Tuesday, April 29, 2025
When teenaged me tried to draw Cory Snyder
Monday, April 28, 2025
City of Wilmington, Delaware, scrip from 1862
Saturday, April 26, 2025
Fabulous paperback cover:
"The Word for World is Forest"
- Title: The Word for World is Forest
- Additional cover text: "The mind-stunning science fiction masterpiece"
- Author: Ursula K. Le Guin (1929-2018)
- Cover illustration: Richard M. Powers (1921-1996), though he is not credited anywhere in the book
- Publisher: Berkley Medallion
- Year of this edition: December 1976 (fifth printing)
- Original publication date: 1972
- Pages: 169
- Format: Paperback
- Cover price: $1.75 (in very small sideways type)
- Back cover excerpt: "The planet Athshe was a paradise whose people were blessed with a mystical awareness of existence. Then the conquerors arrived and began to rape, enslave and kill humans without a flicker of humanity. The Athsheans were unskilled in the ways of war, and without weapons. But the gentle tribesmen possessed strange powers over their dreams. And the alien conquerors had taught them how to hate..."
- Dedication: "FOR JEAN Who Went Ahead"
- Excerpt #1: It was unbelievable. They'd all gone insane. This damned alien world had sent them all right round the bend, into byebye dreamland, along with the creechies.
- Excerpt #2: With a promise of peace they would withdraw all their outposts and live in one area, the region they had forested in Middle Sornol: about 1700 square miles of rolling land, well watered.
- Excerpt #3: "When he has done this, it is done. You cannot take things that exist in the world and try to drive them back into the dream, to hold them inside the dream with walls and pretenses."
- Rating on Amazon: 4.5 stars (out of 5).
- Amazon review excerpt: In 2024, Royce wrote: "If we find life on other worlds, we will inevitably enslave its inhabitants, kill its inhabitants, or if they are superior, go to war with them. It’s just who we are. I hope we never find life elsewhere because I know us and it will end badly."
- Rating on Goodreads: 4.06 stars (out of 5).
- Goodreads review excerpt: In 2020, Sean Barrs wrote: "I argue that it is an extremely important work of science-fiction because we could learn from it as a society. And this is why art is so radically essential. We have a distant future, and a distant alien world, we are dealing with intergalactic politics and racism across humanoid species, but the allegory is not too far from today. And that's truly terrifying."
- Blunt thoughts from Lawrence Burton, author of Crappy 1970s Paperbacks with Airbrushed Spacecraft on the Covers: "I realise that James Cameron's Avatar borrows from a great variety of sources — Edgar Rice Burroughs, Dances with Wolves, and the Smurfs to name but three — but it really feels like a massive [bleeping] chunk of it came from this novella, albeit with a few other bits bolted on so as to save the effects guy being stood around all day twiddling his thumbs and looking bored."
Monday, April 21, 2025
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Postcard from my great-grandfather to my grandmother*
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Setsuko Hara's sketch of Toshiro Mifune in "Tokyo Sweetheart"
Thursday, April 17, 2025
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Old ad for "The Black Cat" on WBKB's Shock Theatre in Chicago
"For early television played late at night, this show was the best. The goofy music and the scary things on the show scared a little kid like me half to death but I loved it. Especially Marvin's humor. The movies were old time horror classics like Dracula and Frankenstein, etc. I wish I could get some of the episodes. I don't know if WBKB in Chicago kept any of them or not. Any show named Shock Theater in any other town just copied what was already done in Chicago. Marvin even took some of the show on the road to local ballparks like Comiskey. His band was great also. It even had a guy playing accordion in the band. I would love to see episodes of Shock Theater, even online somewhere."
Saturday, April 12, 2025
From the readers: Toys of yesteryear, Earle Cook Jr. and liminal spaces
It's ridiculously already 100 degrees outside, so it's a good day to try to type up a post while Bandit sleeps between my arms and Mommy Orange gives my right arm a bath. Here are some reader comments that have come in since early February:
Can we have a national discussion about this vintage toy advertisement? Anonymous writes: "The floor is lava. This is why the guy needs rescuing by a lift cage. Big Josh has pecs. But so did my Big Jim's roommate, GI Joe, with a taped-on leg. He was a Vietnam vet, but still highly deadly and capable."
