Monthly Archives: July 2018

Happy Birthday, Farnsworth

Farnsworth Wright, legendary editor of Weird Tales, was born on this date, July 29, in the long-ago year of 1888.  He died in 1940.

We last discussed Mr. Wright a few weeks ago in my post on who was the greatest editor of the 20th Century.  I think it’s a toss-up between Wright and Don Wolheim.

What isn’t up for debate is that Wright published some of the greatest writers of the fantastic in his magazines during his tenure as editor:  H. P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith, C. L. Moore, Henry S. Whitehead, Henry Kuttner, Manley Wade Wellman, Robert Bloch, Seabury Quinn.

Just to name a few.

Granted some, like Kuttner and Bloch, went on to fame for later, more mature work.  But Wright recognized something about their writing and published it.

So if today or tonight you happen to read something published in Weird Tales while Wright was the editor, raise your glass to his memory and his legacy.

Bill Crider’s Birthday

Bill Crider at the 2017 WFC in San Antonio. That’s Joe Lansdale on the left.

Bill Crider was born on this day, July 28, in 1941, in Mexia, Texas (pronounced Me-hay-a).  He passed away from cancer earlier this year on February 12.

While I certainly didn’t know Bill, he was one of my favorite people to hang out with at conventions.  I first encountered him about 19 years ago, when he was the featured guest of a writing conference at the university where I was a visiting faculty.  We didn’t meet at the time.  I snuck over between classes and heard him speak.

We did meet a year or two later.  I don’t recall if it was at Armadillocon or Aggiecon.  Bill made his mark in the mystery field, but he was a fan of fantasy and science fiction and would dabble in those fields from time to time, as well as attending a number of Texas conventions.  He was knowledgeable about the history of genre fiction and pop culture.  Talking to him or reading his blog was always an education.

As you can tell from the photo above, I got to visit with him one last time this past November.  It was one of the highlights of the convention. He is sorely missed.

Three Weird Birthdays: Benson, Dunsany, and Coye

Today (July 24) marks the birth of three practitioners of the weird tale: authors E. F. Benson (1867) and Lord Dunsany (1878) and artist Lee Brown Coye (1907).

E. F. Benson

During his lifetime, Benson was probably best known for his novels of upper middle class British life.  The best known of these were the Mapp and Lucia novels, which have been adapted for television.

Benson’s legacy, though, was with his supernatural tales.  Ash-Tree Press collected all his known ghost and spook stories in the early 2000s.  Those editions are nice.  They’re also expensive and out of print AFAIK.  Fortunately Wordsworth has collected all the stories in an inexpensive edition.

I first encountered Benson when I was around ten, give or take a year.  My grandparents had a farm in rural Mississippi, and we would stay there in the summers.  One day I was poking through the bookcase and found a battered paperback copy of a ghost story anthology.  It had probably belonged to my uncle, as my grandparents didn’t read that kind of thing.  The book contained the Benson story “Caterpillars”.  I became an instant fan.  Other Benson stories that have stuck with me have been “Mrs. Amworth” and “The Room in the Tower”.

Lord Dunsany

Lord Dunsany needs little introduction.  His work was greatly admired by H. P. Lovecraft.  In fact, much of Lovecraft’s early work is written in a style similar to Dunsany’s.

Dunsany was primarily a writer of short stories, many of them only a page or two in length.  One of his recurring characters was Jorkens.  The Jorkens stories fall into what is primarily a British type of story, commonly called the club story.  This is when a group of men (sorry, ladies, these stories were at the height of their popularity when men’s clubs were part of British upper crest society) sit around their club and tell tall tales.  P. G. Wodehouse wrote some of these.

The difference between the standard club story and that practiced by Dunsany is that the core of the story involves something fantastic.  Other examples include Gavan’s Bar by L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt and Tales From the White Hart by Arthur C. Clarke.

Lee Brown Coye was an artist.  I first became acquainted with his work when I snagged a copy Hugh B. Cave’s Murgunstrumm, published by Carcosa Press.  Lately I’ve been reading the reprint of Manly Wade Wellman’s Worse Things Waiting, originally published by Carcosa.  It was Lee Brown Coye who gave Karl Edward Wagner the idea that became his classic horror story “Sticks”.  Here are some examples of his work.

Ruminations on Selling Books Through the Blog

The title of this post refers to selling books I own, not ones I’ve written.  Just so we’re clear.

Not my house (yet).

I’ve been kicking some thoughts down the road to avoid dealing with them around to see if any will fall out of one of the holes in my head.  I’m pretty much out of space for physical books and need to clear some of them out.  I’ve also been looking for ways to generate small but hopefully semi-steady streams of cash.

I’m not sure I want to deal with ebay.  I’m also not looking to become a book dealer.  I just want to clear a little space.  We’re talking pizza and beer money amounts of cash, nothing that will pay my mortgage or utility bills.  I’m not sure it’s worth dealing with ebay for that.  I was thinking from time to time posting a picture or pictures of a few titles I’d like to move, naming a price, and selling to the first person who wanted them, assuming anyone wants them.

Most of my books I’m keeping.  There are two categories where I would choose what to sell, each with two subcategories.  The first is duplicates.  In some cases these would be paperbacks I have more than one copy of.  If the book is scarce, I would probably put it up by itself.  Otherwise, I might offer them in small lots.

