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This month we read Philip José Farmer's extended fart joke The Wind Whales of Ishmael. This episode is kinda ridiculous, which is fitting for a book which is also kinda ridiculous. We chatted for 15 minutes before we got into the book, as follows: 0:00-7:00ish - general chat and update on Haley's fava beans, as requested by listener Amber 7:00ish-14:30 - tasting and discussion of Coca-Cola Spiced, which is not very good 14:30-15:30 - an anecdote from Haley's college radio days 15:30-end - an actual episode of Hugo, Girl! the podcast Support Locus Magazine Music by Pets of Belonging
Votre prochaine lecture se trouve peut-être dans cette liste. Les références utilisées : « L'Alchimiste » de Paolo Coelho ; « L'Assassin royal » de Robin Hobb ; Voltaire ; « Le Monde du Fleuve » de Philip José Farmer ; Edgar Alan Poe ; « Les Merveilleuses aventures de Kalon » d'Asp Explorer que vous pouvez lire gratuirement ici : http://mapage.noos.fr/aspexpl/kalonbrw.htm 3 moyens de nous soutenir : Vous abonner est le meilleur moyen de nous rejoindre ! Vous pouvez partager ce podcast sur Insta en taguant @florence_georgeon et nous retrouver sur Youtube à 6e de couverture (cela nous fera très plaisir). Vous pouvez laisser une chouette évaluation sur la plateforme de podcast de votre choix.
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Bocetos entre las ruinas de mi mente (Sketches Among the Ruins of My Mind) —a veces titulado en español: Las ruinas de mi mente— es un relato fantástico del escritor norteamericano Philip José Farmer (1918-2009), publicado en la antología de 1973: Nova 3 (Nova 3). Bocetos entre las ruinas de mi mente, probablemente uno de los mejores cuentos de Philip José Farmer, nos sitúa en una realidad en donde las personas son despojadas periódicamente del recuerdo de los últimos cuatro días. SPOYLERS En este sentido, Bocetos entre las ruinas de mi mente de Philip José Farmer cuenta la historia de Mark Franham, su esposa, Carole, y sus dos hijos, Tom y Mike, quienes creen estar viviendo la noche del 28 de mayo de 1980. De alguna forma, desde que se fueron a dormir la noche anterior han perdido cuatro días de recuerdos. Llega entonces el periódico del domingo, publicado antes de la 1:00 am, con la información necesaria para llenar las piezas faltantes. Al parecer, un objeto esférico gigantesco, que los astrónomos han estado rastreando durante tres semanas, ha cambiado de curso y se dirige directamente hacia la Tierra. Mark encuentra copias de los periódicos del jueves, el viernes y el sábado, los cuales confirman la edición del domingo. Pero no puede recordar esos cuatro días faltantes. Solo queda una opción: irse a dormir y repetir la misma rutina de olvidos y descubrimientos, un bucle en el tiempo, que no conduce a nada. Análisis de: El Espejo Gótico http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2019/06/bocetos-entre-las-ruinas-de-mi-mente.html Texto del relato extraído de: http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2019/06/bocetos-entre-las-ruinas-de-mi-mente.html Musicas: - 01. Mind Tricks - Experia (Epidemic) - 02. Sublimation - Red Dictionary (Epidemic) Nota: Este audio no se realiza con fines comerciales ni lucrativos. Es de difusión enteramente gratuita e intenta dar a conocer tanto a los escritores de los relatos y cuentos como a los autores de las músicas. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
"Bocetos Entre las Ruinas de mi Mente" (Sketches Among the Ruins of My Mind) —a veces titulado en español: Las ruinas de mi mente— es un relato fantástico del escritor norteamericano Philip José Farmer (1918-2009), publicado en la antología de 1973: Nova 3. Es probablemente uno de los mejores cuentos de Philip José Farmer, nos sitúa en una realidad en donde las personas son despojadas periódicamente del recuerdo de los últimos cuatro días. En este sentido, Bocetos entre las ruinas de mi mente de Philip José Farmer cuenta la historia de Mark Franham, su esposa, Carole, y sus dos hijos, Tom y Mike, quienes creen estar viviendo la noche del 28 de mayo de 1980. De alguna forma, desde que se fueron a dormir la noche anterior han perdido cuatro días de recuerdos. Música: "Fallout 4" Inon Zur Blog del Podcast: https://lanebulosaeclectica.blogspot.com/ Twitter: @jomategu
Season five of Vintage Sci-Fi Shorts is coming soon. I'm reading stories from the first two volumes of the classic speculative fiction magazine Fantastic Universe, including stories in the public domain from Evelyn Goldstein, Philip K. Dick and Judith Merril. In the meantime, enjoy this essay from Philip Jose Farmer. I think it really captures the heart and spirit of the magazine.
