(1) DESTINATION FOR THE STARS? The New York Timesâ Blake Gopnik reports that last week Christieâs auction house broke records by selling more than $1.5 billion in art from the estate of Paul G. Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft who died in 2018. Although a lot of high art went under the hammer, his pop culture holdings, including sf art, did not and may have a different fate.
âĶ It all made me think of Allen as the kind of person who might have enjoyed buying, and owning, a $15 million Stradivarius violin and a $12 million Mickey Mantle baseball card and a $10 million stamp from British Guiana.
But there was one work in the sale â a real outlier â that meshed with stronger, more focused feelings that I seemed to glimpse when I met with Allen. Hanging among pieces by the certified geniuses of Western âhighâ art at Christieâs sat a dreamy, sunset scene of teen-girls-in-nature, painted in 1926 by the American Maxfield Parrish, best known for his truly great work in commercial illustration. It called to mind the tremendous excitement that Allen showed, a decade ago, when he had me look at a series of paintings that had been used, sometime in the 1950s or â60s, Iâd guess, for reproduction on the cover of science-fiction novels or magazines: I remember seeing weird Martian landscapes, galactic skies and maybe a rocket ship or two.
I canât confirm those memories, right off the bat, because none of those pictures ended up at Christieâs. (Even though you could say that Allenâs Botticelli has some extraterrestrial strangeness to it, if only because of its distance from todayâs culture, and that his paintings by Salvador Dalà and Jacob Hendrik Pierneef might work with stories by Philip K. Dick.) But I do remember that in our interview Allenâs enthusiasm for those objects from so-called âpopularâ culture seemed much more intense, and heartfelt, than the feelings he expressed for masterpieces that had cost him thousands of times more.
And that may be born out in the future that seems in store for those sci-fi objects, different from the fate of the ones sold into private hands at Christieâs. Last month, a spokesperson for Seattleâs Museum of Pop Culture, founded by Allen in 2000 â his sister Jody Allen is its current chair â told The Times that more than 4,000 objects of un-fine art and culture from the Allen estate, valued at some $20 million, were due to end up among its holdings, and I can only hope that the sci-fi paintings will be among them. (A representative from Vulcan, the Allen company in charge of his estate, later weighed in to say that the bequest to MoPOP was not final and that Vulcan could not confirm the exact number or type of objects in it. As when their boss was alive, his Vulcans play their cards close to their chests.)âĶ
(2) AO3âS FANZINE SCAN HOSTING PROJECT. âAO3âs fanfiction preservation project: Archivists are digitizing zines to save fan historyâ reports Slate.
Archive of Our Own is probably best known as the place to read fansâ carefully crafted Harry Potter prequels or Lord of the Rings stories millions of words long. But the fanfiction website also has a lesser known, though no less important mission: to save older fanfic thatâs at risk of disappearing. A new initiative, the Fanzine Scan Hosting Project, aims to make fan stories and art from physical fanzines accessible through the Archive, preserving pieces of history previously confined to university libraries, scattered eBay sales, and forgotten corners of atticsâĶ.
Over the last year or so, however, Open Doorsâ Fan Culture Preservation Project has expanded, finally giving them room to launch the Fanzine Scan Hosting Project. So far, theyâre making their way through the backlog of scans that Zinedom has already accumulated, which Dawn estimates is âa couple thousand.â
These came from various sources, with Dawn doing a lot of outreach herself simply by searching Facebook for names she came across in zines and making phone calls. Janet Quarton, a Scottish Star Trek zine publisher and preservationist, scanned about 500 zines herself in 2013. But even Zinedomâs digital collection is only a fragment of whatâs out there. One Zinedom participant has a collection of around 8,000 physical zines from the Star Trek fandom alone, and digs out the appropriate copies if Dawn is contacted by someone looking to save something in particular.
Open Doors is now preparing to post on the Archive those zines from Zinedomâs backlog which they already have permission to share. Some of these overlap with online zine archives that theyâve been previously importing, like the Kirk/Spock archive. But new requests and permissions have also been coming in since the announcement, and it will be an ongoing process, with volunteers working hard to convert and edit each individual zine.
(3) THE RIGHT WORD? Nisi Shawl was still in search of an answer that hits the spot when I looked at Facebook this afternoon:
What’s the word for the kind of apology you get that blames you for what went wrong?
