Saturday, February 04, 2012

Samuel Youd (John Christopher), R. I. P.

Samuel Youd - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Samuel Youd (Christopher Samuel Youd, born 16 April 1922, died 3 February 2012) was a British author, best known for his science fiction writings under the pseudonym John Christopher, including the novel The Death of Grass and the young adult oriented novel series The Tripods. He won the Guardian Award in 1971, and the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis in 1976.

PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention

Folks, this one is a full-out shocker. Trust me. I've read some dark books this year, but nothing quite approaches this one. It'll take you places you might not want to go.

Amazon.com: Angel Noir eBook: Fred Zackel: Kindle Store: “Angel Noir” is horror / crime / suspense from the author of THE BLONDE IN THE RED CORVETTE, CREEPIER THAN A WHOREHOUSE KISS, and TIGHT FIT IN A LONG COLD BOX. "You can't kill an angel, fallen or otherwise." What if Angels had free will? What if they had vengeance in their heart? They met one night at the Rowdy Yates Cantina near the California-Nevada stateline. She drank mezcal tequila and played lead guitar in an all-girl hard rock band. He was a serial killer with a baker's dozen under his belt. She could have been just a ditsy, sickly blonde in dreadlocks living alone in a rusty trailer in the Mohave Desert. He prowled the Interstates west of the Rockies giving into his urges and rage. Face to face, eye to eye and belly to belly, they were both dead wrong about each other. "Wrestling with your angel might be another form of foreplay." Intense themes. Intense situations. Language and violence. Not for the squeamish.

Song of the Day

Dorothy Gilman, R. I. P.

NYTimes.com: Dorothy Gilman, an espionage writer whose best-known heroine, Mrs. Pollifax, is very likely the only spy in literature to belong simultaneously to the Central Intelligence Agency and the local garden club, died on Thursday at her home in Rye Brook, N.Y. She was 88.

Link via Mystery Fanfare.

Today's Vintage Ad

PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention

I read these stories when they came out, but I grabbed this collection immediately. After all, it's free today only!

Amazon.com: HALLAM (Lucas Hallam Mysteries) eBook: L. J. Washburn: Kindle Store: "Hallam", a 10,000 word story is the first appearance of Lucas Hallam, a cowboy who has outlived the days of the old west to become a gun-toting private eye and stuntman in the early days of motion pictures in California. Originally published in The Eye's Have It, 1984.

"Hollywood Flesh", a 7000 word story was published in The Book of all Flesh 2001. It's a good thing Lucas Hallam is a hard-headed old cowboy and doesn't believe in such nonsense as Zombies, or this case might give him nightmares.

Top 50 modern day low budget movies

Top 50 modern day low budget movies

Criminal-E: Free For Two

Criminal-E: Free For Two: Free For Two
These two very fine books are free on Kindle over 4th and 5th Feb.

The Unburied Dead: Amazon UK|Amazon US
Yellow Medicine: Amazon UK|Amazon US

John Steinbeck Update

John Steinbeck Wanted His Name Taken Off Hitchcock’s ‘Lifeboat’

PaperBack


Elliott Gilbert, Don't Push Me Around, Popular Library, 1955




Texas Led the Way

Frito Pie and the Chip Technology that Changed the World: Fritos got their start in Texas with the “Tom Edison of snack food.”

The Nazca Lines

Nazca Lines

Once upon a time, Judy and I went to Peru, and one of the highlights for me was seeing these lines. I'd read about them for most of my life, but I never thought I'd see them. It was a big event for me. Here's a photo of the little plane we flew in to see them, along with one of my photos of the lines. The shots in the article at the link are better.

Rare Japanese Photobooks

AbeBooks: Rare Japanese Photobooks: The works of prominent Japanese photographers from the past 50 years are now highly collectible. Connoisseurs of photobooks have become familiar with names like Eikoh Hosoe, Kikuji Kawada, and particularly Nobuyoshi Araki and Daido Moriyama.

Araki has been prolific over the decades but critics have accused him of veering into pornography. Lady Gaga was one of his more recent subjects. AbeBooks has sold more than 20 of his photobooks for prices in excess of $500.