Perry and David take the Hugo Time Machine back to the year 1968, when the shorter fiction was dominated by the Dangerous Visions anthology edited by Harlan Ellison and Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny won the Best Novel award. General News (10:07) Nebula Award Short List (03:14) Forthcoming Releases (02:29) Brandon Sanderson's Kickstarter project (04:15) Hugo Time Machine 1968 (01:12:20) Best Short Story (12:30) The Dangerous Visions anthology (00:50) The Jigsaw Man by Larry Niven (03:18) Aye And Gomorrah by Samuel R. Delany (03:17) I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison (02:17) Other possible nominees (02:44) Best Novelette (14:26) Faith of Our Fathers by Philip K. Dick (03:46) Wizard's World by Andre Norton (02:45) Pretty Maggie Moneyeyes by Harlan Ellison (03:04) Gonna Roll the Bones by Fritz Leiber (02:32) Other possible nominees (02:06) Best Novella (19:46) The Star-Pit by Samuel R. Delany (03:07) Damnation Alley by Roger Zelazny (03:56) Hawksbill Station by Robert Silverberg (03:05) Weyr Search by Anne McCaffrey (02:48) Riders of the Purple Wage by Philip José Farmer (04:20) Other possible nominees (01:42) Behold the Man by Michael Moorcock (00:30) Best Novel (23:52) Thorns by Robert Silverberg (03:09) The Einstein Intersection by Samuel R. Delany (05:39) Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny (09:34) Other possible nominees (04:36) Windup (01:25) Photo by Omar Houchaimi on Pexels
Perry and David take the Hugo Time Machine back to the year 1968, when the shorter fiction was dominated by the Dangerous Visions anthology edited by Harlan Ellison and Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny won the Best Novel award. General News (10:07) Nebula Award Short List (03:14) Forthcoming Releases (02:29) Brandon Sanderson's Kickstarter project (04:15) Hugo Time Machine 1968 (01:12:20) Best Short Story (12:30) The Dangerous Visions anthology (00:50) The Jigsaw Man by Larry Niven (03:18) Aye And Gomorrah by Samuel R. Delany (03:17) I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison (02:17) Other possible nominees (02:44) Best Novelette (14:26) Faith of Our Fathers by Philip K. Dick (03:46) Wizard's World by Andre Norton (02:45) Pretty Maggie Moneyeyes by Harlan Ellison (03:04) Gonna Roll the Bones by Fritz Leiber (02:32) Other possible nominees (02:06) Best Novella (19:46) The Star-Pit by Samuel R. Delany (03:07) Damnation Alley by Roger Zelazny (03:56) Hawksbill Station by Robert Silverberg (03:05) Weyr Search by Anne McCaffrey (02:48) Riders of the Purple Wage by Philip José Farmer (04:20) Other possible nominees (01:42) Behold the Man by Michael Moorcock (00:30) Best Novel (23:52) Thorns by Robert Silverberg (03:09) The Einstein Intersection by Samuel R. Delany (05:39) Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny (09:34) Other possible nominees (04:36) Windup (01:25) Click here for more info and indexes Photo by Omar Houchaimi on Pexels
Welcome to episode 23 of Season 12 of The Coode Street Podcast. This week, after a brief and mostly irrelevant discussion of whether the proposition that Ray Bradbury as the quintessential October writer means anything at all outside North America, Jonathan and Gary actually try to focus on an important question: whether posthumous publications actually do anything to enhance an author's reputation. We make distinctions between works that the author clearly wanted to be published (like Philip K. Dick final four novels), works that the author clearly did not intend for publication (like some late Heinlein manuscripts), and works which the author may or may not have tried to publish during their lifetimes (such as a number of R.A. Lafferty manuscripts completed or continued by other hands, including novels by Walter M. Miller, Jr., Robert Jordan, and Terry Pratchett). We even touch upon whether the J. Michael Straczynski The Last Dangerous Visions is a useful idea decades after Harlan Ellison began the project. Do author's estates see posthumous publication as a means of keeping an author's name alive, as a purely commercial proposition, or as a way of arguing for an author's canonical status? Other authors touched upon include J.R.R. Tolkien, John M. Ford, Philip José Farmer, and even a few examples from mainstream fiction, such as John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces, which won a Pulitzer Prize more than a decade after its author's death. As always, we hope you enjoy the episode.
