Saturday 25 June 2022

Next Stop The Leisure Hive.

Knitted by that witty little knitter Doctor Martin, I could not resist trying on his replica of the scarf worn by the Doctor in the final season of Tom Bakers tenure in The Tardis. Oh my giddy aunt, it was only as I typed this I realised it was the scarf my hero died in. Sort off....

Armistad Maupin In Belfast.

He finally made it to Belfast, after two pandemic cancelations, rather posponements I should say, including a dose of the virus itself. And what a great night it turned out to be. Hosted by Paul Mc Veigh who knew how tease out some rivetting tales of the city from the man himself. The affection the audience had for Armistead was palpable. There was indeed a lot of love in the air. To be honest it was almost surreal to be sitting a few feet away from an author who's work was so formative for myself and a few others I have known. Not just for his beloved cast of characters from Barbary Lane but for always magical and memorable stand alone novels that explore the humane diaspora in witty and compelling ways. He is one of those born word smiths who can make you laugh and cry in the space of a single sentence. He really drew out a fantastic audience and a gay old time was had by all. A really gay old time. XOX.

Witty Little Knitter.

It was such a lovely piece of work I could not resist giving it some visual context. Even after all these years people remember that scarf. And the person who wore it. let us not forget Begonia Pope who originally knitted the first scarf. Now she really was a Witty, Little, knitter.

Portrait Of An Artist As A Young Bohemian.

( Painted by Danny Merron.) Was I Ever This Young?

Wakenhyrst.

This is the third book I have read by Michelle Paver and I continue to be impressed by her ability to generate feelings of uneasy and the presence of the weird. I some respects she reminds me of MR James skills as a storyteller in that she witholds as much as she reveals, allowing the reader to unveil the unseen. it requires a degree of narrative deconstruction as much as building to generate suspicion of the unreliable narration she sometimes uses to complete the fondations for a yarn. You can find yourself embedded in a given narrative wondering if you can trust the stated perceptions of the storyteller. Its good stuff and especially useful when telling a story set in remote locations or in atypical surroundings. She really understands the desire that some people reserve for life in extremis. Be it a lonely island out post, a high mountain range or a remote mysterious fenland. Period dramas prove especially fertile ground for such notions. Modern notions of faux-progressivism can bog a story teller, projecting into the past post modern sensibilities. The story is set in Suffolk, at a rambling pile of a house with family and servants; Wakes End. it is close to a village valled waykenhyrst but closer still to a mysterious and sprawling fenlans. The atmosphere generated by the fens permeates the house, its sights and sounds a part of the everyday lifefor those who coexist there. Guthlaf's Fen has a history all its own, steeped in folklore and superstition, it winds and twists, like an organic presence and just like the narrative which attempts to explain it, it conceals more than it reveals. Speaking of revelations; An ancient painting is recovered from the Fen, first appearing to the owner of Wakes End as a demonic eye peering at him through some reeds and rushes.This turns out to be a painting on some ancient wood and with its recovery ancient forces are seemingly unleashed into the lives of those who live at Wakes End. This painting. The Doom, lets loose something in the mind of Wakes End's owner Edmund Sterne , a historian, scholar and father. It is a mind which quite quickly begins to unravel. If you have not read any Michelle Paver and are wondering why you should imagine a worthy successor to The Woman In Black. Tales set in remote locations with uncompromising dark forces and you may imagine what you are in for.

Here Comes The Summer.

( From my sketchbook.)
( From My Happy Memories. )

Happy Unit Days.

Doctor Woof acting as scientific advisor to UNIT, with Sarah Jane Smith and UNIT trooper Alexander. Acting on information that a possible Auton incursion was about to take place with them posing as crisp bags in order to invegal their way into unsuspecting victim's homes. Another good reason to avoid three for twos, I imagine.

Lioness.

( From my sketchbook.) The world misses you, Amy.

Doctor Martin.

" OH MY GIDDY AUNT I FORGOT MY TASSLES!" Mett "Doctor" Martin, Teddy the dog's tailor, he off the Phantom Thread. He has been working on a fourth Doctor scarf, which grows daily. Old Madame Nostradamus would be proud of his efforts. I snapped a picture of him wearing it and completely unplanned and unrehearsed he slipped into a Fourth Doctor pose (This one if I am not mistaken.) There is something about that scarf, one winds it round ones neck and already one bristles for adventure...

