Pixel Scroll 3/19/24 Ocean’s Elevenses

(1) GAIMAN COLLECTION AUCTION RESULTS. March 15 was “The Day Neil Gaiman Swapped His Original Comic Art, Comic Books and Collectibles for More Than $1 Million”.

[He offered] 125 prized pieces from his collection — everything from original comic artwork to signed books, a Coraline puppet used in the film to limited-edition sculptures, handmade Christmas stories given as gifts, to the awards he received. It was a day well spent: The completely sold-out Neil Gaiman Collection Comics & Comic Art Signature ® Auction, which drew more than 1,200 bidders worldwide, realized $1,029,392.

A portion of the auction’s proceeds will benefit The Hero Initiative, which provides medical and monetary assistance to veteran comics creators, writers and artists needing a helping hand. Some proceeds will also go to the Authors League Fund, which assists professional authors, journalists, critics, poets and dramatists in financial need because of medical or health-related problems, temporary loss of income or other misfortunes.

Gaiman will also share some of the proceeds with the artists who made his imagination tangible enough to put on Bristol board.

“I love the idea of benefitting charities that look after authors who’ve fallen on hard times, that look after the artists and writers and creators of comics who’ve had hard times,” Gaiman told the packed auction gallery Thursday morning. “And I like the idea of normalizing the idea that we who do have art we bought for $50 a page or $100 a page that now sells for tens of thousands of dollars a page get into the idea of giving something back to the artists who originally drew it. That seems to me an important thing to do.”

This single page of art alone went for $132,000: “Dave Gibbons and John Higgins Watchmen #7 Story Page 16 Original Art”.

… Not far behind was the only piece of Sandman-related artwork Gaiman had ever purchased: Jean Giraud’s 1994 painting of Death of the Endless, sister of the titular Sandman whose epic tale spans the universe’s origin through the present day. This painting by the man called Moebius sparked a bidding war that drove its final price to $96,000. That was also the amount realized for John Totleben’s cover of Miracleman No. 16, the last issue written by Moore before Gaiman took the reins.

One of the auction’s most sought-after, fought-over pieces was among its smallest: an on-screen, camera-used puppet of Coraline in her orange polka-dot pajamas accompanied by her ever-present companion, The Cat — “fully posable actors,” as Gaiman explained. He told the audience that Coraline “has been in my bedroom in a glass case since 2009, and I had more qualms about letting her go than I did anything else in this entire auction. She’s there. She smiles at me. She’s special.”

It was so special that a bidding war broke out over Coraline, who eventually went to a new home for $72,000….

(2) KGB. Ellen Datlow has posted photos from the Fantastic Fiction at KGB reading on March 13, 2024 where Moses Ose Utomi and Richard Butner read.

(3) EVIDENCE THAT SCHOOL TOSSED BOOKS WHICH WERE OBJECTED TO BY STAFF OR PARENTS. “Publishers Issue Letter to NYC DOE Over Discarded Books”Publishers Weekly has details.

Candlewick Press, Charlesbridge Press, Hachette Book Group, Macmillan Publishers, Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, Sourcebooks, and the organization Authors Against Book Bans have issued a letter to the New York City Department of Education over reports that hundreds of books were discarded by a Staten Island elementary school on ideological grounds.

On March 11, Gothamist reported that hundreds of new books featuring characters of color and LGBTQ themes were found near the garbage at PS 55. Some of the books, pictured in the report, were marked by sticky notes that marked certain titles “not approved,” with reasons such as “Boy questions gender,” “teenage girls having a crush on another girl in class,” and “Witchcraft? Human skulls.”

The discarded books included copies of My Two Border Towns by David Bowle, illustrated by Erika Meza; Kenzy Kickstarts a Team (The Derby Daredevils #1) by Kit Rosewater, illustrated by Sophie Escabasse; Black Panther: The Young Prince by Ronald Smith; We Are Still Here: Native American Truths Everyone Should Know by Traci Sorell, illustrated by Frané Lessac; and Nina: A Story of Nina Simone by Traci N. Todd, illustrated by Christian Robinson.

Gothamist reporter Jessica Gold found that no formal challenge to the books had been raised through official channels and that “the removal of the books resulted from an objection raised by staff or parents.” The NYC DOE has reportedly announced it is conducting an investigation into the incident.