The Fabulous River PodMegan covers Japanese cult mystery novel THE DECAGON MURDERS - a classic honkaku novel in the style of Golden Age murder mysteries. Meanwhile, Rob drifts upstream with Philip José Farmer's sci-fi epic series RIVERWORLD, discussing the classic tomes that make up the saga. With presenters Rob Jan & Megan McKeough, 'Zero G' explores Science Fiction, Fantasy and Historical.Website: http://www.rrr.org.au/program/zero-g/playlistsFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/ZeroGRadioRob Jan on Twitter: @zerogrobjan
Kienna Shaw joins us to discuss Philip José Farmer's "The Lavalite World", using present-day religious texts as mythology, literary info dumps, the petty egos of immortals, making moral choices when you your life is at stake, close third-person narration, the dangers of presenting racist characters without critique, Bluebeard's Bride, being a collaborative player instead of a lone wolf, constantly shifting landscapes, and much more!
This week Mike is again joined by Scott Weatherly of the 20th Century Geek podcast and the Stories Out Of Time & Space podcast, for a chat for the nerds among us – crossovers, special effects, sci-fi & much more is discussed! Part 2 of their chat starts with a discussion on crossovers, directors being allowed to be more adventurous with their projects, issues with prequel movies, cinematic/shared universes, Philip José Farmer’s early sci-fi work, accessibility of “nerd culture” for the mainstream, video game movies, a film universe’s own internal logic and more! Last week, part 1 of Mike & Scott’s chat, it started with a discussion on older sci-fi shows and their special effects compared to modern special effects (including how Mandalorian & Ghostbusters have mixed the old with the new), they then discuss de-aging technology and what the cutting-edge must look like, before delving into how far technology must be “behind closed doors”, dystopian futures, Red Dwarf & more! 20th Century Geek - Stories Out Of Time & Space Scott has been on GCC previously, on episode 75 for a Star Wars discussion and on ep 89 for a wrestling talk – be sure to subscribe to 20th Century Geek as Mike, Megan & Scott’s Batman retrospective will be out in early 2021! In the last episode of GCC; number 106, Mike spoke with Millie Manders of the alternative/cross-genre punk band Millie Manders And The Shutup for a talk on their latest album “Telling Truths, Breaking Ties”, as well as Millie’s music-orientated childhood, trumpets, live performances, the immediate positive reception of their album, Millie’s powerful lyrics, Mike & Millie’s mutual appreciate for Scroobius Pip, trust, social media and more! Mike was recently on the Scott Pilgrim Vs The World review for the TV & Movies show on Comics In Motion where he discussed the movie with Dave of CiM and Tony of Indie Comic Spotlight (dated 8th October), check it out here: https://spoti.fi/33I9N5L Mike also appeared on the second episode of Comics On Trial, defending The Phantom Menace against Scott of 20th Century Geek – found on the feed of Comics In Motion Mike appeared on episode 8 of Max Byrne’s Mandatory Marvel & DC show about The Killing Joke. Mike also appeared on Tony Farina’s Indie Comics Spotlight to talk about the comic series Second Coming (Episode 13). Check out the podcast ROOM where Mike is in episode 1 of season 2 called “All Roads Lead To Room” as well as the episode "Jen And The Blob"! Mike has another show, called Star Wars: Comics In Canon – all episodes can be found on Comics In Motion’s podcast feed and episodes will be out every Saturday; episodes 0-34 are now out, 34 introduced Doctor Aphra, 33 was about Yoda’s secret war and 32 was about the Journals Of Old Ben Kenobi. Previous episodes topics include Count Dooku, Chewbacca, Galaxy’s Edge, Darth Vader and the Vader Down crossover event, Lando Calrissian, Mace Windu, Darth Vader, Doctor Aphra, The Rise Of Kylo Ren, Darth Maul beyond The Phantom Menace, how C-3PO got his red arm & more - https://apple.co/39mut2Y Genuine Chit-Chat is a part of the Brit Pod Scene, so be sure to check out the other members of the family as well as the BPS podcast – www.britpodscene.com Instagram – Twitter – Facebook – YouTube – Stitcher - Podbean - Spotify You can also email Mike at GenuineChitChat@outlook.com with any reviews, comments or suggestions.
