Category Archives: Weird Tales

Happy Birthday, Seabury Quinn

Seabury Quinn was born on this date, January 1, in 1889. He passed away Christmas Eve, 1969.  Quinn wrote for Weird Tales in the 1920s, 30s, and 40s. He is best remembered for his occult detective Jules de Grandin.

I don’t have a review to mark the occasion. It’s been a while since I read any of his works.  I’m traveling today, so I don’t know if I will get a chance to read anything he wrote today. If it doesn’t happen today, it may be a few days. The rest of the week is going to be pretty packed with work and other obligations.

I do want to read more Quinn this year. I have the Night Shade editions of the complete Jules de Grandin, as well as the Battered Silicon Dispatch edition and a collection of non-de Grandin stories from Ash-Tree Press.  I’ll let you know what I think when I do read some.

The Weird Tales Covers of C. C. Senf

Farnsworth Wright (l.) and C. C. Senf, Chicago, late 1920s

Artist C. C. (Curtis Charles) Senf was born in this date, July 30, 1873. He passed away in 1949.  Senf did a number of covers for Weird Tales.  The ISFDB lists 45 covers between 1927 and 1932.  I’m not sure why Senf didn’t do any others.  His last cover was July 1932.  Margaret Brundage’s first cover was September 1932. She had already provided the covers for the Spring and Summer 1932 issues of Oriental Stories.  Maybe Farnsworth liked her covers better.

Or maybe Senf left to pursue other, more lucrative projects.  I don’t know.  I’ll do some checking, and if I find out anything interesting, I’ll report back.

Senf’s covers definitely have what I would call a 1920’s look to them, with Victorian overtones.  For more discussion of Senf’s technique and a more detailed biography, see these three posts at Tellers of Weird Tales.

Now, let’s enjoy some of his covers. Continue reading

Henry S. Whitehead

Today (March 5) marks the birth of Henry S. Whitehead.  He was born in 1882 and passed away in November of 1932.  Whitehead was a contributor of Weird Tales and a correspondent of H.P. Lovecraft.  The year before Whitehead died, Lovecraft visited him at his Florida home and quite liked him.  Had he not died so young, Whitehead would have been a major author of the weird and fantastic.  I consider him to be so, and I’m sure I’m not alone in that.

Whitehead served for a time as the Archdeacon for the Episcopal Church in the Virgin Islands.  This posting would become a major influence on his fiction, as most of it dealt with voodoo and other fantastic aspects of Caribbean life.

Whitehead wrote no novels, but his short fiction is worth seeking out.  I reviewed “Seven Turns in a Hangman’s Rope” a few years ago.  Fortunately, his work is available in electronic format.  If I get a chance, I’ll try to read something else by him.

Blogging Northwest Smith: Yvala

Catherine Lucille Moore was born on January 24, 1911, in Indianapolis, Indiana.  I’ve written multiple birthday tributes to her.  As I said for Robert E. Howard’s birthday two days, ago, I’m eulogized out.  So today in honor of her birthday, I’ll be revising a series I let go dormant, that of the Northwest Smith stories.  There will be spoilers below the fold. Continue reading

Happy Birthday, Seabury Quinn

Seabury Grandin Quinn was born on New Year’s Day in 1889.  He passed away on Christmas Eve in 1969.  Now where have I heard that name “Grandin” before?

Oh, yeah.  Jules de Grandin, the French occult detective.  He appeared in over 90 stories and one novel in Weird Tales beginning in 1925.  The last story was published in 1951.  They are currently being reprinted in hardcover by NightShade Books.  Four of a projected five volumes have been published as of this writing.

Quinn wrote other stories that didn’t feature de Grandin.  The first Quinn story I ever read was “The Phantom Farmhouse”.

Given how prolific he was, I’m surprised he isn’t better remembered today.  Hopefully someone will publish a collection of his non-de Grandin work in an affordable edition.

We Need a Joseph Payne Brennan Retrospective

Today, December 20, marks the centenary of the birth of Joseph Payne Brennan.  Brennan only wrote  one novel, which was published by a small press.  Most of his output was in the form of short fiction and poetry.   Several volumes of both have been published, and are readily available on the secondary market.  They ain’t gonna be cheap.

For example, The Shapes of Midnight, a paperback published by Berkley in 1980 shows eighteen copies available under a search on ABE.  They cheapest is $27.63.  The prices rise from there to a high of $176.04.  That is not a typo.  Someone is asking one hundred seventy-six dollars and four cents for a paperback.  I don’t remember how much I paid for my copy, but it wasn’t anywhere near $27, let alone $176.

Brennan was a good writer.  He was one of the last writers to write for the original incarnation of Weird Tales.  I’ve liked everything I’ve read by him, which, granted, isn’t much.  But that’s mainly because his work hasn’t been collected in a readily accessible form.  Most of his books were published in limited print runs by small presses.  It would probably be easier and cheaper to track down his stories in their original publications than to buy some of his books.