Yet Another List I'm Not On

The 10 Absolute Coolest College Professors

10 Best Motorcycle Moments in Movie History

10 Best Motorcycle Moments in Movie History

Zalman King, R. I. P.

CNN.com: Zalman King, a onetime actor who went on to produce and direct numerous films including "Wild Orchid," died Friday after a lengthy battle with cancer, his son-in-law said.

Ben Gazzara, R. I. P.

Actor Ben Gazzara dies at 81: Ben Gazzara, who often portrayed tough or difficult characters on stage and screen during his 50-year career, died this afternoon, The New York Times is reporting. He was 81.

Apache Territory

Friday, February 03, 2012

He Was Studying the Play

Corpse sits in gamer cafe for 9 hours

Hat tip to Mel Odom.

Millennium Falcon Built from Mega Bloks

I built this model of the Millennium Falcon from Star Wars out of Mega Bloks in under 6 hours.

*gasps of awe*
*wild applause*

Thank yew, thank yew verra much.

The Top Suspense Group is Back with Their Favorite Kills

A great anthology. Amazon Prime members read for free! Others pay only $2.99.

Amazon.com: Favorite Kills (Top Suspense Anthologies) eBook: Harry Shannon, Bill Crider, Vicki Hendricks, Max Allan Collins, Paul Levine, Libby Hellmann, Dave Zeltserman, Lee Goldberg, Joel Goldman, Ed Gorman: Kindle Store: We're back. We hope you're sitting down, and that you've finally caught your breath from Top Suspense, our first bestselling anthology. You're about to take another screaming thrill ride with twelve master storytellers. Each Top Suspense Group author is an award winning, highly acclaimed pro whose compelling and unforgettable tales have been published all over the world—and, in some cases, have even become blockbuster movies and TV shows.

In this book, Favorite Kills, we've collected our very best short stories. All major prize-winning tales and personal favorites, each one a knock-out punch of suspense.

So hold on tight my friend, or better yet, tie yourself down. You're in for another breathtaking wild ride of seething sex and unexpected twists, dark humor, and certain death. And when it's all over, and you're sitting there spent and satisfied, soaked in a flop sweat of terror and exhilaration, we're gonna be right there to bring you even more.

Was His Name Reese?

Cops Bust Naked Burglar Covered In Chocolate, Peanut Butter

5 Lost Photos That Could Have Changed History

5 Lost Photos That Could Have Changed History

Yet Another List I'm Not On

10 New Must-Reads for February

Song of the Day

Uh-Oh

The Munsters reboot is too edgy to be called The Munsters

And Yet They Didn't Base It on My Novel

TV Icons Barry Williams And Danny Bonaduce TVbytheNumbers: Television legends Danny Bonaduce (The Partridge Family) and Barry Williams (The Brady Bunch) will star in the new Syfy Saturday Original Movie Bigfoot, completing production in Seattle.

Joining Williams and Bonaduce will be Howard Hesseman (Head of the Class), Sherilyn Fenn (Twin Peaks), Andre Royo (The Wire) and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Alice Cooper (School’s Out). Oscar and Emmy nominee Bruce Davison (X-Men) will direct and also appear in the movie.

Free e-Book! One More Day!

If you have a Kindle, please grab it. You don't even have to read it. Just help me improve my numbers. I thank you, my family thanks you, and the publisher thanks you.

Amazon.com: The Prairie Chicken Kill (Truman Smith Mystery Series) eBook: Bill Crider: Kindle Store:Booklist says: "For pure fun and sheer entertainment, it doesn't get much better than Crider's Tru Smith stories. Highly recommended."

Today's Vintage Ad

Free Story!


And while you're getting the free story, don't forget to pick my my FREE BOOK, today only!

Amazon.com: The Red Reef eBook: James Reasoner: Kindle Store: Inspired by the classic adventure stories that appeared in such pulp magazines as ARGOSY and ADVENTURE, "The Red Reef" features the colorful glamour and the gritty danger of the South Seas as a guilt-ridden ship's captain gets a last chance at redemption. Written by bestselling novelist James Reasoner (the RANCHO DIABLO and WIND RIVER series, as well as cult classic novels TEXAS WIND and DUST DEVILS), this 4300-word short story first appeared in the final issue of the legendary webzine HARDLUCK STORIES and is now available again!