In response, a coalition of publishers whose books were discarded teamed with Authors Against Book Bans to pen a letter to New York City’s DOE over the report about the book removal, stating, “If true, such action amounts to unlawful censorship and violates authors’ and students’ First Amendment rights.”…

(4) SENDAK FELLOWS. “2024 Sendak Fellows Announced”Publishers Weekly has the names.

The Maurice Sendak Foundation has announced this year’s Sendak Fellows: Charlotte Ager, Rocío Araya, and Cozbi A. Cabrera.

The four-week fellowship will take place May 13 through June 9 at Milkwood Farm in South Kortright, N.Y., and comes with a prize of $5,000. During the residency, artists will focus on a project of their choosing, meet with visiting artists and professionals in the field, and explore Sendak’s house and archives in Ridgefield, Conn.

Originally from the Isle of Wight, Ager is a freelance illustrator based in London. Her clients have included the New York Times, Google Design, Penguin Random House, and Flying Eye Books. Araya is an illustrator from Bilbao, Spain, currently living in France. Rocío’s first English-language translation of her book Head in the Clouds will be published by Elsewhere Editions in 2024. And Cabrera is the author-illustrator of Me & Mama, which received a Coretta Scott King Honor and Caldecott Honor, and My Hair Is a Garden.

(5) NOT QUITE INFINITE COMBINATIONS. Den of Geek says “It’s Official: TV Shows Have Run Out of Titles”. (Fanzines have run into the same problem – how else to explain “File 770”?)

Back when it was all fields around here, TV show titles were in abundance. In the days when television used to be hand-stretched and sun-dried and made at a gentlemanly pace by artisanal methods, there were titles galore. Worzel GummidgeStarsky and HutchLast of the Summer Wine. Distinct and descriptive titles milled around drinking holes, and all writers had to do was toss in a lasso and drag out a Sapphire & Steel or a Knight Rider.

But thanks to streaming, nowadays TV is made in windowless factories and injected with antibiotics and e-numbers. There can never be enough. Every streamer requires a chunky flow of television shows they can release all on the same day, not tell anybody about, and quickly delete for tax purposes before anybody watches them. And the first casualty (aside from the livelihoods of the writers, directors, crew, cast and the collective human spirit)? The titles.

The problem is, the glut has dried up the supply. Abstract nouns. Character names. Place names. Common phrases. “Fun” puns. Creepy lines from nursery rhymes for psychological thrillers. Every combination of words in the English language has already been used to name a TV show. ITV got lucky with Mr Bates Vs the Post Office, but it’s hardly a long-term solution.

Neither is it a uniquely new problem, but it is getting worse. Time was that two competing TV shows with the same title would be released a good many years apart, by which point, who could really remember the first one? When HBO brought out android interplanetary sci-fi Raised by Wolves in 2020, it was several years after the Channel 4 comedy Raised by Wolves set on a Wolverhampton council estate, and fairly difficult to confuse the two….

(6) DON’T TRY THIS AT HOME? “George Lucas Backs Bob Iger in Disney Proxy Fight with Nelson Peltz: ‘Creating Magic Is Not for Amateurs’” – a quote in The Hollywood Reporter.

… The Star Wars and Indiana Jones filmmaker is weighing in on The Walt Disney Company’s ongoing proxy fight with activist investors, and he is throwing his support firmly behind CEO Bob Iger and Disney’s board.

“Creating magic is not for amateurs. When I sold Lucasfilm just over a decade ago, I was delighted to become a Disney shareholder because of my long-time admiration for its iconic brand and Bob Iger’s leadership,” Lucas said in a statement Tuesday. “When Bob recently returned to the company during a difficult time, I was relieved. No one knows Disney better. I remain a significant shareholder because I have full faith and confidence in the power of Disney and Bob’s track record of driving long-term value. I have voted all of my shares for Disney’s 12 directors and urge other shareholders to do the same.”…

… Disney is facing a proxy fight against two activists: The corporate raider Nelson Peltz, and Blackwells Capital. Notably, Peltz has billions of dollars in shares pledged by Ike Perlmutter, who, like Lucas, sold his company (Marvel) to Disney and became a major shareholder. Perlmutter remained with Disney until being laid off last year….

(7) ARE YOU GOING TO BELIEVE YOUR LYIN’ EYES? Meanwhile, Variety reports Disney’s Star Wars cash register has rung up another sale: “’The Acolyte’ Trailer: New Star Wars Show Gets First Look on Disney+”.  