This week Mike is joined by Scott Weatherly of the 20th Century Geek podcast and the Stories Out Of Time & Space podcast, for a chat for the nerds among us – crossovers, special effects, sci-fi & much more is discussed! For more detail, part 1 of Mike & Scott’s chat starts with a discussion on older sci-fi shows and their special effects compared to modern special effects (including how Mandalorian & Ghostbusters have mixed the old with the new), they then discuss de-aging technology and what the cutting-edge must look like, before delving into how far technology must be “behind closed doors”, dystopian futures, Red Dwarf & more! Part 2 of their chat starts with a discussion on crossovers, directors being allowed to be more adventurous with their projects, issues with prequel movies, cinematic universes, Philip José Farmer’s early sci-fi work, accessibility of “nerd culture” for the mainstream, video game movies, a film universe’s own internal logic and more, so be sure to tune in next week for that! 20th Century Geek - Stories Out Of Time & Space Scott has been on GCC previously, on episode 75 for a Star Wars discussion and on ep 89 for a wrestling talk! Promo by Beernuts Productions - Gough was also on episode 105 of GCC! In the last episode of GCC; number 106, Mike spoke with Millie Manders of the alternative/cross-genre punk band Millie Manders And The Shutup for a talk on their latest album “Telling Truths, Breaking Ties”, as well as Millie’s music-orientated childhood, trumpets, live performances, the immediate positive reception of their album, Millie’s powerful lyrics, Mike & Millie’s mutual appreciate for Scroobius Pip, trust, social media and more! Mike was recently on the Scott Pilgrim Vs The World review for the TV & Movies show on Comics In Motion where he discussed the movie with Dave of CiM and Tony of Indie Comic Spotlight (dated 8th October), check it out here: https://spoti.fi/33I9N5L Mike also appeared on the second episode of Comics On Trial, defending The Phantom Menace against Scott of 20th Century Geek – found on the feed of Comics In Motion Mike appeared on episode 8 of Max Byrne’s Mandatory Marvel & DC show about The Killing Joke. Mike also appeared on Tony Farina’s Indie Comics Spotlight to talk about the comic series Second Coming (Episode 13). Check out the podcast ROOM where Mike is in episode 1 of season 2 called “All Roads Lead To Room” as well as the episode "Jen And The Blob"! Mike has another show, called Star Wars: Comics In Canon – all episodes can be found on Comics In Motion’s podcast feed and episodes will be out every Saturday; episodes 0-33 are now out, 33 being about Yoda’s secret war, 32 was about the Journals Of Old Ben Kenobi and 31 was about Qui-Gon Jinn & Obi-Wan’s one-shot comics. Previous episodes topics include Count Dooku, Chewbacca, Galaxy’s Edge, Darth Vader and the Vader Down crossover event, Lando Calrissian, Mace Windu, Darth Vader, Doctor Aphra, The Rise Of Kylo Ren, Darth Maul beyond The Phantom Menace, how C-3PO got his red arm & more - https://apple.co/39mut2Y Genuine Chit-Chat is a part of the Brit Pod Scene, so be sure to check out the other members of the family as well as the BPS podcast – www.britpodscene.com Instagram – Twitter – Facebook – YouTube – Stitcher - Podbean - Spotify You can also email Mike at GenuineChitChat@outlook.com with any reviews, comments or suggestions.
Jamila R. Nedjadi joins us to discuss Philip José Farmer's "Behind the Walls of Terra”, World of Darkness games, the false divide between the OSR and indie games, simulacrums, motorcycle gangs, one's own mother as a romantic love interest, hippie culture, fiction written by random tables, GMs building on what players give them, PBtA moves, describing modern items as marvelous artifacts, the perfect way to end a session, and much more!