If This Won't Smooth Things Over, I Don't Know What Will

Komen Foundation offers pink handgun to promote Breast Cancer Awareness Month

The Paris Review: Bastion of Fine Fiction & Poetry

AbeBooks: The Paris Review: Bastion of Fine Fiction & Poetry: Founded in 1953 by Harold L. Humes, Peter Matthiessen and George Plimpton, the Paris Review is more than just a quarterly journal. It is a literary institution. As stated in the magazine’s inaugural issue, the creators wanted a vehicle to showcase great new fiction and poetry without shifting into literary critique, which was the dominant style of the time. The Paris Review is not un-critical but its focus is a celebration of great writing.

PaperBack


Elliott Gilbert, Vice Trap, Avon, 1957





Did You Remember that Ben Stiller & Adam Sandler Were There?

The 10 Oddest Super Bowl Halftime Performers

No Comment Department

Man swallows dentures during sex and dies

Six Horror Movies Where the “Filler” is Superior to the Horror

Six Horror Movies Where the “Filler” is Superior to the Horror

Hat tip to Jeff Segal.

Today's Western Movie Poster

The Worst Acting Snubs in Oscars History

The Worst Acting Snubs in Oscars History

10 Outstanding Neo-Noirs of the 2000s

10 Outstanding Neo-Noirs of the 2000s

Once Again, Texas Leads the Way

First ‘Heartless’ Man: You Don’t Really Need A Heart, Or A Pulse

10 Weirdest TV Ads in History

10 Weirdest TV Ads in History

The Artist

Why James Reasoner should see The Artist: one word -- Quicksand.

Why everybody else should see The Artist: Great black and white photography, scene-stealing dog, actors who appear to be having a wonderful time, the amusing take on an old story, lots of laughs and heart, and wonderful use of sound. What's not to like. Highly recommended.

Forgotten Books: A Night for Screaming -- Harry Whittington

This post originally appeared in slightly different form on July 13, 2005, before the “Forgotten Books” feature got started.

Which of Harry Whittington's novels is my favorite? That's an impossible question for me to answer, since I like so many of them. Certainly A Night for Screaming is right up there, so I decided to re-read it. It's the story of Mitch Walker, ex-cop, on the run from a murder he didn't commit, who winds up in Kansas, working on a huge farm that's run like the prison camp in Cool Hand Luke. The complications include Walker's relentless pursuer, the beautiful but nutjob wife of the farm's owner, the owner himself, the brutal overseers, and more.

One thing Whittington can do about as well as anybody ever could is begin the book with a tense situation and then dial up the tension on every succeeding page. He can put his protagonist into a situation that seems as bad as it can get, and then he can make it worse. And after that, he can make it worse still. In this book he takes a seemingly simple situation and complicates it more with every chapter, throwing in a few reversals and surprises along the way. If you ever run across a copy of A Night for Screaming, don't pass it up. You'll be sorry if you do. It's a dandy story, and it has a great cover, besides.

Since I wrote the above, the book has been reprinted in a swell double volume along with Any Woman He Wanted by Stark House. You can’t go wrong.

Alexander the Great

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Gotta Be a Novel in This

Miss Cora Strayer's Private Detective Agency

Link via Boing Boing.

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

World News: Two infamous Swedish murderers, the "Skara Cannibal" and the "Vampire Woman," hope to get married, according to Expressen, a Swedish newspaper.

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

Something to be Thankful For

Madonna's guarantee: no half-time wardrobe malfunction

Once Again, Texas Leads the Way

Someone at the FBI Is Swooning Over the "Tall, Dark & Handsome Bandit"

Ed Wood Update

NYTimes.com: TIM BURTON’S finely textured 1994 film, “Ed Wood,” would seem to have dramatized nearly everything the world needs to know about that schlocky filmmaker.