Never underestimate the capabilities of an action figure and an awesome imagination.
A long-gone motor inn, longer-gone ancestors and a sketch: Anonymous writes: "I remember [Framingham Motor Inn in Framingham, Massachusetts] fondly. My now hubby of 50+ years and I had our 1st upscale date there."
Book cover: "The Second Hammer Horror Film Omnibus" (1967): Anonymous writes: "Five shillings was a pretty high price for a paperback in the UK in 1967. You could buy new paperbacks for 2/6, half that price. Probably first publication, royalties to Hammer and film script-writers, and Burke's own fees helped put the price up."
Thursday, April 10, 2025
If only we knew then what we know now...
On November 3, 1990 — 34 years and 5 months ago — I was a second-year student at Penn State University, learning the ropes of journalism and calling all of my sources via landlines.
Also on that date, the Lancaster Intelligencer Journal published this short editorial about AT&T's new SmartPhone. Looking back, it's quite the curiosity...
Monday, April 7, 2025
Peeking inside 1916's "The Overall Boys in Switzerland"
Saturday, April 5, 2025
Thursday, April 3, 2025
Madeline Brandeis revisited
I thought I had just this week learned that the children's author was also a director, taking the helm of 1918's silent fairy tale film The Star Prince. But I guess I had known that, too, as I wrote in 2015: "In her amazing and too-short life, she was also a pioneer filmmaker. You can read about those efforts at the Women Film Pioneers Project." You can also read about Brandeis' The Star Prince in this review from one of my favorite film bloggers, Movies Silently. That review notes: "The story is heavily influenced by fairy tales and there are bad aspects to that as well as good. Equating beauty with goodness is not such a great lesson, nor is making the main villain a dwarf. I think Brandeis’s heart was in the right place but some of the decisions do not exactly work."
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Psychedelic book cover: "Tongues of the Moon"
- Title: Tongues of the Moon
- Additional cover text: "A plot to set the stars on fire ... chilling science fiction"
- Author: Philip José Farmer (1918-2009)
- Cover illustration: Unknown!! It would be really nice to sleuth this one out, so the groovy artist can be acknowledged for the record.
- Publisher: Pyramid Books (T2260)
- Year of this edition: Second printing, July 1970
- Original publication date: 1964 (also by Pyramid Books, with a different cover)
- Pages: 143
- Format: Paperback
- Cover price: 75 cents
- Back cover excerpt: "This is Science Fiction — but — perhaps less Fiction than Science ... Man's fate has always been to play deadly games with the enormous forces of the universe ... tempting doom. And now it may be too late ..."
- Grim opening passage: Fireflies on the dark meadow of Earth ... The men and women looking up through the dome in the center of the crater of Eratosthenes were too stunned to cry out, and some did not understand all at once the meaning of those pinpoints on the shadowy face of the new Earth, the lights blossoming outwards, then dying. So bright they could be seeen through the cloudmasses covering a large part of Europe. So bright they could be located as London, Paris, Brussels, Copenhagen, Leningrade, Rome, Reykjavik, Athens, Cairo ... Then, a flare near Moscow that spread out and out and out. ...
- Excerpt #2: Earth, dark now, except for steady glares here and there, forest fires and cities, probably, which would burn for days. Perhaps weeks. Then, when the fires died out, the embers cooled, no more fire. No more vegetation, no more animals, no more human beings. Not for centuries.
- Excerpt #3: "He'd have to be a raving maniac to do that!" said Broward. "He's a maniac all right, but he knows what he's doing and how to do it," said Scone.
- Excerpt #4: Broward patted her back and said, "I know, sweetheart. Try to forget what's happened, think of it as a nightmare. Now we're awake and in a world that needs to be gardened and needs love as never before."
- Rating on Amazon: 3.6 stars (out of 5).
- Rating on Goodreads: 2.97 stars (out of 5).
- Goodreads review #1: In 2023, Jim wrote: "One of PJF's earlier books, from 1964, and not one of his better books, but still of interest. In this one, Earth is destroyed in a nuclear war — but the war is not over. There were Earth colonies on the Moon and Mars, and led by power-mad dictators, are going to continue the war. Our hero, Broward, is one man who wants to stop the fighting ... and killing. Farmer has a rather cynical view of human nature — much like Mark Twain. However, in this story, he gives us a hero who has the courage to stand up against the insanity of war."
