Monthly Archives: June 2012

Crazy Greta is Crazy Fun

Crazy Greta
David Hardy
Urania
various electronic formats, $3.99

If John Bunyan had dropped acid while writing The Pilgrim’s Progress (or perhaps Dante writing The Inferno), then the result would likely have resembled this book.  With a dash of John Myers Myers’ Silverlock thrown in and an echo of The Wizard of Oz in the final chapter.

The setting is in Holland during the time of all the religious wars between the Catholics and the Protestants, with the Spanish invading currently invading.  Greta is an tavern keeper, about forty, whose husband left three years prior on a voyage to the New World, never to return and presumed lost.  The first couple of pages are something of an infodump, but that’s all right because you need to know who these people are when they start dying.  Which happens within a couple of pages.

Brueghel’s The Triumph of Death

The tavern is attacked by the dead, although these really aren’t zombies in the traditional sense.  They’re skeletons and animated corpses.  The handful of survivors end up fleeing the tavern, although not without a fight.  Greta swings a mean sword.  She swings a meaner skillet.

What follows is a nightmare scene out of Pieter Brueghel and Hieronymous Bosch.  I mean literally; Hardy cites the two painters in his afterward.

I’m not familiar enough with the works of either of these two men to catch all the references to the various paintings.  Some of them, though, weren’t hard to find.  The scene by Bosch is one of those in the book.  And yes, what it looks like is happening in the picture is what’s happening.

The story also becomes a wild trip not only through a devastated country side into the bowels of Hell itself, as envisioned by Hieronymous Bosch.  Along the way Greta gains and loses a number of companions.  My favorite was Christopher Marlowe, you can’t remember his own death and thinks he’s still alive.  Hardy’s handling of him was especially well done.

There’s plenty of conflict here, with fights or battles in nearly every other chapter, including a war between the forces of Heaven and Hell.  Crazy Greta is a fun book, but it’s not your typical fantasy.  It’s different, and that’s a good thing.

RIP Ray Bradbury

Jonathan Strahan and Lou Anders have both tweeted that Ray Bradbury has died.  So far io9 is the only news outlet I’ve found carrying the story.   I’m swamped at work this morning, so I’m going to post this and write more later.  I’ll have a more personal tribute tonight or tomorrow. 

Rest in Peace, Ray.  You will be missed.

Midnight House/Darkside Press is Having a Sale

I don’t know how many of you are familiar with Darkside Press and Midnight House, two specialty imprints run by John Pelan who edited the recent The Century’s Best Horror Fiction, a massive two volume collection featuring a horror story for each year of the 20th century, each by a different author.  Midnight House is the horror imprint, and Darkside is the science fiction imprint.  Their titles have included collections by Fritz Leiber and a collection of science fiction by Clark Ashton Smith.  I can’t find a current website, or I’d post a link.  As far as I know (and I should know because I have lifetime subscriptions to both imprints), it’s been a couple of years since a new volume from either imprint has come out.  This is nothing unusual in the small press world. 

But that doesn’t mean their books aren’t available.  For this week, they’re running a special sale.  Following are the details from John, via Gerad Walters of Centipede Press.  I’ll have a few things to say about some of the titles which may be of interest to some of you at the end.

EVERYONE GETS BETTER THAN DEALER DISCOUNT!!!! (Even Book Dealers!)

Here’s the deal: Order any quantity of lots of 5 of any the following titles and pay just $100.00 per lot! You can mix and match, but the orders MUST be lots of five books. You can buy as many lots as you wish at this bargain price. Dealers, now’s a great time to shore up your stock! Collectors, here’s a great opportunity to fill in some blanks or get some early Christmas shopping for your friends out of the way! This sale will not be repeated and ENDS FRIIDAY AT 1AM!!! I need to buy an expensive nebulizer and the meds to put in it, so this is a short-term need on our part.