But at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, last month two earnest and affable men, Jason Insalaco and Jonathan Harris, presented what they called the only existing complete print of a 22-minute television pilot that could ignite new appreciation for Wood. Called “Final Curtain,” this odd, minimalist pilot was written, produced and directed by Ed Wood in 1957.

First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .

Chicken nuggets, punches thrown in Dinkytown fight

Guys, Do Not Click the Link. Women Might Enjoy It, However.

Man Gets Gored By Bull In Place Where Men Do Not Want To Get Gored By Bulls

And Keep Off Her Lawn!

Toothless Pa. woman robs bank for denture money

Indeed

The Greatest Year in Women's Fashion History

Ah, Ross Thomas

If you've been reading this blog for years (as who hasn't?), you know that Ross Thomas is one of my favorite writers. I'd give a lot just write one paragraph half as good as thousands that Thomas wrote. At any rate, here's a link to a fine essay and survey of Thomas' work, with copious quotations. Highly recommended. Ah, Treachery! - Do The Math

Song of the Day

First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .

HPD jails suspect in deadly text feud: According to a criminal complaint filed in the case, the older brother knew that his sibling and Franklin were involved in a feud based on threatening text messages sent to the younger brother's phone.

When he passed by, Franklin confronted Ruben Rubio. Xavier Rubio joined the argument then pulled a knife, according to the complaint. Franklin revealed a pistol and began firing.

Not Me

20 Common Grammar Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Makes

Today's Vintage Ad

Mona Lisa Update

Earliest copy of Mona Lisa found in Prado - The Art Newspaper: Conservators at the Prado in Madrid recently made an astonishing discovery, hidden beneath black overpaint. What was assumed to be a replica of the Mona Lisa made after Leonardo’s death had actually been painted by one of his key pupils, working alongside the master. The picture is more than just a studio copy—it changed as Leonardo developed his original composition.

Reminder: Free e-Book -- Two Days Left

If you have a Kindle, please grab it. You don't even have to read it. Just help me improve my numbers. I thank you, my family thanks you, and the publisher thanks you.

Amazon.com: The Prairie Chicken Kill (Truman Smith Mystery Series) eBook: Bill Crider: Kindle Store: Booklist says: For pure fun and sheer entertainment, it doesn't get much better than Crider's Tru Smith stories. Highly recommended.

Croc Update (Head Bump Edition)

‘Shieldcroc’: The Prehistoric Crocodile With a Bump On Its Head | Earth & Environment | Science | Epoch Times: The remains of a new species of ancient crocodilian have been unearthed in Morocco that date back to the Late Cretaceous Period, around 95 million years ago.

The now-extinct crocodile is named Aegisuchus witmeri and has been nicknamed “Shieldcroc” due to the shield-like layer of thick skin on its head. The new species was identified from the remnants of a fossilized skull.

Has This Already Been a SyFy Movie?

Caught just in time: Python captured in Florida cut open to reveal 59 baby snakes poised to ravage the Everglades

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

Put Him in the Scuppers with a Hose Pipe on Him

Drunken sailor opens wrong door | Seattle Times Newspaper: A drunken sailor who walked into the wrong apartment in Bremerton, urinated on the floor and then climbed into bed with an 80-year-old woman was "totally humiliated" by his actions but is unlikely to face criminal charges.

Hat tip to Fred Zackel.

PaperBack


Gunsmoke (stories adapted from other media by Don Ward), Ballantine, 1957




Sheep Tornado WBAGNFARB

Sheep Tornado Almost Destroys Car

Once Again, Texas Leads the Way

Man keeps getting arrested on someone else’s warrant: Real criminal already in jail

Shooter's Cross: The First Rancho Diablo Book Free!

Get it while it's free and get started on a great western action series.

Amazon.com: Shooter's Cross (Rancho Diablo) eBook: Colby Jackson: Books

Yet Another List I'm Not On

Top 10 underrated novels

Today's Western Movie Poster

Here's the Plot for Your Next Birding Thriller

UPI.com: Two European birdwatchers and their tourist guide were kidnapped in the southern Philippines Wednesday, police said.

Five heavily armed men abducted Elwold Horn, 52, of the Netherlands and Lorenzo Vinciguerra, 47, of Switzerland along with Filipino guide Ivan Sadenas, the Inquirer Mindanao reported.