(4) HORROR WRITING VETERANS. The Horror Writers Association blog has been running a âVeterans in Horror Spotlightâ series. Hereâs an example: âVeterans in Horror: Interview with Jonathan Genslerâ.
What role, if any, did reading and writing play during your military service?
I still have stacks of my journals from the whole nine-year period sitting on my bookshelf, unread to this day. I had written poetry and journaled most of my teenage years up to that point, but when I got out of the service I stopped journaling and writing almost completely for reasons I havenât quite grasped. That was over 15 years ago. Reading, on the other hand is something I have never stopped doing. These combat deployments were well before I had anything like an e-reader, so it was physical books all the way. I must have lugged around a ridiculous amount of books with me. The big ones that hit me the hardest while deployed are still some of my favorites: Dumasâs The Count of Monte Cristo, Epictetusâ The Enchiridion, my first readings of Enderâs Game and that series. I got my first copy of House of Leaves while deployed to Iraq and that copy is scrawled with my own footnotes and reflections, and is falling apart at the seams. And then of course, King finished out The Dark Tower while I was deployed so I had those tomes sent to me and to tote around as well. So, yeah, I filled my spare hours with both reading and writing, quite a bit of both.
Here are the links to the rest of the series.
- Veterans of Horror: Interview with Owl Goingback
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with Bryn Grover
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with LP Hernandez
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with Verona Jones
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with Brandon Ketchum
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with K.P. Kulski
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with C.R. Langille
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with Chance Fortune
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with David Curfiss
- Veterans in Horror: Interview with Rachel A. Brune
(5) BOOKSTORE REBOUNDS FROM ARSON ATTACK. âL.A. book emporium the Iliad recovering from mysterious fireâ reports the Los Angeles Times. The bookstoreâs GoFundMe has been an enormous success. The owner asked for $5,000 to cover his insurance deductible. âThe response has topped $34,000, sparing him the need to file a claim at all.â
âĶThe cause of the blaze remains unknown. Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Erik Scott said it has been ruled undetermined.
[Iliad owner] Weinstein said he believes an arsonist started the fire. It appeared that books the store leaves outside for the community to browse were stacked in a pyramidal shape next to the entry door and lit, he said.
An inscrutable motive was suggested by 15 to 20 copies of a flyer Weinstein said he found taped to the sides of the building. It was a collage of conspiratorial references â the Irish and South African flags, a photo of the burned-out cabin where policeman-turned-killer Christopher Dorner died, an address of a nearby home, and a handwritten letter attributed to Alex Cox, a deceased figure in a complex family homicide case depicted in a Netflix documentaryâĶ.
(6) AMAZON WORKFORCE CUTS COMING. Reuters has learned âAmazon to lay off thousands of employeesâ. (And last week, Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc said it would cut more than 11,000 jobs, or 13% of its workforce.)
âĶ The cuts, earlier reported by the New York Times, would represent about 3% of Amazon’s corporate staff. The exact number may vary as businesses within Amazon review their priorities, the source told Reuters.
The online retailer plans to eliminate jobs in its devices organization, which makes voice-controlled “Alexa” gadgets and home-security cameras, as well as in its human-resources and retail divisions, the person said. Amazon’s time frame for informing staff remained unclearâĶ.
(7) THE ART OF FANHISTORY. Garth Spencerâs name was chosen from the hat to be Corflu Panglossâ Guest of Honour. He has published the speech he gave ârevealing the hideous basic truths of fandomâ in Obdurate Eye #21.
âĶThere was a time when I thought every other country seems to have a published fanhistory; why shouldn’t a Canadian fanhistory be published? Maybe I could compile it, from any information I could gather. Then I got strange responses like âWho are you? Why are you asking me questions? Who sent you? I’m not responsible!â So, I learned that There Are Things Fans Must Not Put on Record. More to the point, my search to find out what people can be expected to do, when to expect it, and how to defend yourself, is not the first thing people think of when they think of fanhistoryâĶ.
(8) A MEMORY PROMPT. Daytonian in Manhattanâs âThe Lost âFurness Houseâ — 34 Whitehall Streetâ is an article about the NYC headquarters building for the steamship line A. Bertram Chandler once worked for.
