(1) CITIZEN KANE ROSEBUD SLED BRINGS MILLIONS. Heritage Auctions’ latest entertainment memorabilia auction was filled with iconic items that brought high bids.

The word was Rosebud — and it echoed through the halls of auction history this July. In a stunning moment that captivated collectors and cinephiles alike, the original sled from Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane, consigned by Gremlins director Joe Dante, sold for an astonishing $14.75 million. With that single, history-making auction, Heritage’s Hollywood/Entertainment department vaulted into the spotlight, closing its four-day Signature Auction with a jaw-dropping total of $24.96 million — making it the second-highest-grossing entertainment memorabilia auction of all time.
The auction opened with a tribute to Cecil B. DeMille, headlined by his granite Ten Commandments tablets, which brought in $325,000 and helped the July 15 session total $1.4 million. From there, the pace only picked up. A signed I Dream of Jeannie genie bottle fetched $400,000, the “Red Five” X-wing filming miniature from The Empire Strikes Back flew to $375,000, and Harrison Ford’s screen-matched bullwhip from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade — famously presented to HRH Prince Charles — struck at $525,000.Other standout moments included Drew Struzan’s one-sheet poster art for Big Trouble in Little China, which sold for $300,000, and James Bond’s bright yellow Citroën 2CV from For Your Eyes Only, which drove off for $150,000. The screen-matched revolver used by Kurt Russell as Wyatt Earp in Tombstone landed at $525,000, and Bob Peak’s original final key poster art for Apocalypse Now set a world record, realizing $687,500 — the highest price ever paid for movie poster artwork.
(2) READ JAMES BACON’S RESEARCH INTO IRISH COMICS. James Bacon’s book Irish Conflict in Comics in the 20th century: Rebellion, Nazi Spies and The Troubles releases tomorrow at Dublin Comic Con, and will be available at the Limit Break Table, but it is available to order on Amazon UK for £12.99 and Amazon US for $16.99 (paperback only).

(3) EATING THE FANTASTIC. Scott Edelman invites listeners to rip into a lobster roll with Benjamin Rosenbaum in Episode 260 of the Eating the Fantastic podcast.

This episode you’ll be able to eavesdrop on my lunch with Benjamin Rosenbaum, who’s been published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Asimov’s Science Fiction, Harper’s, Nature, McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, and many other venues, and as a result has been nominated for the Hugo, Nebula, BSFA, Sturgeon, and World Fantasy Awards. He’s the author of the short story collection The Ant King and Other Stories, and the Ennie-nominated Jewish historical fantasy tabletop roleplaying game Dream Apart.
His most recent novel is The Unraveling (2021), which first appeared in Germany three years earlier. The Ghost and the Golem, his 480,000-word Jewish historical fantasy interactive novel set amidst the pogroms of 1881, was a Nebula Award nominee in the category of Game Writing that weekend, so as you listen, you can think of Benjamin as Schrödinger’s nominee, existing in a state of many possibilities at once. He is also the co-host of the podcast Mohanraj and Rosenbaum Are Humans.
We discussed the perhaps true/perhaps whimsical reason he ended up in the science fiction field rather than literary publishing, why the story he found the most difficult to sell became his most-read work, how he gamified the submission/rejection process to get into Clarion, the way all stories set in the future are being read in translation, the reason he couldn’t write for a while after his first Nebula nomination, the moral and aesthetic reasons the story of Ghost and the Golem ended up as a game rather than a novel, why he believes “I am very much a child of Chip Delany,” the fascinating differences between the German and English versions of his novel The Reckoning, the intricacies of turning games into novels and novels into movies, and much more.
(4) MORE FLORIDA SCHOOL LIBRARY CENSORSHIP. “Florida Public Schools Remove Library Books, Fearing State Reprisal” reports Publishers Weekly.
Nine Florida counties have removed hundreds of books from public school classrooms and libraries before the start of the 2025–2026 school year, according to a report from PEN America. Columbia, Escambia, Hillsborough, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach, Pasco, Pinellas, and St. Johns counties all have made books with alleged “sexual content” unavailable to students, fearing legal action from the state Board of Education and Office of the Attorney General.
In a statement, PEN America noted, “It’s likely that additional counties may have quietly complied by removing books out of fear of state retaliation if they did not.” Reporting over the past year suggests this is the case in Broward, Volusia, and other counties.
Stephana Ferrell, director of research and insight at the Florida Freedom to Read Project, said the removals are taking place swiftly and without any review process. “No district wants to be told they’re out of compliance, not with the law but with the people who are deciding whether they’re in compliance,” Ferrell told PW. “They’re not even doing it through formal letters and school board meetings anymore, and if you’re not paying attention as a parent, you have no say” in the materials your child can or cannot access at school, despite claims that Florida defends “parental rights.”…
(5) FESTIVAL 451INDY IS BACK. Festival 451indy returns to Indianapolis this September for its fourth year of celebrating the power of storytelling, radical imagination, and the enduring legacy of Ray Bradbury.