…Disney has released the trailer for its newest “Star Wars” series “The Acolyte,” which is set to stream on Disney+ June 4.

The series takes place 100 years before the franchise’s prequel trilogy during the High Republic era of the “Star Wars” universe, which is the furthest back in the timeline “Star Wars” has gone in a live-action production. An official logline for the series reveals, “An investigation into a shocking crime spree pits a respected Jedi Master (Lee Jung-jae) against a dangerous warrior from his past (Amandla Stenberg). As more clues emerge, they travel down a dark path where sinister forces reveal all is not what it seems.”…

(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born March 19, 1928 Patrick McGoohan. (Died 2009.) I don’t how times I’ve seen the opening of The Prisoner series as it’s been separately shown from the episodes online pretty much since The Prisoner series first aired. Not sure in what context I watching it but that it was. It was, without doubt, one of the the best openings I’ve seen.

Then there was the series. Weird, thrilling, mysterious. Eminently watchable over and over and over again. Was it SF? Or was it a spy series set in the very near future? Who knew? And then there was Number Six, the never named intelligence agent played by Patrick McGoohan. He seemed destined to play this role.

He was an American-born Irish actor, director, screenwriter, and producer. Now it turns out that The Prisoner was his creation. He was also one of the writers – there were five in fact — and he was one of four directors. In other words, he had his hand in every facet of the series and its sixteen episodes. 

Before he was that unnamed intelligence agent he was, and I’m not at all convinced that McGoohan meant this to be a coincidence, secret agent John Drake in the Danger Man espionage series. I’ve seen a few episodes, it’s well crafted.  

Danger Man (retitled Secret Agent in the United States for the revived series) was a British television series broadcast between 1960 and 1962, and again between 1964 and 1968. (A neat bit of history here: Ian Fleming was brought in to work on series development, but left before that was complete. Apparently he didn’t like the way the secret service was to be portrayed.) 

After The Prisoner, McGoohan’s next genre endeavor was as the narrator of Journey into Darkness is a British television horror film stitching together two episodes derived from late sixties anthology television series Journey to the Unknown.

We are now leaving genre and headed for, well the Colombo series. Why so? Because he was good friends with Peter Falk and directed five episodes of the series, four of which he appeared in, winning two Emmys in the process. McGoohan was involved with the series in some way from 1974 to 2000. 

He was said that his first appearance on Columbo was probably his favorite American role. He had top billing as Col. Lyle C. Rum, fired from a military academy, in “By Dawn’s Early Light”, one of the  Colombo films that preceded the series.

His daughter Catherine McGoohan appeared with him in the episode “Ashes To Ashes” The other two Columbo episodes in which he appeared are “Identity Crisis” and “Agenda For Murder”.  

Yes, he reprised his role as Number Six for The Simpsons in “The Computer Wore Menace Shoes”.  Homer Simpson fakes a news story to make his website more popular, and he wakes up in a prison that is a holiday resort. As Number Five, he meets Number Six. 

McGoohan’s last movie role was as the voice of Billy Bones in the animated Treasure Planet.

He received the Prometheus Hall of Fame Award for The Prisoner.

(9) COMICS SECTION.

(10) JEOPARDY! [Item by David Goldfarb.] On last night’s Jeopardy! episode, the Double Jeopardy round had a category, “Horrors!”

$1200: This horror master turned director to translate his own novella “The Hellhound Heart” to the screen as “Hellraiser”

Yogesh Raut knew this was Clive Barker.

$1600: H.P. Lovecraft wrote that the “U”s in the name of this “hellish entity” should sound “about like that in ‘full’ “

Ben Chan stumbled over the pronunciation a bit but gave “Cthulhu”.

$2000 – Daily Double. Yogesh: “I’ve wanted to say this ever since I was a child. Alex, I’ll make it a true Daily Double.” His bet: $15,200.

The title of this 1962 Ray Bradbury novel is a Shakespeare line that rhymes with “By the pricking of my thumbs”.

Very unsurprisingly, Yogesh got this right, parlaying this into a runaway win for the round.

$800: His Christmas ghost story “The Haunted Man” sold 18,000 copies on its first day of publication in 1848

Yogesh picked it as Dickens.

$400: Catriona Ward’s “The Last House on Needless Street” is partly narrated by Olivia, one of these animals, & that can’t be good luck

Troy Meyer tried, “What is a pig?”