In 1891, Christopher Furness, owner of the Furness Line of steamships, and Henry Withy, head of the shipbuilding firm Edward Withy & Co., merged their businesses to form Furness, Withy & Co., Ltd. Starting out with 18 vessels, by the outbreak of World War I, it sailed more than 200–and it was ready for a new New York City branch office buildingâĶ.
Andrew Porter reminds readers that he published Chandler’s autobiographical “Around the World in 23,741 Days” in Algol 31. You can read it here.
âĶOne very earlyâbut remarkably vividâmemory I have is of a Zeppelin raid on London during World War I. can still see the probing searchlights, like the questing antennae of giant insects and, sailing serenely overhead, high in the night sky, that slim, silvery cigar. I canât remember any bombs; I suppose that none fell anywhere near where I was. It is worth remarking that in those distant days, with aerial warfare in its infancy, civilians had not yet learned to run for cover on the approach of raiders but stood in the streets, with their children, to watch the showâĶ.
(9) READ COMPLETE MOORE REMARKS ON KEVIN OâNEILL. [Item by Danny Sichel.] At the request of the New York Times, Alan Moore wrote an obit for Kevin O’Neill which was too long to publish. Jeet Heer posted it to Twitter.(OâNeill did the art for Mooreâs The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.)
(10) WOOSTER EULOGY. Philanthropy Daily, where he was a contributor, paid tribute to him in âMartin Morse Wooster, RIPâ.
âĶIn addition to writing for Philanthropy Daily, Martin was a senior fellow at the Capital Research Center, and contributed significantly to research on philanthropy and especially the issue of donor intent. Martin’s contributions to questions around philanthropy, charity, and donor intent can scarcely be overstated. How Great Philanthropists Failed remains the leading book on donor intent and the history of failed philanthropic legacies.
Martin’s work has appeared everywhere from the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post to the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Reason, and numerous other publications.
Martin will be sorely missed by all of us at Philanthropy Daily and countless others who have benefited from his important work.
(11) MEMORY LANE.
1985 — [By Cat Eldridge.] Shadow Chasers
Before we get started on talking about todayâs essay, may I note that this was the day fifty-eight years ago that Santa Claus Conquers The Martians premiered was well? It was considered one of the worst genre films ever released, bar none.
Thirty-seven years ago this evening a series premiered on ABC, receiving almost no notice: Shadow Chasers. Letâs talk about the show before we turn to a brief autopsy on its numbers.
LOOKâ I SEE BIGFOOT COMING WITH SPOILERS!
British anthropologist Jonathan MacKensie (Trevor Eve who played Peter Boyd in the excellent Waking the Dead forensic series) works for the fictional Georgetown Institute Paranormal Research Unit (PRU). MacKenzie’s department head, Dr. Julianna Moorhouse (Nina Foch), withholds a research grant to force him into investigating what she says is a haunting involving a teenage boy. He is paired with flamboyant tabloid reporter Edgar “Benny” Benedek.
Benny and Jonathan do not get along, but manage to solve the case without killing each other. The episodes continued in this vein, with Jonathan and Benny grudgingly learning to respect and admire each other, in the fashion of American cop shows.
LOOK IT WASNâT REALLY BIGFOOT, WAS IT?
Now for the rating autopsy I promised.
So understand that it was on ABC as I said for just ten episodes of its sad existence with the last four shows being broadcast solely on the Armed Forces network. Just how bad was its existence? It was the lowest-rated of a one hundred and six programs during the 1985-1986 TV season.
Why so, you ask? Well thatâs easy. It was broadcast against NBC’s The Cosby Show and Family Ties and CBS’s Magnum P.I. and, later on, Simon & Simon on CBS. It didnât stand a chance.
Indeed, local ABC affiliates within a few weeks in started preempting the series for other programming.

(12) TODAYâS BIRTHDAYS.
[Compiled by Cat Eldridge.]
- Born November 14, 1907 — Astrid Lindgren. Creator of the Pippi Longstocking series and, at least in the States, lesser known Emil i LÃķnneberga, Karlsson-on-the-Roof, and the Six Bullerby Children series as well. In January 2017, she was calculated to be the worldâs eighteenth most translated author, and the fourth most translated childrenâs writer after Enid Blyton, H. C. Andersen and the Brothers Grimm. There have been at least forty video adaptations of her works over the decades mostly in Swedish but Ronja, the Robberâs Daughter was an animated series in Japan recently. (Died 2002.)
