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BOOKS & COMICS

  • Planet of the Apes (novel by Pierre Boulle-1963)

    La Planète des singes, also known as Monkey Planet or Planet of the Apes, is a French 1963 Science fiction-fantasy novel by Pierre Boulle. It was published in the UK as Monkey Planet, then re-issued as Planet of the Apes to tie it in to the film franchise it inspired.

    The main events of the book are placed in a frame story, in which Jinn and Phyllis, a couple out on a pleasure cruise in a spaceship, find a message in a bottle floating in space. The message inside the bottle is the testimony of a man, Ulysse Mérou. Ulysse explains that he was a friend of Professor Antelle, a genius scientist on Earth, who invented a spaceship that could travel at nearly the speed of light.

    In 2500, Ulysse, the professor, and a physicist named Arthur Levain fly off in this ship to explore outer space. They travel to the nearest star system that the professor theorized might be capable of life, the red sun Betelgeuse, which would take them about 350 years to reach. Because of time dilation, however, the trip seems to the travelers only to last two years….

    Author(s): Pierre Boulle. Translator: Xan Fielding. Country: France. Language: French. Genre(s): Science Fantasy novel. Publisher: Livre de Poche. Publication date: 1963
    (Source Wikipedia)

     

  • A Mod Anthology - Paolo Hewitt

    The Sharper Word: A Mod Anthology [BrochĂ©] – Paolo Hewitt

    The mods were a working-class British youth cult in the mid-1960s preoccupied with mohair suits, dance clubs, scooters, and amphetamines. Rock journalist Hewitt borrows short snippets from Richard Barnes’s standard Mods! (Plexus Pub., 1994), fiction by Tom Wolfe and Samuel Selvon, scholarly accounts by Stanley Cohen and Dick Hebdige, and oral histories.

    More obscure mod-related pieces, including an interview with top mod Pete Meaden, a 1960s article by fashion queen Mary Quant, and an unpublished eyewitness account by mod pioneer Irish Jack are also included. Though he somewhat neglects the mod drive for upward mobility after the lingering postwar economic squalor, Hewitt provides marvelous descriptions of mod trappings the fashion, the music, the drugs, the clubs – that clearly demonstrate the roots of Britpop and Austin Powers.

    Recommended for anyone interested in social history, youth movements, Carnaby Street, and rock’n'roll.DDave Szatmary. Univ. of Washington Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. -

    Book Description
    Hard-to-find pieces by Tom Wolfe, novelist Tony Parsons, poet laureate Andrew Motion, disgraced Tory grandee Jonathan Aitken, Nik Cohn, Colin MacInnes, Mary Quant, and more document the clothes, the music, the clubs, the drugs, and the faces behind one of the most misunderstood and enduring cultural movements.

    ISBN-10: 9781900924887 – ISBN-13: 978-1900924887 – ASIN: 1900924889


  • BLACK DYNAMITE


    BLACK DYNAMITE
    first time Comics issue out

    • « Ars Nova and Ape Entertainment present BLACK DYNAMITE: SLAVE ISLAND.
    • Written by Brian Ash (The Boondocks) with pencils by Jun LoFamia.
    • Based on a story by Michael Jai White, Byron Minns and Scott Sanders, the 48-page one-shot is due in stores in early 2011. »

    blackdynamite.com

     

  • Spiderman


    After his successful trial run in the fifteenth and final issue of Amazing Fantasy, the character was given his own title in which to battle villains and establish relationships both in uniform and out. Amazing Spider-Man was for decades Marvel’s flagship title, their bestseller and home of their greatest creation.

    Not for nothing was it so popular: the art of Steve Ditko and later, John Romita Sr., coupled with Stan Lee’s personal touch, made it a fantastic read throughout the 1960′s. Other hands would work on the title from the early 70′s onward, but ASM was always strong script- and art-wise, and certainly didn’t collapse creatively after its original creators started working elsewhere.