4 Ways to Enjoy Nature According to Insane Old Magazines

4 Ways to Enjoy Nature According to Insane Old Magazines

The magazine covers alone make this worth a look.

Angelo Dundee, R. I. P.

NY Daily News: Angelo Dundee, the famed trainer most noted for his work with Muhammad Ali and Sugar Ray Leonard, died at his home in Tampa surrounded by his family on Wednesday. He was 90.

“He was a giant of a man, a history maker,” promoter Don King said. “He stood up in spite of and not because of. The most amazing thing about Angelo was that he could get along with anyone. He was the personification of walking in another man’s shoes.”

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

10 Foreign Remakes of American TV Shows Very Different Than the Original

10 Foreign Remakes of American TV Shows Very Different Than the Original

Why 'Lord Of The Rings' Is Addictive

Why 'Lord Of The Rings' Is Addictive

The Master of Ballantrae

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Here's the Plot for Your Next Chilean Thriller

Glacier thief arrested in Chile: Police hold man on suspicion of stealing five tonnes of ice from a glacier in Patagonia to sell as designer ice cubes for cocktails

PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention

I read an advance copy of McGrave, and I gotta tell you, it's terrific. A great action hero, nonstop action, and a lot of laughs. Reading it was like watching a great action movie, and I'm really glad to hear it's likely the first book in a series. Highly recommended!

Amazon.com: McGrave eBook: Lee Goldberg: Kindle Store: Los Angeles cop John "Tidal Wave" McGrave is an unstoppable force of nature who always gets his man...even if it means laying waste to everything around him, including his own career...which is exactly what happens in his pursuit of Sebastian Richter, the ruthless leader of an international gang of violent thieves.

When Richter flees to Berlin, McGrave chases after him...even though the cop doesn't know the language, the laws, or the culture. But McGrave doesn't care...he speaks the universal language of knee in the groin and fist in the face...and he won't let anything get in his way.

Feeling Safer Now?

TSA agent arrested for stealing iPads from travelers: "If they're the guys who are protecting us and they're not, who am I going to trust next?" one angry victim, Borna Mojra, told the TV station.

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

Mike Kelley, R. I. P.

Gallerist NY: Mike Kelley, one of the most critically acclaimed artists of his generation, has died at the age of 57, at his home in South Pasadena, Calif. According to several sources close to the artist that Gallerist has spoken with, the cause of death was suicide.

Nom Nom Nom

64-year-old tub of lard found in Germany — still edible

Or Are You Just Glad to See Me?

Man Allegedly Stuffs Tarantulas in His Pants

Another Freebie for your Kindle

Amazon.com: Hot Pursuit eBook: Paul Bishop: Kindle Store: A Calico Jack Walker / Tina Tamiko L.A.P.D. novel . . .

It’s 1977 and veteran L.A.P.D. cop Calico Jack Walker and his rookie partner, Tina Tamiko, are planning to make Calico’s last shift on the job something special – but plans, as they do, come apart because Walker and Tamiko are good cops no matter what the cost . . . even if they're L.A. cops, in uniform, in their patrol car, on duty, and way out of their jurisdiction on the Las Vegas Strip.

When a major crime is going down, good cops never hesitate.

PW Reports, You Decide

The Worst Book Ever is ‘Moon People’

Probably Looking for One of My Books

Deer smashes through D.C. library window

Fortunately We Geezers Are Immune

Study: Internet addiction a growing problem among youth

Freebie February

Hawaiian Eye: Mark Troy on Crime Fiction: Freebie February

Don't Click the Link. I'm Warning You.

The Vampire Woman Of Mexico

Uh-Oh

Diet soda linked to stroke, heart attack - UPI.com: Drinking diet soft drinks on a daily basis might increase the risk stroke, heart attack and vascular death, U.S. researchers said.

What It Was -- George Pelecanos

Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear (1972) that some of us remember well. It was the time of blaxploitation, Plymouth Furies, Isaac Hayes (and Roberta Flack), Kool cigarettes, and just plain cool.