We’re teaming up once again with beloved local partners like Indy Reads, Kan-Kan Cinema, and The District Theatre, and welcoming a few new faces to the mix. This year’s theme draws inspiration from The Martian Chronicles, which celebrates its 75th anniversary—what better time to reflect on memory, myth, and humanity’s place in the cosmos?
Here’s a peek at what’s ahead:
- Sept 6 – Letters from the Edge writing workshop at Indy Type Shop
- Sept 11 – Join us at IF Theatre for the Annual Ray Bradbury Author Talk featuring Hugo Award-winning author Mary Robinette Kowal.
- Presented in partnership with Tomorrow Bookstore.
- Sept 14 – Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes book-to-film night with Indy Reads and Kan-Kan Cinema
- Mr. Dark tattoos? Let’s just say we’re getting Illustrated…
- Sept 26 – The beloved Multilingual Read Aloud returns to Indy Reads
- Oct 4 & 5 – A dramatic reading of Ray Bradbury’s The Halloween Tree by Ben Asaykwee at The District Theatre
(6) JIM LOVELL (1928-2025). “Jim Lovell Dead: Apollo 13 Commander Was 97” reports Deadline.
Astronaut Jim Lovell, whose history-making leadership as commander of a near-disastrous 1970 mission to the moon is one of the most celebrated tales of the U.S. space program and was chronicled in the hit Ron Howard film Apollo 13, died Thursday in Illinois. He was 97.
His death was announced by his family and by NASA….
…Lovell had served as a naval air test pilot when he was first selected as an astronaut by NASA in 1962. He was the first person to fly to the moon twice, the first to fly into space four times and among only two dozen people ever to fly to the moon. Apollo 13 was his final mission, and he retired from the Navy and the space program in 1973….
The Apollo 13 Command Module is preserved at the Cosmosphere’s Hall of Space Museum in Hutchinson, Kansas.
Lovell is survived by his children and grandchildren. His wife of 71 years, Marilyn Lovell died in 2023.
(7) MEMORY LANE
[Written by Cat Eldridge.]
Ravens in the Library: Magic in the Bard’s Name (2009)

