator is an ancient magical artifact they use to defeat said badguys, it’s a paranormal romance.
If she’s his lab assistant, he thinks she looks hot in goggles and a tool belt, and the Transnistrian Infundibulator is a huge rivet-intensive steam-driven mechanical wombat, it’s steampunk.
If the Transnistrian Infundibulator is magic, but instead of working like a handheld appliance, it generates profound and numinous changes that affect the world as a whole, it’s probably fantasy.
And the discussion took off from there.
Farther down the list of comments, I added:
If you actually see what the Transnistrian Infundibulator looks like in the book twice, it’s comics.
If it also has a spine, it’s a graphic novel.
But it occurs to me that we should be much more precise in trying to decide comics categories. For starters:
If the Transnistrian Infundibulator awakens a long sleeping creature the size of an elementary school that speaks perfect if grandiose English, it’s a Marvel monster comic from the late 50s.
And so I throw the floor open to you. Have at it.
This is going to be one of those rapid fire Tommygun columns for ILB today. Got a lot going on, but had this idea that I know I’m not likely to get to anytime soon and that just won’t leave me alone. Now, of course, all the usual copyright stuff applies..this is my idea and all that as of today, so if you want to write it, then holler at me and we’ll discuss details. This idea has enough legs that once the deluge I’m currently suffering under passes, I will probably pick up and do something with unless someone’s already gotten me to agree to let them have it:)
THE FAMILY MYSTERY
Although the time frame for this idea could be changed, my thought right now is that this is set in the late 1940s-early to mid 1950s. It centers around a family, the Dentsons. The five members of the Dentson family are your stereotypical Father Knows Best TV Family on the surface, but they share something other than DNA and a last name.
They share a secret identity.
In the metropolitan city the Dentsons live in, there is a problem. A major problem. And that is crime. Crime runs rampant, everything from street level muggings to maniacal super geniuses hellbent on world domination. Although others in the past have stood against the rising tide, those myths and legends, the handful there were, hung up their masks or faded away following the Second World War. But another stepped up to fill the void. One who seemed to be everywhere at once, to know everything, to even master a variety of skills no one person could master, including changing physical size and appearance tor almost any situation. This hero, this bastion of justice and truth, wraps himself in the shadows of the city he swears to protect. Cloaked, masked, hidden from view, THE MYSTERY does all one man can do to protect the decent denizens of his city.
Of course, it’s easier when THE MYSTERY is really five people…Meet the Dentsons!
OK, looks like this will be a two part column! For character descriptions of the Dentsons and some of the other principals, tune back to ALL PULP this weekend as I’ll be finishing this up from WINDY CITY!
From Tommy Hancock-Pulp Ark Coordinator-
https://derricklferguson.wordpress.com/about/
From the site-
Greetings and Salutations. Welcome to The Ferguson Theater. So glad you could make it. Sit down, make yourself comfortable. Rest your coat. Hopefully you’ll stay here for a while while I give you the obligatory explanation as to why I’m taking up valuable time and space here.
You guys already know I’m into movies. Big time. On a good day I watch at least one movie, either a new one I’ve never seen before or an old favorite. On a really good day I watch four. And then every so often, usually during the summer months my wife Patricia and I will have all-night movie marathons at home. So yeah, I guess you could say I like movies. A lot.
That love of movies prompted me to start up a Live Journal where I wrote movie reviews. That proved successful enough that eventually I ended up with enough movie reviews to fill two books (which are available from Amazon.com and the handy dandy link is to your right) with a third book sitting on my hard drive giving me dirty looks because it feels neglected. It also led to my co-hosting Better In The Dark with Thomas Deja. The movie review themed podcast has also enjoyed a good bit of success. Since it’s lasted five years now, I have no choice but to accept that people actually think that I know what I’m talking about when it comes to movies.
And that leads us to The Ferguson Theater. Over the years people have emailed me asking why don’t I put all my movie reviews on one website, blog, whatever since they’ve been scattered over three or four different websites over the years. And as part of my mandate to become more organized when it comes to my online footprints, I’ve finally buckled down and put this together.
What does this mean for my Live Journal? Oh, it’ll still be there but I’ll no longer be posting movie reviews there. Anything that has to do with movies or TV will be posted right here from now on. So you won’t have to go scrambling through three or four different websites to find a review of mine. I’ll also continue posting reviews over at the Better In The Dark message board so if you don’t get ‘em there, you’ll get ‘em here. Makes it simpler all way round, I think.