"The Leaser of Two Evils" Es una historia extraña escrita por Philip José Farmer en 1979 sobre un policía esquizofrénico. Las dos personalidades en su cabeza son completamente diferentes. Uno vive una vida muy puritana, el otro es un pervertido sexual. Se busca ayuda de un psiquiatra. Pero después aparece una tercera persona. Musica: Cyberpunk & Dystopian Music Compilation Blog del Podcast: https://lanebulosaeclectica.blogspot.com/
Que sí, que ya sabemos que San Valentín fue hace ya dos semanas… Pero, ¿sabéis qué? ¡Que este es nuestro podcast y lo publicamos cuando nos da la gana! :p Fuera bromas, el amor no es cosa de un día y ni mucho menos tiene solo una forma. Por ello os traemos nuestro especial a la causa de la temporada, en diversos formatos, con unas recomendaciones dispuestas a quedarse en un hueco de vuestro corazón, aunque algunas lo conseguirán más que otras, porque ya sabéis… Aquí en Leyendo hasta el amanecer, tenemos recomendaciones para todos los gustos y colores. Los libros que recomendamos para este programa y que podréis escuchar en la sección Los libros de la semana, son: El día que decidiste no morir, de Gloria Cerezo. Hombres sin mujeres, de Haruki Murakami. Tomates verdes fritos, de Fannie Flagg. Relaciones extrañas, de Philip José Farmer. Podéis escucharlo aquí, en Lektu o en iVoox.
Hoi and Jeff discuss character morality, action scequences, and female sexuality in Philip José Farmer's "A Private Cosmos" with special guest Eric Daum!
In this Pulp Event Podcast, Paul Spiteri moderates a panel discussion of "Philip José Farmer of the Pulps: A Harvest of Influences." The panel features Win Scott Eckert, Jason Aiken, Christopher Paul Carey, and Garyn Roberts. The discussion was part of FarmerCon, which was being held in conjunction with, PulpFest. It was recorded on Aug. 17, 2019, at PulpFest 2019, in Pittsburgh Pa.
Early pulp covers indicate that aliens are very interested in having sex with human females, but in the classic story ”The Lovers” by Philip José Farmer it is the male protagonist who has sex with an alien insect. The three authors in this panel all have written stories where humans have sex with individuals of … Fortsätt läsa Sweconpoddar 63 – Alien Sex →
Hoi and Jeff discuss Philip José Farmer's "The Gates of Creation" with special guest Christopher Paul Carey.
De una serie de cinco relatos publicados de 1961 a 1969, nace La Nave que Cantaba (1969) que se convirtió en una novela que nos ubica en el futuro donde nuestro universo está organizado en la Federación de Planetas Sensibles. Aquí, los padres de bebés con graves discapacidades físicas, pero con talentosos y desarrollados cerebros, pueden elegir en convertirlo en “personas caparazón” en vez de aplicar eutanasia. De este modo, puede encapsularles en exo-esqueletos de titanio con sistemas de soporte de vida y conexiones a computadoras donde no sufrirán, podrán cumplir curiosas profesiones a lo largo de los siglos y servir de manera inusual a los mundos centrales… Anne McCaffrey (1 de Abril de 1926, 21 de Noviembre de 2011) fue una escritora estadounidense de novelas y relatos de fantasía y ciencia ficción, conocida principalmente por su saga Los jinetes de dragones de Pern. Fue la primera mujer en ganar un premio Hugo en 1968 (Compartido con Philip José Farmer) y obtuvo el premio Nébula por uno de los relatos que forman parte de su libro El vuelo del Dragón. En 2005 fue reconocida con el premio Gran maestra Damon Knight Memorial, otorgado por la Asociación de escritores de ciencia ficción y fantasía de Estados Unidos.
ZORK One 04. (Season -02 episode -37). Oh gosh. I just remembered this is the one that I recommended all those things in, right? Okay well the Author I couldn't remember was named Philip José Farmer, AND his book was called To Your Scattered Bodies Go, not "Riverworld", AND it was written in 1971, not 1978 or whatever I said. Jeez what a huge moron I was. I remembered his name the second I stopped recording, I swear. The other author was Vonda N. McIntyre. Check out The Exile Waiting and Dreamsnake. It wasn't an official Daniel K Recommends, but I do recommend you check out Gogs; it's actually better than I thought it would be. The audio that played at the very end of this episode was stolen from a special patreon-only episode of the Star Wars Minute podcast, a podcast I unreservedly recommend to absolutely everyone, not only star wars fans. Definitely check it out. Happy binging!