    Amazing Spider-Man worked as a title because the main character’s life was interesting to readers whether he was swinging through the city as Spider-Man, or not: the more mundande soap opera of Peter Parker’s loves, friendships, and conflicts were often, amazingly enough, at least as interesting as the super-heroic happenings. During Ditko’s run as artist (#1-38) saw Peter as a high school kid, skinny and unpopular, beset by the same problems that his readers faced – i.e., getting picked on by bullies, trying to speak to the prettiest girl in class, worrying over tests, etc. Of course, he was different from ordinary kids in that he had super-powers and led a secret life – so the bullies really didn’t bother him so much, at least. But unlike Batman or Superman, or any of the other traditional heroes, Spider-Man/Parker often found his life complicated by his extra-normal existence.

    As a result, Peter Parker often found himself frustrated and ridden with self-pity. Self-pity – in a superhero?! Such a thing was unheard-of in the early 1960′s, but in ASM it took place issue after issue – and readers loved it.

In the course of normal super-hero business, however, ASM wasn’t so offbeat a title that lovers of the genre couldn’t find anything to like about it. Spider-Man quickly found himself fighting against a Rogue’s Gallery of the weirdest and most interesting villains to appear in the comics, rivalling even Batman’s or Dick Tracy’s enemies. Some of them were, like himself, victims of weird accidents involving energy or radioactivity (Doctor Octopus, Elektro) of some sort; many were just petty crooks with gimmicks (the Vulture, the Green Goblin).


    Some of them were monsters one moment and friends the next – like Dr. Curtis Connors, who was Spider-Man’s ally and scientifically-able assistant when normal, but who could turn into the deadly Lizard under the wrong conditions. Like Spider-Man himself, some of his villains had secret identities – and the revealing of those identities would prove to be major events.

When Ditko left the series, his chores were taken over by John Romita Sr., who brought a smooth, polished artistic style, honed over the years at both Marvel and DC, doing everything from Daredevil to romance comics. Romita’s fight scenes were like action movie stills; his characters radiated emotion and energy. His men were dangerous and his women were breathtakingly beautiful.

    Romita had been on the title only a few months, in fact, when the love of Peter Parker’s life, Ms. Mary Jane Watson, was introduced – she had lurked in the background of a few issues before being fully revealed in #42. With her, she brought the title into the mid-to-late 60′s with her fashion sense, her 60′s lingo, and her modern sensibilities in general.

    The series got its first black supporting character (Joe Robertson, Peter’s colleague at the Daily Bugle) and the harmful effects of drug use were shown – both very topical subjects. As a result of all this, ASM became a title that moved with the times, not in spite of them.

    Arguably, this would become the most creatively fertile period in the title’s history. With all of its characters in place, and its conflicts and situations set up, Amazing Spider-Man could be counted on month after month for razor-sharp storytelling. Stan Lee could, to his great credit, pack a lot of plot and action into a single issue’s pages, and it was during this time that he was at the height of his powers on this series. Some issues were almost entirely given over to battles; some contained pages that seemed to sag beneath the load of words they must bear. But whether wordy or not, Lee was pouring everything he knew about comic book scriptwriting into the book. As a result the fictional milieu that the characters inhabited became almost as familiar to readers as the one they inhabited in the ‘real’ world.

    Beginning with issue #111, Gerry Conway took over as writer as Stan Lee went on to pursue other things. Romita would continue as the sole artist for some time – his workload sometimes eased with the help of Gil Kane – until with #125 Ross Andru (who had worked on The Flash in the 1960′s) took over as penciller. Conway and Andru would make a good team – if not on par with Lee/Romita, they at least would turn out stories as good as anything else Marvel was printing in the 70′s. It was during their tenure that both the Green Goblin and Gwen Stacy were killed off, and such characters as the Tarantula , the Jackal, and the Punisher were introduced.

    The decade would finish with the title being created under different hands as writers such as Len Wein and Marv Wolfman, and artists like Al Milgrom would continue the Wall-Crawler’s adventures.

  • Wax Poetics magazine


    One of the best magazine out there, on all things soulfull…
    New issue with articles on
George Benson / George Duke / Billy Cobham / Norman Connors

    waxpoetics.com