George Pelecanos knows the territory -- the music, the styles, the attitudes -- and they're all on display here as private-eye Derek Strange and his former partner, Frank Vaughn, go after a stone killer known as Red Fury (like the car). Red even has a soundtrack: "Red Fury, he's the man/Try and stop him if you can." If Red were into country music, he'd be singing, "Life fast, love hard, die young."

Readers familiar with Strange from previous books will be glad to meet his youthful self again. The novel is framed by the present-day Strange telling his tale to Nick Stafanos, and other familiar character, and it's a fast, lean story that moves like a Plymouth Fury peeling away from a stoplight. Check it out.
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Cartoon of the Day

Strange BrewLink

Commercial of the Day

Ardath Mayhar, R. I. P.

Joe Lansdale reported the passing of Ardath Mayhar on his Twitter feed. Judy and I met Ardath more than 30 years ago at AggieCon, and I still have many of her books that I read and enjoyed. She'll be missed.

Update: There's a fine tribute here by Jayme Blaschke.

Today's Vintage Ad

Apocalypse Now

Adam Sandler to write and star in Candyland movie

Teach 'em the Alphabet!

CBS Boston: It’s going to be a while before things get back to normal for Judy Sanchez and her three-year-old daughter.

Last Thursday, a team of FBI agents swarmed her apartment building as part of a massive citywide drug and weapons gang raid.

Trouble is, Sanchez lives in apartment 2R.

The suspect they were after is in 2F.

Yet Another List I'm Not On

22 Incredibly Old Living Things

First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .

Half Moon Bay Review : News:A National Parks ranger subdued a Montara resident with a Taser Sunday afternoon, arresting the man after an argument unfolded about walking his dog without a leash at the Rancho Corral de Tierra open space.

Don Cornelius, R. I. P.

latimes.com: "Soul Train" creator Don Cornelius was found dead at his Sherman Oaks on home Wednesday morning.

Law enforcement sources said police arrived at Cornelius' home around 4 a.m. He apparently died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the case was ongoing.

PaperBack


Jack Finney, The House of Numbers, Dell, 1957




New Mural Puts a Face to Famous Authors

New Mural Puts a Face to Famous Authors

Free for Kindle -- 3 Days Only

If you have a Kindle, please grab it. You don't even have to read it. Just help me improve my numbers. I thank you, my family thanks you, and the publisher thanks you.

Amazon.com: The Prairie Chicken Kill (Truman Smith Mystery Series) eBook: Bill Crider: Kindle Store:Booklist says: For pure fun and sheer entertainment, it doesn't get much better than Crider's Tru Smith stories. Highly recommended.

Today's Western Movie Poster

You Should Definitely Check This Out

Blood and Tacos

The 20 Most Beautiful Bookstores in the World

The 20 Most Beautiful Bookstores in the World

The Worst Career Moves in Sports History

The Worst Career Moves in Sports History

10 Crazy College Secret Societies

10 Crazy College Secret Societies

Underground Houston

Buffalo Bayou's dark secret

The Spanish Main

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

UFO Update

UFO Found In Baltic Sea?: A team of shipwreck hunters that found a strange circular object on the floor of the Baltic Sea in 2011 now says they have discovered visual evidence of a second "disc-like shape" some 200 meters from the original find, CNN reports.

PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention

Amazon.com: Call Me Cupid: Six Screwball Stories of Love eBook: Gerald So: Kindle Store: Gerald So brings you six flash fiction stories of off-the-wall romance: "Call Me Cupid", "Connect the Dots", "Every Man for Himself", "Sweet Child O' Mine", "Rocky Road", and "Once Upon a Wedding Cake". Includes work originally published in POWDER BURN FLASH and ZYGOTE IN MY COFFEE.

Deadline Extended!

Click here to go to sign-up page.