- Goodreads review #2: In 2019, Dave wrote: "Awful! Lol. I was hoping for a little cheesy sci-fi but this was terrible! No chapters, just one long run on story with weak one dimensional characters. Unbearable. I pity the Little Free Library that will house this. Not only will it cheapen the company of the other books where it resides, but some poor soul may choose it thinking it a small hidden masterpiece. Only when they reach home and crack it open will they realize their fate. I can’t even bear to stash it during daylight; one night, soon, I’ll be off to some darkened street to hide this poor mistake of a story."
- That's really harsh: Agreed. There's no need to disparage books that are placed in Little Free Libraries. Let readers explore and decide for themselves. A much more in-depth and thoughtful review of the strengths and weakness of Tongues of the Moon can be found in this 2022 post on MPorcius Fiction Log, which has been going strong since 2013 and already has 42 posts (!) this year. MPorcius writes: "I like the broad outlines of the plot of Tongues of the Moon, and its themes and ideas. All the Biblical references and the theme of an atheist acquiring faith are a good change of pace from the references to Greek and Norse mythology and to Shakespeare, and the insistence that religion is a scam, that is the norm in the science fiction I generally read. ... There is a lot of talk about culture and ethnicity in Tongues of the Moon, and while it seems Farmer admires all the various people of Earth, and the whole point of the book is that we should all get along, some of his depictions might be considered uncomfortably stereotypical."
- Related headlines from this morning, 61 years after the novel's publication: Trump says he’s "angry" at Putin’s remark questioning Zelensky’s legitimacy: The president said he would mull secondary tariffs on Russian oil if Putin stalls the peace process with Ukraine ... and ... Elon Musk’s Mission to Take Over NASA — and Mars (Musk & government officials have discussed a scenario in which SpaceX would give up its moon-focused Artemis contracts to free up funds for Mars-related projects) ... and ... Nuclear risk from military AI prompts calls for US, China and others to seek agreement
Saturday, March 29, 2025
1910 letter inside "Legends & Tales of Old Munich"
Thursday, March 27, 2025
Phillies Opening Day 2025
- A neat piece of Phillies history (1970 hex sign giveaway)
- John Doll's 1929 baseball predictions
- Down memory lane with 1983 Topps Baseball Sticker Album
- Collection of Phillies ticket stubs
- Baseball-themed advertisements from a 1953 Phillies scorecard
- Inside the 1973 Spartanburg Phillies program
- Some Phillies Fever from the Bicentennial summer of 1976
- It's been five years since Harry Kalas, the Voice of the Phillies, died [2014]
- Steve Jeltz's greatest day (Phillies 15, Pirates 11)
- Connie Mack has some advice for the 2013 Philadelphia Phillies
- For Opening Day, great Phillies hairstyles of the late 1970s
- Ches Crist, baseball player
- It's Opening Day! Do you have Phillies Phever?
- Philadelphia Phillies spring training photos from March 1984
- 1959 Fleer baseball card showing the "Ted Williams Shift"
- Baseball program ads for Coca-Cola and Hires
- An all-star lineup of Camel smokers from 1954
- Postcard: The haunted hotel that spooks Bryce Harper
- Charlotte Clymer: "If you think what happened to Rumeysa Ozturk can't happen to you because you're a citizen and she's not, you are sorely mistaken. Ozturk was snatched off the street not for being a national security threat but for having a wrong opinion. If we don't put a stop to this, it's coming for all of us."
- Gillian Branstetter: "No matter your station in life, there is astoundingly little separating you from those men in that cage behind Kristi Noem. No charges, no attorneys, no hearings, no trial. Just conjecture and brute force could be enough to justify completely dehumanizing you, too."
- Erin Reed: "It’s not just trans and gender nonconforming people who should be worried — most every marginalized group will be impacted by this measure, as well as huge impacts on married women."
- Prem Thakker: "So the position of the Trump-Vance administration — and every member of Congress unless they explicitly say otherwise — is quite literally you do not have guaranteed free speech rights in America if you say things they don't like. That is the headline."
- Andrea Pitzer: "As long as thugs in hoodies can disappear people from our streets, we do not have a functioning democracy."