So that’s the dilly-o. Thanks for listening and by all means, please feel free to come back soon and often. Rest assured that the older reviews you may have read before aren’t just copied and pasted here from other sites. Most reviews are rewritten to reflect my new views/sensibilities on the movie so you’re just not getting the same ol’ crap from me you’ve read elsewhere. I value your time just as much as I value mine. I don’t waste my time and I won’t waste yours and anytime you feel that I am, call me on it.
I also urge you to check out the links on the right. Some of those sites contain content written or presented by friends of mine, some of them really excellent writers. I visit their websites on a regular basis because they know what they’re talking about, they’re entertaining and they’re simply just a whole lotta fun to read.
Okay, I’ve run my mouth enough. Time for the reviews. Thank you for coming to The Ferguson Theater. Sit back and relax, enjoy the show.
From Tommy Hancock, sorta EIC, ALL PULP-
Hello, All Pulp fans, just a quick note to let you go that ALL PULP is going to the Windy City Pulp and Paper Convention! I’m actually going as a partner in my production company, PRO SE PRODUCTIONS, but while there I’ll be doing double duty and will be sending out reports whenever possible on the news at WINDY CITY, including the mysterious announcement Will Murray is planning to make and The Pulp Factory Awards! Stay tuned! (Well, later tonight at least…the drive is a LONG ONE!)
Tommy
From Pro Se Press-
YESTERYEAR, the debut novel from Tommy Hancock as well as Pro Se Press’ first foray into the field of novels and anthologies, is now for sale! Printed via Createspace, YESTERYEAR, 190 pages, can be purchased for $12.00 here. In the next 1-3 weeks, it will be available via Amazon and after that available via online at other markets as well!
The following is taken from the Estore Page-
YesterYear by Tommy Hancock, Published by Pro Se Press. Cover Art by Jay Piscopo, Interior art by Peter Cooper, Format and Design by Sean Ali.
A world where heroes and villains existed since the day the market crashed and the world almost collapsed. Common people granted great powers and awesome responsibility. A world where one of them knew all the secrets, good and bad, and put them down in a book. A world where that man and that manuscript disappeared.
Until now.
YESTERYEAR is the first book in an epic series chronicling the adventures of Heroes and Villains, both in the Heroic Age of the 1920s-1950s and in the modern day. Centered around a missing manuscript that might hold information that could literally change history and even mean the end of the world, YESTERYEAR alternates between a fast paced modern storyline about the man who ends up with the legendary book and excerpts from the mythic tome itself. Marvel to pulp like adventures of glory and adrenaline and become engrossed in the humanity and horror of being a Hero.
YESTERYEAR by Tommy Hancock-Sometimes the Greatest Mystery of Tomorrow happened Yesterday!
As an added bonus, Pro Se is proud to share with ALL PULP readers the Introduction to YESTERYEAR, written by noted Pulp Author Derrick Ferguson! Enjoy and remember go buy YESTERYEAR TODAY!
Here’s the item on sale today at woot: 1 refurbished Barnes & Noble NOOK 3G+WiFi eReader, 16 Level B&W E Ink Display & Color Touchscreen Navigation Panel for $99 plus $5 shipping.
I’m not sure whether this is a sign of eBooks becoming the default, or if it means that new products are coming down the pike, or that Barnes & Noble is in trouble and the Kindle is going to be the default, or what, but it does show that the industry is changing faster and faster.
Having seen some of the new color screens coming out by the end of the year, I think I’m leaning towards inventory reduction… but I can’t be sure. And of course, by writing this, I’m contributing to the uncertainty.
Oh, one other note: woot is owned by… Amazon. Which means that for at least one day, Amazon is selling NOOKs. Now I’m even more confused.
Known by the blah generic title HEADS YOU LOSE in later paperback editions, this 1943 book is a perfectly enjoyable little mystery with two added points of interest. It deals with the rationing system used during WW II and it briefly touches on Mike Shayne coping immediately after the death of his wife Phyllis.
According to Davis Dresser (the original “Brett Halliday”), a movie studio was interested in Shayne but didn’t want him with a wife in tow, so the author reluctantly dispatched her between books. After MURDER WEARS A MUMMER’S MASK, poor Phyllis died offstage in childbirth (and evidently the baby did, also). I really disliked this development, partly because I am just so sick of the hero’s wife or girlfriend getting bumped off for plot purposes but also because Phyllis was a perfect counterbalance to Shayne’s grim surliness. Bubbly, energetic, a bit vacant, she brightened up the stories and gave them some levity.