Song of the Day

Dust of the Damned -- Peter Brandvold

This is a real rip-snorter of a weird western, set in an alternate America in which Abraham Lincoln had to resort to bringing in werewolves from Europe to win the Civil War. The werewolves were supposed to go home after the war, but you just can't trust a werewolf. They didn't go, and now the frontier is overrun with werewolves, swillers, and hobgobbies. Instead of the traditional bounty hunters, there are ghoul hunters, chief among them being Uriah Zane. When Charlie Hondo, the worst werewolf of them all, breaks out of Hellsgarde prison, assisted by a couple of other werewolves and a Mexican witch, it's up to Zane and beautiful U. S. Marshal Angel Coffin to track them down before they wreak real havoc.

This is one of those books where the action never lets up. Heads roll, supernatural creatures die by the dozens (humans do, too), and there's lots of sex. There's humor, too, and I got a kick out of noticing that an undertaker was named Hank DeRosso. If you're looking for a horror novel crossed with a spaghetti western, this is the one to try. Check it out.

Henry Miller’s 11 Commandments for Writing

Henry Miller's 11 Commandments for Writing

"And the beer I had for breakfast wasn't bad, So I had one more for dessert"

Bacon Flavored Beer

Today's Vintage Ad

Maybe They'll Ask Me to Star in the American Version

Televisual: Spun Gold TV is making its first wildlife programming with the commission of Swimming with Crocodiles for BBC Two.

The two hour-long shows will follow presenter and World Wildlife Fund ambassador Ben Fogle as he travels across the world to discover more about the behaviour of wild crocodiles and to dive with them.

Gotta Love #1!

8 Most Extreme Tourist Attractions

First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .

Vero wife upset at hubby's request to 'use the bed' with another woman - Off the Beat with Will Greenlee: Marian Searchwell's husband said his wife grew enraged after he decided to bring home a "female visitor."

PaperBack


Roger Dee (Roger D. Aycock), Let the Sky Fall, Popular Library, 1957





Yet Another List I'm Not On

16 Of The Smartest Children In History

Top 10 Suicidal Writers

Top 10 Suicidal Writers

Coming Soon....more adventures of The Dead Man

Coming Soon....more adventures of The Dead Man

Today's Western Movie Poster

Rare Color Photos from the Depression Era

Rare Color Photos from the Depression Era

First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .

Fisticuffs at Cowboy BBQ: Deputy Jeff Stoltz said that the argument began over whether food was done cooking, with the cook Harvey Smith, 34, of Helena, saying it wasn’t done and that he would cook it until it was. As the discussion escalated, the restaurant owner, Jimmy Russell, 67, of Wolf Creek, fired Smith.

6 Painful Things Nobody Tells You About Fighting

6 Painful Things Nobody Tells You About Fighting

Chris Knopf Interview

You Would Say That, Wouldn't You?

Overlooked Movies -- Stealing Home

You regular readers know that I'm a sucker for coming-of-age stories, and this movie is a good one. I saw it more than 20 years ago and still remember how it made me feel.

Mark Harmon is a talented baseball player who's never lived up to expectations, his own or those of others. The movie opens when he's called to come back to his home after the death of his childhood friend, played by Jodie Foster, who was the "older woman" when he was a teen. She was a free spirit who lived life her own way, and she was someone he could always talk to when he needed a sympathetic ear. The rest of the story is told mostly in flashbacks to that earlier time in Harmon's life, and it's all about friendship and love and loyalty and such. Great stuff.

The ending is a little sentimental, or maybe a lot, but I wouldn't have it any other way. There's another of those great soundtracks with several songs that you'll recognize instantly if you grew up in the late '50s and early '60s. If you're a sucker for this kind of thing, as I am, and if you haven't see this movie, check it out.

Stealing Home

Monday, January 30, 2012

The Dead Man Has a Theme Song

Go to the Amazon page and look to the right. You'll find the link to the song there. Give it a listen.

John Rich, R. I. P.

John Rich obituary: Emmy-winning director of landmark sitcoms dies at 86 - latimes.com: John Rich followed his acclaimed work on 'The Dick Van Dyke Show' with 'All in the Family.' His credits over an almost 50-year career also included 'Gunsmoke,' 'The Twilight Zone' and 'MacGyver.'

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

Gator Update (Blind Hunter Edition)

Lind: Blind Fargo hunter bags alligator in Florida Everglades

I Don't Know about You, but I Think Gelatinous Balls WBAGNFARB

Strange blue gelatinous balls fall from sky

Song of the Day

That Flying Car You've Been Waiting For?