PAYMENT MUST ACCOMPANY ORDERS! Remit to darkmidhouse@yahoo.com

INTERNATIONAL CUSTOMERS MUST ADD $30.00 per lot for S & H. Domestic orders shipped free!

Here are the available titles:

The Feaster from Afar – Joseph Payne Brennan (cover price $45)
Thing of Darkness – G.G. Pendarves (cover price $45)
My Rose & My Glove – Harvey Jacobs (cover price $40.00)
Darker Tides – Eric Frank Russell (cover price $45.00)
Falling Idols – Brian Hodge (cover price $35.00)
City Fishing – Steve Rasnic Tem (cover price $40.00)
The Shining Hand – Dick Donovan (J.E. Muddock) (cover price $40.00)
The Scarecrow – G. Ranger Wormser (cover price $40.00)
Echo of a Curse – R.R. Ryan (cover price $40.00)
Idol of the Flies – Jane Rice (cover price $40.00)
The Beasts of Brahm – Mark Hansom (cover price $40.00)
Return of the Soul – Robert Hichens (cover price $40.00)
The Harlem Horror – Charles Birkin (cover price $40.00)
Fingers of Fear – J.U. Nicolson (cover price $40.00)
The Garden at 19 – Edgar Jepson (cover price $40.00)

Also, do check our eBay auctions (seller ID = chrismorris927) Some terrific one of a kind items available this week!

OK, Keith here again.  Of particular interest to readers of the blog, let me recommend the first two titles in the list  (The Feaster from Afar – Joseph Payne Brennan, Thing of Darkness – G.G. Pendarves) as well as the volumes by Eric Frank Russell (Darker Tides) and Jane Rice (The Idol of the Flies).  Both Brennan and Pendarves wrote for Weird Tales, while Rice wrote for John Campbell’s Unknown.  The Eric Frank Russell collection isn’t science fiction but horror and dark fantasy, a side of Russell most people aren’t familiar with.  Other titles were favorites of Karl Edward Wagner, such as Echo of a Curse by R. R. Ryan. 

New Issue (#96) of Beneath Ceaseless Skies Now Available

Beneath Ceaseless Skies
biweekly
free online or through electronic subscription

A new issue of BCS went live today, unless you subscribe, in which case you’ve had it since Sunday night/Monday morning.  But I digress.

This issue contains two stories.  Let’s take a brief look at them.

The first is “The Magic of Dark and Hollow Places” by Adam Callaway.  It’s a creepy story about the Inked Man, who is dying.  His body is parchment.  He has the ability to tear a strip off his body, write on it, and what he writes comes into existance.  Wings, for example.  Parallel to it are the epistles of an exiled miner to his beloved.  He’s trying to save up enough money to buy passage home.  The two storylines are related, but just how I’ll let you discover for yourself.  I loved the concept of the Inked Man.  He’s creepy and horrifying in just the correct measure.

My favorite story, though, was Kenneth Schneyer‘s “Serkers and Sleep“.  It’s the longer of the two offerings this month.  It’s the story of a young boy.  His family owns a book that has been passed down so long that its origins are lost.  No one, not even the local sorcerer, can read the writing.  Then one day the boy discovers that he can read one of the sentences.  No one else can, only him.  But only one or two sentences.  And only for a brief time.  The sentences relate directly to things he’s dealing with.  The book begins to give him advice and show solutions to problems.  Ultimately, it will lead him on a journey of loss and discovery and a heartrending sacrifice.

I think I liked “Serkers and Sleep” better than “Places” because I could relate to the protagonist, Scuffer, better.  Let’s face it, the Inked Man is a really cool character, but there’s not much in my experience that’s similar to his.  We’ve all loved someone we’ve lost, which is why I think Scuffer’s story speaks to me on such a deep level.  I highly recommend this one.

Once again BCS has provided excellent fantasy short fiction.  It’s worth your time to check it.  And if you like it, get a subscription.  This is a publication, I’d like to see stick around for a while.