I get a lot of personally signed books and Ravens in The Library showed up in the post some sixteen years ago with a note asking if Green Man would review it. I already knew of SJ Tucker, a singer-songwriter who does a lot of filk, sort of filk and of course straight singer-songwriter material. You can hear her doing Catherynne Valente’s “A Girl in The Garden” here, riffing The Orphan’s Garden as she gave it to Green Man.
She also writes children’s books and we reviewed one here, Rabbit’s Song, she wrote with Trudy Herring.
Sadly she got a severe illness starting in 2008 caused her to have a very long hospital stay and related surgery, and left her to recover under the weight of massive medical bills. As you well know, independent musicians don’t have deep pockets, so her friends launched a number of projects to generate the needed monies.
So what did they do? Well the most successful project is sitting on my desk, The Ravens in the Library anthology. Three hundred and seventy pages of ballads, poems, songs and stories amply illustrated by far too many stellar artists too note here. The great cover which you can see left is James A. Owen
The writers here are, well, let’s just say I was gobsmacked. Charles de Lint, and Terri Winding to name but two that I really like are here as well as Ari Berk usually known for his illustrations does a story too, as does Catherynne Valente, Holly Black, and, of course, S.J. Tucker contribute excellent work too. It would be wrong to overlook the work by writers that I’ve never heard of, most likely from the fan community, who are just as great.
I’d be remiss not to mention the excellent editing work of Phil Brucato and Sandra Buskirk.
So how successful was it? This anthology in less than a week paid off all of her considerable medical bills. Very impressive!
(8) COMICS SECTION.
- Bliss found a store for your ungrammatical needs.
- Jerry King recommends a writer.
- Non Sequitur answers “Whatever happened to…?”
- The Argyle Sweater dives into the origin of a joke.
- Macanudo has a Star Wars face-off.
(9) ‘ALIEN’ POP-UPS LAND TOMORROW. On August 9 — “An ‘Alien’-Themed Pop-Up Crash Lands In L.A. For One Day Only – Here’s Where And When” – Secret Los Angeles has the 411.
FX is launching a global pop-up takeover for their new series Alien: Earth – and it’s smashing into Los Angeles this Saturday.
Just ahead of the premiere of the iconic Alien franchise’s new sci-fi series, FX is launching a global stunt dubbed “The Hunt.” The upcoming activation is taking over fourteen cities, including Valencia, Spain, London, UK, Toronto, Canada, Mexico City, Mexico, Sāo Paulo, Brazil, Tokyo, Japan, Seoul, Korea, and Sydney, Australia, as well as NYC, Dallas, Nashville, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Seattle, and Los Angeles.
The L.A. activation will take place at the W Hollywood hotel this Saturday, August 9, from 12 pm – 6 pm.
“The USCSS Maginot has crash-landed on Earth and containment units holding mysterious alien life forms have fallen from the wreckage and landed in cities around the world,” reads the press release. “Brave fans who approach the Prodigy Corp officers protecting the salvaged containment crates will be rewarded with a chance to instantly win an exclusive prize.”
Not much is known about the pop-up as of yet, but the press release describes it as an immersive stunt with containment unit crates from the series as well as hidden Easter Eggs, photo opps, and chances for exclusive prizes. L.A. participants also have the chance to win a pair of limited-edition Alien: Earth x Skullcandy Crusher EVO Headphones, an Alien: Earth thermos, collectible pins, and special offers from W Hotel.
Supplies are available on a first-come-first-serve basis. The U.S. experience is only open to those 18 and older.
(10) THE LEGAL RULES. Science Fact & Science Fiction Concatenation’s ”August 2025 news” tries to school Worldcon committees, but shows the editors first need to learn a few things themselves. The subject of the vote discussed here was not an amendment to the WSFS Constitution but an appeal of the chair’s ruling that a virtual meeting was in order. And as concerns amendments to the Constitution, they require a simple majority, not a two-thirds majority, though must be ratified at the next Worldcon’s business meeting.
Huge thanks to the 45 out of 125 who voted against the World SF Society ‘Business Meeting’ that would have quasi-legitimised the illegal breaking of the World SF Society Constitution by the 2025 Worldcon (being held 13th – 17th August in Seattle). This Worldcon is the third Worldcon in succession, after Glasgow (2024) and Chengdu (2023), that has wilfully ignored the WSFS Constitution that was democratically created by preceding Worldcons. Though only 45 voted against this motion, as a two-thirds majority is required to change the constitution, the motion failed. (Back story here.) It is good to see that there are still some principled SF fans in the Worldcon community, even if only a minority. And this news snippet lets Worldcon organisers know that there are fans outside of Worldcon who are watching and taking note!
(11) REASONS TO PLAY. [Item by Steven French.] Well, this surprised me but then I’m maybe I’m not that romantic! From Keith Stuart’s “Pushing Buttons” newsletter in the Guardian: “How video games are keeping romance alive – one level at a time”
Last week, [BBC] Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour talked about the role of women in the video games industry. It featured interviews with gaming insiders, from esports presenter Frankie Ward to members of the inclusive online community Black Girl Gamers. It was wonderful to hear so many disparate, expert views on games culture being given so much time on the show.
One of my favourite moments was when presenter Nuala McGovern read out some listener responses to the question: why do you play video games? “I don’t think there’s enough recognition of gaming as an activity for couples,” one replied. “My husband and I bonded over our shared love of gaming. Our honeymoon was playing Borderlands 2 while we saved for a flat deposit, and now, with a young child, we explore stories, we visit new worlds, we solve mysteries … There is an underappreciated romance to gaming – we communicate, encourage, collaborate and celebrate together. It’s a joy.”
I found this very moving because I know many friends who met their partners through playing games, and who see the act of gaming together as a much more textured and immersive experience than wallowing in front of a TV series. I’ve lost count of the number of couples who’ve told me they especially enjoyed playing survival horror games such as Resident Evil and Silent Hill together – even though they are strictly single-player experiences. Sharing scary games is a way of lessening the terror while exploring an abandoned orphanage or science lab. It introduces an element of physicality – as does taking it in turns to use the joypad, swapping it from hand to hand, like an intimate gift….
[Thanks to Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, and Kathy Sullivan for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]



