Here it is.

An airplane in your garage?

Left Coast Crime Award Nominations

Left Coast Crime Award Nominations

Your Tax Dollars at Work . . . or Play . . . or Something

CNBC: The Pentagon doesn’t know what happened to more than $100 million in cash held at Saddam Hussein’s palace in Baghdad during the Iraq war, according to a new report by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

What’s more, the Pentagon can’t find documents to explain what it spent as much as $1.7 billion on from funds held on behalf of the Iraqi government by the New York Federal Reserve, the report says.

Today's Vintage Ad

A Misleading Headline In Many Ways, but Still. . . .

Designing Pulp Fiction

Hat tip to George Kelley.

Your Favorite Authors’ Favorite Books of All Time

Your Favorite Authors’ Favorite Books of All Time

PaperBack


Richard Glendinning, Who Evil Thinks, Gold Medal, 1952




The 10 Most Iconic Accessories of Famous Authors

The 10 Most Iconic Accessories of Famous Authors

6 Myths Everyone Believes about Space (Thanks to Movies)

6 Myths Everyone Believes about Space (Thanks to Movies)

6 Hit Songs Written By the Last Person You'd Expect

6 Hit Songs Written By the Last Person You'd Expect

Today's Western Movie Poster

Or Maybe You Have

The Ten Best Sherlocks (That You’ve Probably Never Seen)

Ian Abercrombie, R. I. P.

Ian Abercrombie Dead: 'Seinfeld' Actor Dies At 77: After nearly 50 years in the business, "Seinfeld" actor Ian Abercrombie died on Thursday at 77 years old. The TV icon who played Elaine Benes' (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) boss on Jerry Seinfeld's sitcom, passed away in Hollywood. He is survived by three brothers.

Although Abercrombie made a name for himself as Elaine's quirky boss, who cut his candy bars with a knife and fork and was more than a little particular about his socks, his most recent television run was on the Disney channel hit "Wizards of Waverly Place," playing three-thousand-year-old wizard school headmaster, Professor Crumbs.

The 6 Loneliest Places On Earth

The 6 Loneliest Places On Earth

Valley of the Kings

Sunday, January 29, 2012

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Five Bestselling Authors. Ten Free Kindle Fires. 75 Free Kindle Thrillers.

Dick Tufeld, R. I. P.

NYTimes.com: Dick Tufeld, who possessed one of Hollywood’s most often-heard disembodied voices, especially from the 1950s through the 1970s, announcing or narrating television shows like “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea” and commercials for products like Mr. Bubble bubble bath and Gallo wine, but who was best known for his electronic intonations as the robot in the loopy science-fiction series “Lost in Space,” died on Sunday at his home in the Studio City section of Los Angeles. He was 85.

Hat tip to George Kelley.

Song of the Day

Today's Vintage Ad

Once Again, Texas Leads the Way

Inmate attacks jailers with pepper spray

10 Moving Movies About the Creative Process

10 Moving Movies About the Creative Process

PaperBack


Jack Allan, Good Time Girl, Newsstand Library, 1961




Soon to Be a SyFy Movie!

The Capitol architect wanted to reanimate George Washington's dead body: George Washington may have been America's first president, but was he nearly America's first zombie-in-chief? If William Thornton, physician and designer of the US Capitol, had had his way, Washington's body would have been subjected a scientific experiment designed to bring the deceased former president back to life.

In Case You Were Wondering, . . .

What are the 15 most expensive sci-fi, fantasy and horror books?

And Keep Off His Lawn!

Gordon King, 88, takes on armed robbers using his walking stick

Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.

Today's Western Movie Poster

Ansel Adams’ Street Photography of 1940s Los Angeles

Ansel Adams’ Street Photography of 1940s Los Angeles

Opposites Attract: Odd Couples on Film

Opposites Attract: Odd Couples on Film

The 6 Stupidest Things We Use to Judge People We Don't Know

The 6 Stupidest Things We Use to Judge People We Don't Know

Treasure of Pancho Villa