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| King Kull |
Saturday, 31 January 2015
Friday, 30 January 2015
Doc Savage
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| March 1933 |
Savage, however, does not work alone. He is helped by five associates who have pledged themselves to help him in his endeavours:
- Col. John Renwick ("Renny"), engineer extraordinaire.
- William Harper Littlejohn ("Johnny"), world-renowned geologist.
- Brigadier General Theodore Marley Brooks ("Ham"), noted attorney.
- Major Thomas J. Roberts ("Long Tom"), electrician pioneer.
- Lt. Col. Andrew Blodgett Mayfair ("Monk"), chemistry specialist.
Doc Savage was created in the early thirties by publisher Henry W. Ralston, editor John L. Nanovic, both working for Street & Smith Publications. He debuted in his own magazine in 1933. All of Savage's 181 adventures were published under the house name of Kenneth Robeson. In reality most were the work of Lester Dent. Doc Savage starred in his own magazine from 1933 up until 1949. Modern readers became re-acquainted with the hero in the 1960s when Bantam Books reprinted all of his tales, with iconic covers done by artist Jim Bama.
Like any good character, Doc Savage branched out in other medias. There were two radio serials in 1934 and 1943. He also appeared in several comic book series, from the Golden Age up to the present time. The most recent being the Dynamite Entertainment series beginning in 2013.
Hollywood also came a-callin'. George Pal produced and directed a film version in 1975: Doc Savage: The Man of Bronze starring Ron Ely (Tarzan). I remember seeing this when I was a kid, but I don't recall much of it. The film was a critical and commercial failure. Shane Black is currently working on a new adaptation.
Thursday, 29 January 2015
Thorgal
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| 1980 |
The series is set in Medieval Europe, predominantly in Scandinavia, though, like any good adventurers, Thorgal does travel a lot (he even ends up in pre-Colombian America). The series deftly combines historical accuracy with elements of high fantasy and science-fiction.
Thorgal Aegirsson is a skald (aka a bard in Viking cultures), living in a small village. Unlike others, however, Thorgal is not interested in coquest, combat or pillaging. Which makes him appear weak in the eyes of other men, including Gandalf the Mad, his chieftain and father of the woman he loves, Aaricia.
In reality, Thorgal is an alien, whose people crashed on Earth years ago. The only survivor of the crash, Thorgal was raised as a viking, but he is not one of them.
One of the things that separates Thorgal from other adventurers of his ilk, is the fact that Thorgal doesn't want to be an adventurer at all! He just wants to live happily with his wife, Aaricia, and his two children Jolan and Wolf Cub. This is thread running through most of the series. Events conspire to send Thorgal into one scrape after another, mostly to reunite with his estranged family. Thorgal doesn't care about his alien heritage, of the fact that he and his family seems to have some sort of destiny to fulfil.
After the 29th volume of the series, Van Hamme left the writing to Yves Sente, though Rosinsky's fabulour art is still the defining factor in this series. There's also several spin-off books focusing on other characters.
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| (L to R) Jolan, Thorgal, Aaricia & Wolf Cub |
List of Thorgal's Books in English
The Cinebook edition combines two separate issues of the French edition.
- Child of the Stars
- The Three Elders of Aran
- Beyond the Shadows
- The Archers
- The Land of Qa
- City of the Lost God
- The Masters of the Mountain
- Wolf Club
- The Guardian of the Keys
- The Sun Sword
- The Invisible Fortress
- The Brand of the Exiles
- Ogotai's Crown
- Giants
- The Cage
Tuesday, 27 January 2015
Tower Of The Elephant
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| March 1933 |
The scene is Arenjun, the city of thieves of Zamora, where Conan is drinking away in one of its many taverns. He hears about a precious stone called the Heart of the Elephant. A jewell many have tried to steal, without success. Conan finally arrive at the Tower of the Elephant where the jewell lies. He makes friends with Taurus, fellow thief, and they decide to join their efforts to capture the stone. Taurus is eventually killed and Conan meets with Yag-Kosha, an alien being who has been captured, blinded and put in chain by the evil sorcerer Yara.
Yara has been abusing Yag-Kosha in exchange for his knowledge. But when the alien creature meets with Conan, revenge is in order.
Certainly one of Howard's better tales.
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| 1946 |
Weird Tales (March 1933)
Skull-Face and Others (Arkham House, 1946)
The Coming of Conan (Gnome Press, 1953)
Conan (Lancer Books, 1967)
The Tower of the Elephant (Donald M. Grant)
The Conan Chronicles (Sphere Books, 1989)
The Conan Chronicles 1 (Gollancz, 2000)
Conan of Cimmeria, Vol. 1 (1932-1933)
(Del Rey, 2003)
Monday, 26 January 2015
At The Earth's Core
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| April 4-25, 1914 |
Imagine my absolute thrill when I found out that the creator of Tarzan and John Carter had imagined a hollow world exactly how I wanted it to be: cavemen, scantily clad savage girls, dinosaurs and plucky surface explorers. Yep, At the Earth's Core had everything for it, and what's more was the first in a whole series of novels taking place inside our planet.
Prospector David Innes uses the mole-bore engine created by his friend Abner Perry, and the trial run takes them to Pellucidar, the Inner Continent. They are soon captured by ape-men serving the dominant species of Pellucidar: the Mahars, sentient pterodactyls who rule the land with an iron hand. Humans are quite low on the totem pole. David falls in love with Dian the Beautiful, daughter of a local chieftain. He inadvertently insults her, so she runs off with Hooja, the Sly One, a rival.
This is it, folks: Perpetual sunlight. Bizarre geography (the horyzone actually stretches out above you). Dinosaurs and pleistocene fauna. The Mahars (psychic pterodactyls). Dian the Beautiful. The Sagoths (ape-men, servants of the Mahars). Every other 'inner world' stories you might have read was most likely inspired by this one.
At the Earth's Core first saw light as a serial in April 1914. Later published as a complete novel by A.C. McClurg.
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| July 1922 |
Pellucidar Advisor 2.0
Yes...this was the first blog I started way back in 2012, but quickly abandoned it as I hadn't really got the hang of blogs and everything.
Now I'm older and quite possibly wiser so I ressucitated it. This blog will be dedicated to all matters Heroic Fantasy, Pulp Fiction, Sword & Sorcery, Planetary Romance and the like.
Enjoy!
Now I'm older and quite possibly wiser so I ressucitated it. This blog will be dedicated to all matters Heroic Fantasy, Pulp Fiction, Sword & Sorcery, Planetary Romance and the like.
Enjoy!
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