In retrospect, the publication of Philip José Farmer’s The Maker of Universes (Ace Books, 1965) marks the beginning of the most productive and rewarding phase of Farmer’s writing career. It can hardly have seemed that way at the time, as Farmer was toiling away as a technical writer in Scottsdale, Arizona to support himself and his family. Even though Farmer had been a published writer as of 1946 and had even won his first Hugo Award in 1953 (as “Best New SF Author or Artist”), commercial success had eluded him so far. Robert Wolff, the initially aged, paunchy, and disillusioned protagonist of The Maker of Universes is obviously a stand-in for Farmer at that point in his life---fortunately Farmer and his wife Bette appear to have been very happy together in real life, as their marriage lasted over 67 years until his death in 2009. The Maker of Universes is one of Farmer’s most personal works, with callbacks to the whole range of his youthful enthusiasms, from Ancient Greek and Native American myths and legends, Edgar Rice Burroughs-style pulp, and Lord Dunsany’s sense of mystery and wonder among others. Interestingly, in Farmer’s introduction to the 1980 Phantasia Press special edition of The Maker of Universes he cites Gulliver’s Travels, Alice in Wonderland, and Through the Looking Glass as stronger influences on the book than the more obvious high adventure of Burroughs. Farmer would later write in his introduction to the THOAN, Les Faiseurs d’Univers RPG, that he had first received “impressions” of the World of Tiers while he was laid low with a fever at the age of 18 and believed them to be actual visions from an alternate universe. One has to wonder if Farmer is being utterly serious or so drily tongue-in-cheek as to make no difference…. The cover of the original Ace Books paperback features a wonderfully composed if not entirely accurate depiction of Podarge the Harpy by the versatile and prolific Jack Gaughan The Ace Books reprints from 1977 onward featured Boris Vallejo’s unmistakably beefcakey rendition of Robert Wolff along with an accurately wing-armed Podarge Given The Maker of Universes’ galloping pace and mad invention, it’s no wonder that Gary Gygax found it a particular inspiration for Dungeons & Dragons. Like many other Appendix N works, The Maker of Universes makes no particular distinction between science fiction and heroic fantasy, much to its benefit. The motley crew that eventually assembles around Robert Wolff and Kickaha the Trickster is recognizable as a proto-adventuring party and the World of Tiers itself is the classic dungeon writ (very) large, with each successive level an environment of greater threat and adventure.
Risvegliarsi dopo la morte con tutta l'umanità lungo un fiume, Philip José Farmer ci racconta in questo romanzo del 1971 come vivere e soppravivere in questa situazione limite.Note:https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Il_fiume_della_vita_(romanzo)https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Francis_BurtonVOTO: 8
Risvegliarsi dopo la morte con tutta l'umanità lungo un fiume, Philip José Farmer ci racconta in questo romanzo del 1971 come vivere e soppravivere in questa situazione limite.Note:https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Il_fiume_della_vita_(romanzo)https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Francis_BurtonVOTO: 8
Kate and Jack discuss Image of the Beast and its sequel Blown by Philip José Farmer. Released in 1968 and 1969 by adult science fiction publisher Essex House, Kate describes these ultra-explicit, super-bizarre novels as "like the monster mash version of Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye." But that's only part of the picture as we follow private detective Herald Childe on his journey into a world of monsters, ritual murder, and warring horror memorabilia collectors. The guest reader is man of mystery Baron XIII, who has the distinction of being Kate's most frequently punched-in-the-head friend. Baron XIII reveals his seven-day drawing challenge in exchange for reading one of the most extreme passages from these books. Are these books sexy? Will we learn anything about Philip José Farmer's sexual preferences? What lives in that one character's nether regions? What does Lord Byron have to do with all of this? Tune in to this episode of Bad Books for Bad People to find out! Find us at BadBooksBadPeople.com, on Twitter @badbooksbadppl, Instagram @badbooksbadpeople and on Facebook.