- Born November 14, 1932 — Alex Ebel. He did the poster for the first Friday the 13th film, and his cover illustration for The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin published by Ace Books in 1975 is considered one of the best such illustrations done. Iâm also very impressed with The Dispossessed cover he did as well as his Planet of Exile cover too. His work for magazines includes Heavy Metal, Space Science Fiction and Fantastic Story Magazine. (Died 2013.)
- Born November 14, 1950 — Elliot S. Maggin, 72. A writer for DC Comics during the Bronze and early Modern ages of comics where he helped shaped the Superman character. Most of his work was on Action Comics and Superman titles though he did extensive work elsewhere including, of course, on the Batman titles.
- Born November 14, 1951 — Beth Meacham, 71. In 1984, she became an editor for Tor Books, where she rose to the position of editor-in-chief. After her 1989 move to the west coast, she continued working for Tor as an executive editor which she just retired from. She does have one novel, co-written with Tappan King, entitled Nightshade Book One: Terror, Inc. and a handful of short fiction. A Readerâs Guide to Fantasy that she co-wrote wrote Michael Franklin and Baird Searles was nominated for a Hugo at L.A. Con II. She has been nominated for six Hugos as Best Professional Editor or Best Editor Long Form.
- Born November 14, 1959 — Paul McGann, 63. Yes, he only did one film as the eighth incarnation of the Doctor in the 1996 Doctor Who: The Television Movie, but he has reprised that role in numerous audio dramas, and the 2013 short film entitled The Night of the Doctor. He also appeared in âThe Five(ish) Doctorsâ reboot. Other genre appearances include The Pit and the Pendulum: A Study in Torture, Alien 3, the excellent FairyTale: A True Story, Queen of the Damned and Lesbian Vampire Killers.
- Born November 14, 1963 — Cat Rambo, 59 . All around great person. Past President of SFWA. She was editor of Fantasy Magazine for four years which earned her a 2012 nomination in the World Fantasy Special Award: Non-Professional category. Her novelette Carpe Glitter won a 2020 Nebula, and her short story âFive Ways to Fall in Love on Planet Porcelainâ was a 2013 Nebula Award finalist. Her impressive fantasy Tabat Quartet quartet begins withBeasts of Tabat, Hearts of Tabat, and Exiles of Tabat, and will soon be completed by Gods of Tabat. She also writes amazing short fiction as well. The Rambo Academy for Wayward Writers is her long-standing school for writers that provides her excellent assistance in learning proper writing skills through live and on demand classes about a range of topics. You can get details here. Her latest, You Sexy Thing, was a stellar listen indeed and Iâm very much looking forward to the sequel.
- Born November 14, 1969 — Daniel Abraham, 53. Co-author with Ty Franck of The Expanse series which won a Hugo at CoNZealand. Under the pseudonym M. L. N. Hanover, he is the author of the Black Sunâs Daughter urban fantasy series. Abraham collaborated with George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois to write the Hunterâs Run. Abraham also has adapted several of Martinâs works into comic books and graphic novels, such as A Game of Thrones: The Graphic Novel, and has contributed to Wild Cards anthologies. By himself, he picked up a Hugo nomination at Denvention 3 for his âThe Cambist and Lord Iron: A Fairy Tale of Economicsâ novelette.
(13) COMICS SECTION.
- Speed Bump knows of one effect thatâs not special at all!
(14) HAPPY NEW YEAR. Lois McMaster Bujold pointed out to her Goodreads followers that the next Penric book Knot of Shadows garnered a starred review in Publishers Weekly. The Subterranean Press hardcover is due to be released on January 1. [Update: Bujold’s author page shows the Kindle edition of Knot of Shadows came out last year in October, so this will be a new hardcover edition, but not a new release per se.]
Temple sorcerer Penric and demon Desdemona return in this page-turner fantasy mystery from Bujold, the 11th in the series (after The Assassins of Thasalon) and possibly the best yet. Penric and Desdemona, the chaos elemental who shares his body, are joined by Alixtra and her own demon, Arra, to help the healers of the Motherâs Order in Vilnoc with an unusual case: a corpse has revived and is now shouting gibberish. Penric discovers that the victim is not one but two dead peopleâa man slain by death magic and a ghost that has begun animating his body. Death magic is so rare that even Desdemona has never witnessed it performed. A supplicant offers their own life to ensure that the Bastard, Penricâs god, will kill their target. This ritual opens multiple quandaries: Who is the corpse? Were they the supplicant or the target? And where is the other party to the death prayer? Penric remarks that âthis case is bound to get ugly and sadââand indeed it does, in the most creative of ways. Bujold has her protagonists combine mundane and mystical investigative methods to unravel the questions at hand, creating a truly enticing mystery. Series fans and new readers alike will want to savor this intricate , unusual case.
