June 11–12, 2010
Robert E. Howard Days 2010, Cross Plains, Texas
July 30–Aug. 1, 2010
PulpFest #2, Columbus, Ohio
Aug. 19–22, 2010
Dum–Dum 2010, Hillside, Ill.
Sept. 23-25 , 2010
Fifth Annual Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention, Hunt Valley, Md.
Oct. 16-17, 2010
SavageCon 2010, St. Louis, Mo.
Nov. 12-14, 2010
Doc Con 13, Glendale, Ariz.
April 29–May 1, 2011
Windy City Pulp & Paper Convention, Lombard, Ill.
On–going
Gotham Pulp Collectors Club, second Saturday of each month, Hudson Park Library, Manhattan
• Do you have a Pulp.Event you’d like to promote? Let
us know about it.
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Supernatural sleuthing
Writer Ron Fortier reviews Lin Carters Anton Zarnak: Supernatural Sleuth, a collection of 16 stories featuring the weird, occultist detective. MORE . . .
The art of pulps
There may only be a few hundred original pulp cover paintings left in the world. If youre in New York City this summer, head over to Brooklyn to feast your eyes on more than 100 on exhibition. MORE . . .
Double-barreled inspiration
An empty cabin, a shotgun-wielding old man, Hugh B. Cave and the idea for a popular pulp store. Romance With Attitudes Conrad V. Sucatre recalls Caves appearance at the Windy City pulp show. MORE . . .
Tarzan on the tube
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Travis Fimmel will play Tarzan this fall on the WB.
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Its official. The WBs newly announced fall 2003 season includes Tarzan and Jane. The series, loosely based on the Burroughs tales, stars former Calvin Klein model Travis Fimmel, right, and Sarah Wayne Callies as the title characters. Loosely is key here. According to the WBs PR, 20something Tarzan is captured by his billionaire uncle, Richard Clayton (played by Mitch Pileggi of The X-Files), who heads the powerful Greystoke Industries, and returned to his familys home contemporary New York City. Thats where he meets NYPD Det. Jane Porter. It will air at 9 p.m. ET Sundays.
End of the adventure
Back in October, we had a short item about AdventureStrips.com offering more than a dozen new online comics. During the intervening time, Ron Fortier (who also wrote the review of the Anton Zarnak collection above) and Rob Davis started a strip featuring the Paul Ernst character Doctor Satan for the subscription Web site. Unfortunately, AdventureStrips.com will stop publishing May 30. For Doctor Satan fans, fear not. Ron says the series will be moving to ModernPulp.com, where hes been writing with Gordon Linzner a serialized pulp crossover featuring Doctor Satan and the Moon Man. Chapter 4 of the Hounds of Hell has just been posted.
Indy on DVD
Indiana Jones comes to DVD on Nov. 4 in a special four-disk collection, The Adventures of Indiana Jones: The Complete DVD Movie Collection. All three films Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade are packaged with a fourth disk of bonus material. In addition to the films themselves, of course, this collection explores every facet of how the films were made ... from stunts to visual effects to the music and sound, says Jim Ward, vice president of marketing for Lucasfilm, in announcing the set. We take viewers around the world to explore the history behind the Indiana Jones legends. Check out the Indiana Jones Web site for more information. The collection arrives in stores Nov. 4, meanwhile check out the collections trailer.
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Sean Connery plays Allan Quartermain in LXG.
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LXG goes online
If youve been checking out the teaser and the trailer of the upcoming pulp-like League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, youve probably clicked on the official Web site link only to discover a coming soon note. Well, no longer. The official site is up and mostly running (areas still under development include a look at the Nautilus and technology and the LXG). Theres basic information about the League and the main characters, from Sean Connerys Allan Quartermain to Peta Wilsons Mina Harker.
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Ive read somewhere, but cant remember the source, that either The Shadow or Doc Savage paperbacks have altered text. Is this true?
Yes, some of The Shadow and Doc Savage reprints (as well as those of other pulp characters, such as The Spider, Conan, etc.) were re-edited from their pulp originals. The Bantam and Pyramid/Jove Shadow paperbacks were largely intact compared with their pulp counterparts, but Grosset and Dunlop’s Shadow reprint, featuring Grove of Doom, Murder by Moonlight and Voodoo Death, and the Tempo paperback version of Grove of Doom were significantly cut.
Many of the endings in the Doc Savage paperbacks were trimmed or rewritten to eliminate teases to the next pulp. Check out the 86th Floor Web site for the original endings of many stories. Editor’s note: This site is no longer available as of October 2008 because AOL discontinued its Web hosting service.)
Then there were four Spider paperbacks published by Pocket Books in the 1970s that were rewritten and modernized.
To send a question or comment, please visit the Contact TPN page.
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