The other duplicates are hardcovers from small presses, such as Cemetery Dance and Subterranean mostly.  These are titles I’ve picked up in grab bags that I already had or in a few cases things I pre-ordered and later forgot I’d ordered them and ordered a second copy.  These would probably be offered singly at less than cover but at least half of cover.

There’s a second category, and that’s review copies.  They also fall into two categories.  The book as you would purchase it in the store or online, and the ARC.  The ARC’s would probably be sold in small lots, with multiple titles by the same author or of similar type.  Many of these would be crime and mystery.  The ARC’s are not as high a quality as the store copies.  They have low quality binding, and the cover art might be different.  In come cases, not all editorial corrections will have been made.  As a general practice, none of the review copies would be of any titles released in the last six months.

Would there be any interest in trying this, or would I be wasting my time?  Thoughts?

A Look at Kings of the Wyld

Kings of the Wyld
Nicholas Eames
Orbit
$2.99 ebook, $15.99 print

If you haven’t read yesterday’s post heard the news, Kings of the Wyld won this year’s David Gemmell Morningstar Award for best first novel.  Congratulations to Mr. Eames.  Well done, sir.

I had attempted to read all of the nominees before voting closed this year, but Real Life got in the way.  I only managed to finish two (reviewed here and here).  I was part of the way through Kings of the Wyld when voting closed.  Travel started and somehow I didn’t get back to the book until this past week.  I’m glad I did. Continue reading

2018 Gemmell Award Winners Announced

I received the following press release a short while ago.  My comments will follow.

Tonight saw the prizegiving ceremony for this year’s Gemmell Awards, marking the tenth anniversary of the event, and once again the awards were presented before a keen and enthusiastic audience at Derby’s Edge-Lit event.

The winner of the Ravenheart Award for best fantasy artwork was Richard Anderson for this work on Nicholas Eames’s Kings of the Wyld, published by Orbit with cover design from Lisa Marie Pompilio. Richard wins the award for the first time having seen off a host of previous winners and nominees taking in Kerim Beyit, Sam Green, Jackie Morris/Stephen Raw and Kerby Rosanes.

The winner of the Morningstar Award for best fantasy debut was Nicholas Eames with his title Kings of the Wyld, the first in ‘The Band’ series published by Orbit. The story follows a group of retired mercenaries clubbing together for one final mission and will be followed by the second book, Bloody Rose, this August. Eames saw off a strong field of fantasy debutants in RJ Barker, Melissa Caruso, Ed McDonald and Anna Smith Spark.

The winner of the Legend Award for best fantasy novel was Robin Hobb for Assassin’s Fate, the third book in the Fitz and the Fool series published by HarperVoyager. Hobb wins the award for the first time, beating stern competition from Miles Cameron, Steve McHugh and previous Legend recipients Mark Lawrence and Brandon Sanderson.

Awards Chair Stan Nicholls said: ‘The public have once again spoken with their votes this year, and the engagement and response for our tenth year has been fantastic. We’d like to congratulate Richard, Nicholas, Robin and all involved in making this year’s winning titles possible, and all who made the shortlists this year.’

For more information on the awards, visit http://www.gemmellawards.com/

I finished Kings of the Wyld last night.  It is deserving of the award.  I’ll try to have a review up within the next few days.

Adventures Fantastic would like to offer congratulations to all the nominees, and especially the winners.

Of Editorial Greatness

Earlier today I was reading a post on a site I don’t normally read these days (I was lured by the temptation of a free ebook).  The post made the argument that John Campbell was the greatest editor the science fiction and fantasy fields have seen.

That got me to thinking, which usually gets me in trouble.  I began wondering who would be the greatest editor, greater being defined as having the most impact over time.  The original post didn’t include fantasy other than a passing reference to Unknown.  So I thought I’d throw the question open to anyone who wanted to voice an opinion.  Below is a list I compiled off the top of my head.  I didn’t include any living editors.  If I had, Ellen Datlow would be on it.  My rationale is that the impact of living editors on the can’t be accurately assessed because they are still having an influence and their greatest influences may still be to come.

 

So in alphabetical order are ten editors.  I’ll provide a brief explanation as to why they have been included.  Some will be quickly eliminated.  Others, not so much. Continue reading

I’m on the Cromcast

First, I need to apologize to Josh, Jon, and Luke for failing to mention in my report on Howard Days 2018 that they had interviewed me.  I plead fatigue and lack of sleep.  Age had nothing to do with it, really.

I’d also like to thank them for having me on the show.  It was great to visit with them in front of a microphone.  The episode went live the day I left on an extended trip, which is why I’m just not mentioning it.  Again, apologies for the delay in promoting it, guys.

For those of you who don’t know, the Cromcast is a podcast focusing on weird fiction.  It’s one you’ll want to listen to.

Over the weekend, the Cromcasters discussed amongst themselves how they thought Howard Days was going and interviewed a number of people.  In addition to me, they also talked with David J. West, Ty Johnston, Jason Waltz, Mark Finn, Indy Cavalier, Jeff Shanks, and Rusty Burke, just to name a few.  This episode is two hours long.  I come in at 11:18.  But don’t check it out just to hear me.  All of the guests, along with the hosts, have something interesting to say.

Listen to it here.  You’ll be glad you did.