Saturday 4 June 2022

Our Lucy.

Because she knows it.

Serendipity And All That Jazz.

Reading up on the origins of, and the many reasons for, the science of lucid dreaming, I came to the conclusion I had thrown the net too wide and found myself attempting to trace footprints in the air. Which is to say I knew where I wanted to go to but felt I had compromosed the authenticity of that journey with a barrel load of personal biasis. A huge chunk of lucid dreaming owes its origins to nostalgia, how we frame memories ina certain way and how we project those memories on to the stage where we act and perform our impressions of our lives. No wonder even the Victorians considered nostagia an unhealthy impulse and that was an era that verged on necrocity. As a collector of sorts I find my journey through life loaded with serendipity, loads of happy accidents that trick me into believing that my life is linear and unfolding in the correct way, as opposed to just...well, unfolding. Consider this; in a recent old comic aquisition I came across a few old Dell Comics, an American publisher who had a wide range of titles, from Boris Karloff presents, to other long gone television tie-ins. There were also a number of British Tarzan comics, black and white interiors with some lovely painted covers of life in an African jungle that probably only existed in the ink well of Edgar Rice Burroughs. Take this delightful issue Tarzan Adventures #31, a weekly title published and sold for the princely sum of 6D ( In The Year Of Our Lord 1958 ) to be found on a newsagent shelf somewhere near you, if you were lucky at the end of your street. Back in the day when any respecting newsagent would have carried a huge number of diverse publications on its shelves, to tempt even the swarthisest tastes. Oh how we miss such places. We took them for granted and they wilted through lack of love. Not only from the corners of our streets but from the main streets of our city centres, turning instead to the unlovely booty parade that is the internet, for shame. Just look at this lovely wee comic. Not only was it a title bold enough to go without the main character on its cover, it also contains the comic strip adventures of vanother old house hold legend; Buffalo Bill. Beautiful as these details are there was also another aspect of the interiors that teased my eye . A text feature reporting on the "WORLD CON OF 1957.", a gathering of science fiction and fantasy fans from all corners of the glode., if a globe shaped world can be said to have corners. An event in London set to mirror some of similar themed Conventions in the colonies, so to speak.
Like most mordern conventions there were activities and events staged over the weekend for the attendees. Themed events sure to quicken the pulse of those drawn to come to such meetings of like minded imagineers ( well, what else are they?). There was off course a costumed event, although it would be a few more decades before the ad himinem 2cos-play" would come into common parlance. It was unusually for such rarified conditions an entirely natural evolution,the word a natural congruity birthed in artifice but cloaked in homely humility. The big film of the event was an animated movie; MR WONDERBIRD, starring the voices of Peter Ustinov and Claire Bloom. Other highlights included a display of hypnotism ("..and it seemed incredible that one man could make people do things they had never been able to do.") Music for the event was provided by the Mississipi Jazz Band and some bloke named John Mc Donald was about to embark for Japan. On a raft. Blimey, it all sounds amazing. What a joy it was though to see much respected Irish writer James White so lionised. And he was in such good company too, check out the legendary Forest J Ackermann in a photo with with him, elegantly suited and booted, as one says. They look like science fiction writers from a golden era, which of course they both were, two hugely talented imagineers on top of their game. James White's impressive body of work has deservedly made him something of a legend in the uncollected fraternity of Irish writers. Cerebal yet charming, impressively intellectual while remaining witty and fun. His Sector General taking the very best of us to the stars. ( In other words, whatever Picard is, the very opposite.) His writing is celebrated among those lucky enough to have absorbed it. I was lucky enough to have met him a few times, over beers in Whites Tavern, where he and some like minded chums and fellow scribes would meet up. I liked listening to the free flow of ideas, impressed that these men respected each other enough to value theirrespective works in progress, bouncing ideas and formulating solutions to quite outlandish and other worldly ideas. I rarely contributed to those chats, not wanting to sound like the gormless young wannabe I no doubt looked and behaved like. I also respected these writers much too much to assail their ears with my untutored boobie-babble. You know, they actually reminded me off the Doc Savage team, a group of brilliant individuals on a pulpy retro futuristic path I longed to walk. Perhaps a vision best viewed through the prism of a stein of Carlsberg, a fine beer for such occasions. I felt like a Latverian peasant with a foaming tankard of ale, on the set of some imaginary European village, getting drunk enough to storm the catle of the resident monster maker. I was also delighted to see the name of the editor and writer of this particular piece, Mike Moorcock. I had known as a young man he had worked on a Tarzan comic book series and yet this was the first time I actually held one of the copies in my hands. What a joy that job must have been for this bright young turk. Something of an enfant terrible no doubt. A genius taking baby steps into a world where he would shine as one of its brightest stars, illuminating generations of readers. So much going on between the covers of a seemingly unremarkable weekly British comic strip, long ago and oh so far away.