Yogesh said, “What’s a cat?” and on prompting added “black” and was scored right.

Catriona Ward squeed about being a clue.

(11) GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN. “Researchers Name Ancient Species of Giant Turtle After a Universe-Vomiting Stephen King Character”IGN unravels the references.

Researchers have named a newly discovered species of giant prehistoric turtle after a universe-creating character that features in Stephen King’s novel It, alongside the Dark Tower series of books.

The monstrous armoured reptile was thought to have lived between 40,000 to 9,000 years ago, during the Pleistocene period, during which time it may have lived alongside and potentially been hunted as a source of food by early humans in the Amazon….

…The fossil’s gigantic proportions lead the scientists to name the species Peltocephalus Maturinin reference to the fictional, god-like turtle Maturin, which vomited out the universe that serves as the setting for Stephen King’s novel It. The benevolent turtle also appears as one of the guardians of the beams featured in King’s eight-part Dark Tower book series, which, like It, has been adapted into a live-action movie, though perhaps the less said about that the better.

As noted in the paper published in the scientific journal Biology Letters – and by the author himself on X after reading the news – King’s character was itself named in reference to the fictional doctor Stephen Maturin, who, in the course of Patrick O’Brian’s seagoing novel H.M.S. Surprise, names a giant tortoise….

(12) LIFE IS SHORT, ART IS LONG. ShortCon2024, “the Premiere Conference for Short Crime Fiction Writers”, takes place Saturday, June 22, and Michael Bracken and Brendan DuBois – familiar around here – are among the presenters.

Join acclaimed crime fiction professionals for an immersive, one-day event and learn how to write short crime fiction, get your stories published, and develop and sustain a long-term career writing short. 

(13) THUMBS UP. Camestros Felapton gives us his eyewitness account in “Review: Zombie the Musical”.

… The show starts off with the hapless cast rehearsing their production of “It’s a Musical! (The Musical!)” with requisite sailors singing about the wonders of New York. In reality, the cast is a mix of a not-so-bright leading man whose acting career is magically failing upwards, a leading woman sick of playing two-dimensional characters, an ageing actress whose career is effectively over and a perpetual understudy with genuine talent but no chance of ever becoming a professional. Outside it is Sydney 1999 and people are worried about Y2K and excited about the Olympics coming in 2000. The tone is set with broad parodies about musicals and the sexism of the theatre industry (especially circa the 1990s).

The world of musicals begins breaking down when the leading man quits and the news on the radio warns of a rapidly spreading infection. Will there even be an audience for their opening night?…

Here’s a “sneak preview” from last fall.

[Thanks to Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, Kathy Sullivan, David Goldfarb, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]


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28 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/19/24 Ocean’s Elevenses

  1. 3)Absolutely unsurprised that it was a Staten Island school library that threw all those diversity books in the dumpster. Staten Island is a terrible place.

  2. (1) Looking at the page… he looks like Owlman… from the Inferior Five.
    (7) A hundred years earlier? Having read no books, just how long did the Old Republic last? 100 years, for a galactic republic, is awful short.
    Birthday: Ok, I may be assuming, but I guess not everyone knows he was supposed to be the character from the Secret Agent series, and all of the Prisoner was his nervous breakdown (and with all those secrets in his head…)
    (10) Long ago, in a galaxy far away… I heard L. Sprague deCamp say that Lovecraft had intended it to be pronounced something like “Cthul’HOO”, and yes, the apostrophe indicates a glottal stop.
    (11) Better that, then some other critters that lived around the same time: VW beetle-sized armadillos.

  3. (3) What a waste. And what ridiculous excuses for bans.

    (6) Another chaotic mess. I have to decide which rich dudes to side with. Yay.

    (8) My first exposure to Patrick McGoohan came from “Dr Syn, Alias the Scarecrow” (edited from episodes of “The Scarecrow Of Romney Marsh”). This is yet another property that Disney has not treated well — the reissues go out of print too quickly.

  4. Lis – the Staten Island Ferry. There and back again. And you pass close to Our Lady of the Harbor, and can imagine how a lot of our ancestors felt, coming in and seeing Her.