This Pulp Event Podcast features a panel discussion titled "The Weird Tales of Philip José Farmer," which was part of the FarmerCon, running concurrently with PulpFest. The panel consisting of Jason Scott Aiken, a fantasy and horror writer, and host of Pulp Crazy, a blog and podcast; author and essayist Frank Schildiner; and illustrator and researcher Chuck Loridans.
http://wp.me/p8YAd-1num 785-727-1939 Call the Major Spoilers Hotline! This week on the Major Spoilers Podcast - COMICS AS MORAL PORNOGRAPHY!? Dr. Peter Coogan from the Institute for Comics Studies stops by to talk about why it is good to be bad. Get involved with the Major Spoilers Podcast Network LINK Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers VIP. It will help ensure The Major Spoilers Podcast continues far into the future! Dr. Peter Coogan Peter Coogan gained a doctorate in American Studies from Michigan State University, with his dissertation “The Secret Origin of the Superhero: The Emergence of the Superhero Genre in America from Daniel Boone to Batman” (2002), which he revised for wider publication in 2006. He coined the term Wold-Newtonry in a paper titled "Wold-Newtonry: Theory and Methodology for the Literary Archeology of the Wold Newton Universe." In it, he talks about literary archaeology, a term which he says was inspired (for him) by Warren Ellis's term mystery archeologists in Ellis and Cassaday's Planetary comics. The paper is available online at Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton pages, and as a chapter in Win Scott Eckert's (Ed.) Myths for the Modern Age book, published by MonkeyBrain Books. Coogan co-edited (with Randall William Scott) the Comic Art Studies newsletter and also set up the Comics Studies Email service to "coordinate communication about comic scholarship."[6] The newsletter's motto was Comica Amica Nobicum ("Comics Are Our Friends!") and originated from the Russel B. Nye Popular Culture Collection, to "facilitate communication about the Comic Art Collection at Michigan State University, and communication about public comics collecting and scholarship in general." In 2005, Coogan presented a paper titled The Definition of the Superhero at the interdisciplinary Holy Men in Tights Superheroes Conference at the School of Art History, Cinema, Classics & Archaeology (AHCCA), University of Melbourne in Melbourne, Australia. Our Superheroes, Ourselves Superhero fans are everywhere, from the teeming halls of Comic Con to suburban movie theaters, from young children captivated by their first comic books to the die-hard collectors of vintage memorabilia. Why are so many people fascinated by superheroes? In this thoughtful, engaging, and at times eye-opening volume, Robin Rosenberg--a writer and well-known authority on the psychology of superheroes--offers readers a wealth of insight into superheroes, drawing on the contributions of a top group of psychologists and other scholars. The book ranges widely and tackles many intriguing questions. How do comic characters and stories reflect human nature? Do super powers alone make a hero super? Are superhero stories good for us? Most contributors answer that final question in the affirmative. Psychologist Robert J. Sternberg, for instance, argues that we all can learn a lot from superheroes-and what we can learn most of all is the value of wisdom and an ethical stance toward life. On the other hand, restorative justice scholar Mikhail Lyubansky decries the fact that justice in the comic-book world is almost entirely punitive, noting extreme examples such as "Rorschach" in The Watchmen and the aptly named "The Punisher, who embrace a strict eye-for-an-eye sense of justice, delivered instantly and without mercy.
Oggi parliamo di: Prometheus di Ridley Scott; Philip José Farmer; le companion del Doctor Who; le prossime uscite previste sul grande schermo. Buon ascolto! Leggi di più su Fantascientificast.it - Pubblicazione amatoriale. Non si intende infrangere alcun copyright, i cui diritti appartengono ai rispettivi detentori - Autorizzazione SIAE 5612/I/5359.
Dans ce podcast #67, nous vous parlons de colon géant, du cycle phare de Philip José Farmer, de garagiste dérangé mais aussi bien sur de high tech et d'introductions douloureuses d'objet dans des endroits qui voient rarement la lumière du jour. Have fnu.
Dans ce podcast #67, nous vous parlons de colon géant, du cycle phare de Philip José Farmer, de garagiste dérangé mais aussi bien sur de high tech et d'introductions douloureuses d'objet dans des endroits qui voient rarement la lumière du jour. Have fnu.