(15) WORLD MUSIC. âLudwig GÃķransson Discusses His Globe-Trotting ‘Wakanda Forever’ Scoreâ in Variety.
âĶ The challenge, GÃķransson says, was to find a new sound for the African kingdom of Wakanda and its grief-stricken people while also trying to imagine the sound of Prince Namorâs undersea kingdom of Talokan, whose origins lay in Mexicoâs ancient Mayan civilization.
GÃķransson consulted musical archaeologists and spent two weeks in Mexico City collaborating with Mexican musicians. He auditioned âhundreds of ancient instruments,â from clay flutes to unusual percussion instruments, and saw paintings of Mayans playing on turtle shells, among dozens of similar musically inspirational moments. He discovered the âflute of truth,â a high-pitched whistle-like woodwind instrument, and vowed to incorporate the âdeath whistle,â which has a piecing sound like a human scream.
By day, GÃķransson recorded with Mexican musicians, and by night, he was recording with Mexican singers and rappers. âI was using the morning sessions to put together beats and songs that we would use later that day with the artists,â the composer reportsâĶ.
(16) ON THE GRIPPING HAND. LeaflockâĒ The EntâĒ from WETA Workshop is only fifteen hundred dollarsâĶ The image of this veteran of the attack on Isengard âContains two (and a half) Orcs, squashed, pinned and/or crushed by the Entâs wrath.â

(17) MAKE IT GO. And if you have any money left after buying the Ent, you can order the Volkswagen-built Star Trek captainâs chair that goes 12mph â assuming it truly exists, which the Verge says should not be taken for granted.
âĶAssuming all of this is real, of course. Volkswagen has a recent history of lying to people. This time, the company seems to be fairly transparent that itâs a one-off marketing stunt, while also suggesting that âit will be available for test drives at various locations.â Hopefully that means citizens of Norway will soon be able to prove its capabilitiesâĶ.
(18) COMING FROM DUST. The short film Jettison will be released online December 7 by DUST & Film Shortage.
A restless young woman ships off to fight an interstellar war, only to struggle with the effects of being cut off from her home by both time and space.
(19) BELA WINS. âThe 20 best horror villains of all timeâ, according to Entertainment Weekly.
âĶBut for every icon of the macabre, there are a much larger number of deranged dentists, serial-killing Santa Clauses, and sorority house murderers who don’t quite rank as highly in the frightening food chain. In fact, it’s been a while since a character came along and asserted his or herself as the next count of the Carpathians or chainsaw-wielding maniac. Whoever steps up next has some big shoes to fill, because these are the crÃĻme de la crÃĻme when it comes to history-making evildoersâĶ.
1. Dracula
Dracula is the most influential horror villain of all time. The Count stalks like a slasher, murders in droves like a serial killer, and is the inspiration for every single vampire movie made after 1931. Dracula’s vast powers, and his immortality, make him the most formidable of any killer on this list, and while Bela Lugosi is most often associated with the character, it was Sir Christopher Lee who made the Count the vile, sadistic creature of the night.
Lee gave the character a grandiose feel thanks to his imposing height, and there was a sexuality the villain exuded which made him irresistible to women. Unlike his colleague and friend, Peter Cushing, Lee loathed reprising the role because Hammer wasn’t faithful to Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel. “I wanted to play Stoker’s character,” Lee explained. “It wasn’t remotely like the book.”
You’ll also enjoy Horror of Dracula (1958).
(20) VIDEO OF THE DAY. Dream Foundry has released the video of âFantasy? On MY Spaceship?! Blending Science and Sorceryâ on their YouTube channel. Features panelists Valerie Valdes, Tobias Buckell, and Bogi TakÃĄcs.
[Thanks to Martin Morse Wooster, JJ, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Danny Sichel, David Doering, Andrew (not Werdna), Andrew Porter, Michael Toman, Cat Eldridge, and Mike Kennedy for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]