  5. 5) Reminded of a very dated column by, if I remember correctly, Art Buchwald, depicting tobacco executives lamenting they’d used almost every possible name for cigarette brands, and the only one left was “Lousies”.

    mark, do you have a source for that “nervous breakdown” explanation for The Prisoner? Because that’s one I’ve never heard before. Drake and Number Six being the same man is an idea that’s been around since The Prisoner first began, but I suspect “breakdown” was just someone’s idle speculation and idea-spinning. I don’t think McGoohan ever gave a definitive explanation for the series’ secrets and premise. (And I’m fine with that ambiguity and mystery.)

  6. (3) I too, have never heard anything good about Staten Island. I think maybe it’s full of NYC cops — it used to be — who of course are notorious for not liking people who aren’t SW reactionaries. I’m glad someone found the books and hope they get a happier home. Or even back in the school if the publishers can put enough pressure on. You know the kids will be wanting to read them all now.

    (Side note: Even the LAPD, the people who brought us Rodney King, thinks the NYPD is hopelessly RW and corrupt, well below their standards.)

    (8) IIRC we knew at the time McGoohan was the creative force behind it. Or at least when it finally came to the US, we did, because our family watched the whole thing originally.

    His Columbo (one u, one o) episodes were always a delight. Over the fall, I managed to watch All The Columbo Ever Made since it’s on 3 channels I get. (It’s OTA/online on COZI for Americans, which is usually one of those subchannels on your local NBC station. Also on shiny discs.) However, “By Dawn’s Early Light” isn’t one of the two movies that preceded the show — it’s S4, E3. Also appearing in that — both Bruce and Bruno Kirby.

    I don’t think I ever saw anything in which he wasn’t great, even when the script wasn’t.

    (10) I love that the writer squee’d. I would too.

    (11) It’s literary references all the way down!

    @Anne Marble: The guy causing the trouble is doing it because he thinks Disney is Too Woke, so I know which batch of rich guys I’m with here.

    @Bruce: That theory is strictly fannish, non canon. It’s 99% sure about Number 6 being Drake, though.

  7. BruceA: re, the Prisoner. No – I read this in the… nineties, I think. No memory of where, other than that I was reading it on a printed page that was not a fanzine.

  8. 3) The people can play that game, too. When I go to library book sales, and find those irritating, fake data propaganda books from conspiracy theorists, I buy them (which provides funds for the library), and I tear the pages out and recycle them. At least they’ll go to some future good use.

    6) I never thought I’d say this, but I support Iger against the ruthless bean counters (and politically motivated hacks). It was Walt Disney himself who said, “You can’t create magic to order.”

    8) “Danger Man” was one of my favorites, along with “The Avengers” and “The Man from Uncle.” It was an interesting time to live through.

  9. I might add that if these book banners really want to relieve the schools of books that feature infanticide, adultery, every possible perversion, crime, etc, they should throw out the Bible, and the dictionary, as the Bible has those acts described, and the dictionary has all those words, and more!

    These book banners are no better than Nazi’s, burning books.

  10. 1) I’m thrilled to have in fact won one of the items in that auction. Not one of the truly expensive ones — I’m not made of money! — but a set of bookends I’ve been looking for for over 20 years, and at last I’ll have.

  11. @mark–

    Lis – the Staten Island Ferry. There and back again. And you pass close to Our Lady of the Harbor, and can imagine how a lot of our ancestors felt, coming in and seeing Her.

    Unfairly, perhaps, I don’t think of Our Lady of the Harbor as having anything to do with the borough of Staten Island.

  12. (8) Patrick McGoohan. One of my favorite roles of his is in the 1976 thriller comedy film “Silver Streak”, where he plays the villain Roger Deveraux, a crooked art appraiser and perhaps forger. It had a great cast; it stared Gene Wilder, Richard Pryor, and Jill Clayburgh, and Ray Walston of My Favorite Martian fame (another genre connection) plays one of the underlings. It also featured the great line by Gene Wilder every time he was thrown off or somehow left the train, “Son of a bitch!”.

  13. McGoohan also played the Warden in the Eastwood film “Escape from Alcatraz (1979), and King Edward I in “Braveheart” (1995).

  14. @mark: There wasn’t an Owlman in the Inferior Five. (Its members were Merryman, White Feather, the Blimp, Awkwardman, and Dumb Bunny.) You’re probably thinking of the Earth-3 Batman doppelgänger.

    This character of course is Nite Owl, a derivative of the second Blue Beetle. Have you really not read Watchmen?