a Good Day To Futterwacken.

New Who On The Horizon.

Actually it is all a lot closer than you would believe. Books, comics, audio dramas and exciting news every other day. The Whoniverse does go through the peaks and troughs with dizzing frequency but is'nt that the thing with Time And Space. They are big. Really, really big.

Sam Witwer.

Listened to a really compelling analysis of the Star Wars Obi-wan vs Darth Maul light sabre duel in the episode Twin Suns of Star Wars Rebels canon. It is easily one of my best remembered moments of the whole canon and deserves to be viewed as such.And this was before I had had the opportunity to listen to the actor Sam Witwer's take on that epic duel. He should know, after all, he played Darth Maul in that series. He is a compelling orator, really knows his stuff and invested a lot in his performance as one of the great characters in the saga of The Skywalkers.And damn it, hes easy on the eye to boot.A veritable handsome devil in a sunday bonnet. His explanation for the confrontation between these two great enemies is almost as engaging as the actual sequence of events. They approached this moment in the saga with an eye for detail and a deep understanding of the many forces that brought these two characters to this showdown in the desert beneath the twin suns of the title. There is not a wasted frame, not a lost blink in the eyes of the two proponents. Destinies dove tail into a quiet sweep, cut and thrust that takes a road not traveled in the history of the show. The roots of these two warriors differences marry the forces that shaped the Star Wars saga up to this point and at its conclusion new possibilities emerge from the dust of dueling fates. Maul makes a serious mistake when he assumes Obi-Wan to be a shattered version of the character who sliced him in half on Naboo. He thinks him a snivelling coward, a fallen knight hiding from his former dity as a Jedi Knight. He fails to see the higher stakes his opponent plays for. The protection of the Chosen One. Its a mistake he pays the ultimate price for but it is so much better to hear the unfolding off it from the man who played him. He speaks so well, with an easy authority and confidence that many of the onscreen Jedi lacked. Check any of his interviews on the topic out on line. They are easy to find and unfold with a mythic respectfullness for the material that will have you searching out a DVD of Rebels.

A Pictorial History Of Horror Movies.

First saw this book high on a shelf in Harry Halls book shop many years ago, when i was a boy.I knew that if I had that book the world would suddenly make sense.That shop enabled my growing imagination in so many ways. The rows of Christmas annuals in particular made an indelable mark in my memory. I do believe it has influenced my own buying and collecting habits over a lifetime. And it really was a lifetime ago. Part of a former world almost all but passed.
I have probably mentioned this before but I find as I grow older my mind drifts back during the dream time to people and places which I no longer see or visit. I have often dreamed about that store in Gresham St and its layout to me is as familiar as our old living room in Etna Drive. No doubt there are many other readers out there who experience similar slipback in their resting hours. Who knows, maybe we will bump into each other in a dream.

Casino Royale.

Pick a card, any card. Well, not just any card, not when your life depends on it.Especially when the stakes are tyhat high. which they are when you are playing with someone elses money.... Had this one sitting for a while. Picked up on a not so recent book haul.I was intrigued by the retro cover and by the notion I had never read any Ian Fleming. I wondered what could have spawned the monster of a franchise that is all things Bond. I only recently watched No Time To Die and wanted to investigate the dirty roots of this monstrous growth. One should always beware when tugging at the roots of anything, not withstanding Goblin men and all they plant, for fear of what one will unearth. Unearthing can be an unpredictable process.Glad I did now, it surprised me enough to want to read some more Ian Fleming. Maybe Chitty, Chitty, Bang,Bang next.