Some Classic SF Art From Kelly Freas
Kelly Freas’ art epitomizes the look of what’s known as the Golden Age of Science Fiction. Gorgeous color, beautiful women, sleek spaceships and a universe blazing with stars.
Read MoreKelly Freas’ art epitomizes the look of what’s known as the Golden Age of Science Fiction. Gorgeous color, beautiful women, sleek spaceships and a universe blazing with stars.
Read MoreThis week: Elric, Conan, Frazetta, Leiber, CAS, Ray Bradbury, Tarzan, and more.
Read MoreRay Bradbury took a half-written planetary adventure story started by Leigh Brackett and finished it, creating a minor classic in the process. As Leigh herself said--with thirty years to think on it--Bradbury did a better job than she would have.
Read MoreIn Dawnward Spire, Lonely Hill, H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith both comment extensively regarding A. Merritt and his fiction. Included in this post is a comment by CAS to another correspondent regarding The Ship of Ishtar.
Read MoreLovecraft was nothing if not a writer of letters. It was one of his defining traits. His correspondence with Clark Ashton Smith is among his great legacies. Fortunately, Hippocampus Press has finally published Dawnward Spire, Lonely Hill: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith in fairly affordable trade paperback editions.
Read MoreLovecraft’s stories speak with a voice that echoes the late 19th century wave of scepticism. Humanity is no special creation. We are made in no god’s image. We are a cosmic accident, and nothing more. His work bulges with bloodthirsty cults, hideous monsters, slumbering gods in ancient darkness and ordinary men driven to insanity by the merest glimpse of what lies in the shadows of our world.
Read MoreThis week: Lots of DMR favorites including Clark Ashton Smith, A. Merritt, Manilla Road, Conan, Jack Vance, The Book of the New Sun, and more.
Read MoreIn his last letter to Clark Ashton Smith, Lovecraft, once again, expressed his profound admiration for the “Dark Lord of Averoigne”.
Read MoreThe guys at the Old Time Radio website claim that the radio serial, “Moon Over Africa”, was written by pulp great, Talbot Mundy. Mundy’s biographer begs to differ.
Read MoreA metal zine that comes with a board game based on The House on the Borderland? As soon as I saw it, I knew I had to have it.
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