I would hope that Wildside or Centipede Press would do a large retrospective.  While Centipede would do Brennan Justice by putting his work inside some very nice hard covers, the book would probably be out of nearly everyone’s reach due to the price.  Not that I wouldn’t try to scrape the cash together.  On the other hand, a couple of Megapacks of his work from Wildside would be great.  There aren’t any electronic versions of Brennan’s work.  Maybe one of these publishers will put something together soon.  I would love to read some of Brennan’s poetry.

Black Friday, Adventures Fantastic Style

Here in the States, the day after Thanksgiving has come to be known as Black Friday.  I’m not sure why it’s called Black Friday. The term in the US was originally used to describe the days two different stock market crashes occurred in the 1800s.  In more modern times, it started out as the official kickoff to the Christmas shopping season and has since mutated into something that is taking over the whole season. It’s when women get up before God (or never go to bed) and drag their husbands to mob scenes where they save $128 by spending $583.  Or something like that.

The whole thing is enough to make one want to run up the Jolly Roger and start lopping off heads.

So here at Adventures Fantastic, we’re going to provide an antidote to all that insanity by observing Black Friday our way.  Robert E. Howard wrote a number of stories involving the concept of “black”.  We’re going to look at some of them.  The following list is by no means complete; it’s just the ones I’ve read in the last few days.  Feel free to add others in the comments.  Also, a number of other authors could be included in this post.  I’ll save them for next year, but feel free to add suggestions in the comments. Continue reading

Women in Weird Tales: Mary Elizabeth Counselman

If you pay much attention to the nonsense being passed around as truth in the fantasy and science fiction fields, you’ll quickly hear that women were shut out of the pulps/digests/paperbacks/takeyourpick until [insert arbitrary date here], when women suddenly started writing and publishing.

Most of you know that’s not really the way it happened.  (If you don’t know that, start here, then come back.  I’ll wait.)  Around these here parts, we acknowledge the contributions of women to the fields of the fantastic, and we try to inform of others.

Case in point.  The conventional narrative says women weren’t well represented in Weird Tales, with the possible exception of C. L. Moore.  This is demonstrably not true.  While women certainly weren’t the majority on the Unique Magazine‘s tables of contents, they were by no means absent.

We’ll take a look at one of those authors today, on the anniversary of her birth.  Mary Elizabeth Counselman was born on this date, November 19, 1911.  Ms. Counselman had in weird fiction a career that began in 1931 and, with interruptions, continued until 1994, the year before she died.  She also wrote for the slicks, and later worked as a reporter and taught creative writing.

Counselman only published a handful of books in her lifetime, the final one a collection of poetry.

Some of her best early work is included in Half in Shadow.  It contains her best known story, “The Three Marked Pennies”.

That’s not the story I want to look at, though.  In observance of Ms. Counselman’s birthday, I read “The Monkey Spoons”.  It’s also included in Half in Shadow as well as being available in ebook in the Weird Fiction Megapack, Fantastic Stories Presents the Weird Tales Superpack #2, and as a standalone.

The story concerns three young people who enter an antique store looking for something to signify their friendship.  They are a young woman, her brother, and her fiance.  They end up buying a set of monkey spoons.

I had never heard of monkey spoons before, but apparently they are a real thing.  They were ornate spoons used by Dutch settlers in the New York area and were most frequently used to recognize a death, although they could also be used for births and marriages.

The monkey spoons the three young friends buy are said to be cursed.  They were used at the wake of a notorious Dutch landowner in the 1600s who had been murdered by some friends and family members.  He got his revenge on them from the monkey spoons.  The old hunchbacked proprietor of the antique shop tries to discourage the friends from buying them, but they insist.

Of course all three come to grisly ends.  That part is predictable.  The nice twist is in the last sentence in which we learn exactly how the Dutch landowner died.  It’s nice and grisly.

There hasn’t been a collection of Mary Elizabeth Counselman’s fiction in years, although a number of stories are available in the many omnibus anthologies currently for sale on Amazon.  Virtually none of her later work has been reprinted.  I think it’s time Wildside Press published a Mary Elizabeth Counselman Megapack.  Until that happens, look her stuff up.  She wasn’t a top tier author, but she was consistently entertaining.  And remember, she wrote back when women allegedly didn’t publish in Weird Tales.

A Forgotten Pulpster: H. Warner Munn

H. Warner Munn was born on this date, November 5, in 1903.  Munn passed away in 1981.  He is largely forgotten today, but he wrote for Weird Tales.  Near the end of his life, he returned to writing.

Munn is best known for writing a series known as the Merlin saga.  The first two installments, King of the World’s Edge and The Ship From Atlantis were first published   Merlin’s Ring was to have been published in the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series, but the imprint was canceled.  Ballantine still published the book along with its sequel, Merlin’s Godson.  The latter book combined King of the World’s Edge and The Ship From Atlantis.

Neither of these books (Merlin’s Ring and Merlin’s Godson) are currently available in electronic format in English.  My understanding is that there were other books planned in this series, but Munn died before he could write them.  King of the World’s Edge was favorably compared to the works of Robert E. Howard when it was serialized in Weird Tales.

Munn’s other series involved werewolves.  It was also started in Weird Tales.  When he returned to writing, Munn was convinced by Robert Weinberg to write more stories, which Weinberg published.  These are available in electronic format.

I have to confess I’ve not read much of Munn’s work.  I need to correct that.