  15. @Carl if these book banners really want to relieve the schools of books that feature infanticide, adultery, every possible perversion, crime, etc…

    They don’t, of course – the notional reasons are a proxy for the exercise of power and cruelty. Just as it was for the Nazis who publicly burned the archives of the Hirschfeld Institute in that famous photo

  16. McGoohan himself was pretty insistent that Number 6 was not John Drake – possibly, though, because of intellectual property rights concerning the character.

    Personally, I’ve always thought they were two different people – not because of any IP rights, but because the characters are so different. John Drake was much more relaxed – he could get angry, certainly, but by and large he went through Danger Man (it will always be Danger Man to me, I loved that show as a kid) with a measure of urbanity and dry wit. Number 6, on the other hand, could be witty and urbane, but his dominant personality trait is a (mostly) controlled rage. Then there’s the trappings they have – Number 6 dresses all in dramatic black and drives around in that sporty Lotus 7, whereas John Drake wears very ordinary clothes, and most often drives a Mini. Drake does get himself a sports car, once – and promptly crashes it, and spends the rest of the episode in a hallucinatory world. Which is another difference, I think, because that episode – “The Ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove” – is pretty much the only Danger Man episode to feature any sort of weirdness; Danger Man is much more grounded in reality than contemporaries like The Avengers or The Man from UNCLE… or, of course, The Prisoner, where weird is clearly the name of the game.

    And I’m overthinking things again, and have probably spilled enough pixels over this issue….

    I’ll add a couple of other McGoohan roles I remember; he was in David Cronenberg’s Scanners, of course (playing the scientist who was ultimately responsible for the whole mess); outside the genre, I enjoyed his portrayal of the main villain in Hell Drivers (a film which featured an enormous number of familiar faces – Stanley Baker, William Hartnell, David McCallum, and Herbert Lom, to name but four), and he teamed up with Prisoner colleague Alexis Kanner in the very tense psychological hostage drama Kings and Desperate Men.

  17. If memory serves correctly, David McDaniel wrote one of “The Prisoner” novels (“Who is Number 2?”) The very first page involved Number 6 doing some typical shenanigans.

    McGoohan supposedly read and approved the novels, to make sure they fit in with the show.

    The very first word in the book is “Drake”

  18. @Robert Thornton

    Have you actually tried this and have it work on a book published in 2023 or later? The last time I looked, about six months ago, the deDRM tools couldn’t handle the latest Kindle encryption.

    They still work if you purchase a book now, so long as it was published before Jan 2023, but for recently released content it was a no go.

  19. @Robert Thornton
    (Repeating the reply I gave in the previous scroll)
    The instructions for the first part there requires an E-ink Kindle (not a Fire).

    The instructions for using older Kindle for PC 1.17 will not work for books published after 2022.

    Both of those methods avoid KFX format so installing the KFX Input plugin as they suggest isn’t necessary.

    However, if you don’t have an E-ink Kindle and your book was published in 2023 or later, DeDRM 10.0.9 and the KFX Input plugin will help with most books downloaded from the current Kindle for PC/Mac.

  20. (1) One the one hand, I had no idea that Moebius ever painted Death of the Endless. That’s extremely cool! On the other hand, I can’t say I can’t say I covet the result, even though I’m a fan of both artist and subject. Even ignoring the price tag. I guess I’d say that the styles don’t mesh? At least for me. It’s like when Zappa covered Ravel. The results were interesting, and even entertaining, but it will never be my favorite Zappa, nor my favorite Bolero.

    Apropos of nothing: I’m just finishing the Dead God’s Heart duology by Lilith Saintcrow. I’ve read and enjoyed Saintcrow before, but this one really impressed me! A dark and often creepy contemporary fantasy very loosely based on Russian folktales, this one really tickled my need for the weird and creative. There were elements that reminded me of Gaiman and Tim Powers, but it never felt derivative. Might be a little too dark for some, but otherwise, I definitely recommend it.

  21. [1] Did Neil Gaiman keep none of the proceeds for himself? Does he at least get a hefty tax deduction? The story seems rather vague on that point, beyond “Gaiman had raised more than $1 million for his good causes”.

  22. @Ed Green: If the first word in that “Prisoner” novel is “Drake,” what is it followed by? There are multiple ways it could go.

    More popular suggestion:
    “Drake. That’s what they used to call me … before I became Number 6.”

    Less popular suggestion:
    “Drake. That’s the company that makes those delicious snack cakes like Yodels and Ding Dongs.”

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