None of this is explained in BLOOD ON THE BLACK MARKET. We simply find out that she’s gone. Shayne is now staying in his office in the same building, but he seems to be still keeping up the rent on the apartment on the floor above, where he and his wife lived. During the course of this case, trying to shake two police detectives who are cramping his style, the big redhead returns briefly to his old flat. (“….he turned on the lights and stood looking about the beautifully appointed and restful living room with an expression of acute sorrow tightening his face. Everything reminded him of Phyllis. Never would there be a wife like her again.”)
Maybe he had a longterm lease on the apartment with time to run before it would be rented to someone else or maybe he’s still renting it to possibly refurnish at some point, but it’s evident Mike Shayne is in serious denial. He comes from the old cowboy school of the stony face and unflinching suffering in silence; it’s hard to imagine him crying openly, even at her funeral. But when he has to break bad news to a pregnant young wife, it hits him hard again. (“He slumped low under the wheel. He had inured himself against hurt. Sorrow and grief were for lesser men than he, but as he drove toward Miami in the bright moonlight an acute pain gripped him…. Shayne suffered the agony of the damned, remembering his own slender, darkeyed wife who had not been so fortunate as the humble wife of Joe Wilson.”)
All of this is only found in a few references here and there in the story. From the moment a desperate phone call from a man about to murdered wakes him, Shayne is just too busy to brood. A gas station owner he knew and liked is shot dead, and as our shamus investigates (for once, without even a chance at collecting a fee) he begins to uncover something bigger than the usual murders based on jealousy or greed.
Determined to find out who killed the station owner and also motivated by a genuine patriotism, Shayne lets it be known that he was told who was behind the killing. This makes him a walking target to the gang, of course, but it’s a time honored way detectives and spies in pulp fiction entice their enemies out into the open (Just let them take a few shots at you so you can identify them.. this requires a bit of nerve, true.)
The investigation moves at a brisk clip (I read the book pretty much in one sitting, with no feeling of hitting any slack areas), and before you know it, Shayne is dodging rifle bullets and being slightly seduced by a woman lawyer (she snatches a gun from his hand and shoots a suspect dead right in the doorway, a startling moment for a first date). Hardly slowing to eat or sleep or change his shirt, Shayne is violently intimidating shysters and trading snappy banter with Police Chief Gentry (“This time you’re going to have to put your cards on the table, Mike. Four men have died while you horsed around and acted mysterious”). Our boy takes a good amount of physical wear and tear, ending up in the ER getting broken ribs taped and putting salve on his bruised mouth for the rest of the case.
As a private eye, Michael Shayne does all right. He’s tough enough; two goons take him for a ride at gunpoint and, without giving too much away, he’s around for the rest of the book. Shayne is not a deductive artist anywhere near the Ellery Queen or Nero Wolfe level, but he understands human nature and can puzzle through alibis. At one point, he realizes one suspect knew something before the papers printed it and therefore is the guilty party; this is a fair clue an alert reader could have picked up on. He even assembles a dozen suspects and the police in one room to give the clarifying speech where all the loose ends are tied up.
The racket being busted this time seems to be a shady way of getting around gas rationing. (Starting in 1942, Americans were issued ration books limiting how much of some items they could buy, most importantly gasoline. This was evidently a way of conserving tires, as rubber was increasingly hard to get, due to the war in the Pacific.) Shayne is outraged by this scheme to beat the rations system, and he makes some pointed speeches about hoarders and black market operators. He may feel he can do more good work in a belted trenchcoat than an Army uniform, but the redhead’s patriotism is genuine.
(In fact, he has a contact in Captain Ott of Military Intelligence and there’s a reference to his having helped them before. (“Anytime you want a commission, Shayne….”)
I like the details in this story about driving with dim headlights at twenty miles per hour during a dimout, everyone walking a lot more than usual, even the comments about how precious coffee is becoming. A casual reference to a zoot suit with brown and purple stripes is another reason why books should not be updated with topical references removed; little images like that, or Shayne crumpling his soft felt hat suddenly set the stories in their era and make them seem much more real. It’s your nickel, start talking.