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News Roundup 2024-11-17

Personal / Website News

Scandalous Swords: Interview with J. Manfred Weichsel

A new interview article is up here at the website!

I interviewed J. Manfred Weichsel, editor of the sword and sorcery anthology Sword & Scandal.

Cover shows a Barbarian dude and a barbarian lady. The dude is holding a metal brassiere in his hand and a sword in the other. The lady is covering her breasts because the other barbarian stole her top. She is about to wack him with her sword.
Sword and Scandal cover.

Check it out here!

McFarland Holiday Sale

My publisher, McFarland books, is having a Holiday sale on all of their tiles! From November 15th to December 2nd, if you use code “HOLIDAY24” during checkout, you’ll get a 35% discount.

If you want to support me, consider buying a copy of The New Peplum or Horror Literature from Gothic to Post-Modern:

The New Peplum
Cover art for The New Peplum

McFarland Purchase link

Normal price: 39.99
35% = 13.99
Price after coupon: 25.99

Cover is black and red. The black is a spooky person in a hooded cloak surrounded by silhouettes of trees. Behind the figure is a red light.
Cover of Horror Literature from Gothic to Post-Modern: Critical Essays.

McFarland Purchase Link

Normal Price: 29.95
35% = 10.48
Price after coupon: 19.47

If you want to support Michele, consider buying James Bond and Popular Culture and Horror in Space: Critical Essays (I have essays in both):

Cover shows Sean Connery as Bond, holding his Walther PPK and a martini. Behind him is a swirl of the gun barrel.
Cover of James Bond and Popular Culture.

McFarland Purchase Link

Normal Price: 29.95
35% = 10.48
Price after coupon: 19.47

Cover is a frame from the movie Jason X where it shows Jason walking through a circular hallway on a space station.
Cover for Horror in Space.

McFarland Purchase Link

Normal Price: 29.95
35% = 10.48
Price after coupon: 19.47

If you’re interested in another book that I have an essay in, consider The Many Lives of the Twilight Zone and Uncovering Stranger Things:

Cover depicts a white door that is open and there is a swirl going on in it. The door stands by itself on a grassy area. Behind it is airspace with stars and planets.
Cover of The Many Lives of The Twilight Zone: Essays on the Television and Film Franchise.

McFarland Purchase Link

Normal Price: 29.95
35% = 10.48
Price after coupon: 19.47

Cover shows the silhouettes of four kids on bikes, with a dark and stormy road going to the horizon. Beneath them are x-mas lights.
Cover for Uncovering Stranger Things.

McFarland Purchase Link

Normal Price: 19.99
35% = 6.99
Price after coupon: 12.99

A Hero Will Endure Paperback Relese + Discount

Vernon Press, the publisher of A Hero Will Endure: Essays at the Twentieth Anniversary of Gladiator, has just released a cheaper, paperback version of the book, just in time for Gladiator 2!

Cover for A Hero Will Endure. It shows a ghostly blue arm running through an orange field of wheat (or some other agricultural plant).
A Hero Will Endure.

The paperback is at the much more friendly price of $57 compared to $96 for the hardcover and $107 for an electronic version. All editions of the book can be found at the Vernon Press product page.

In addition, the publisher is offering a coupon on purchases of the collection! From now until the end of January 2025, if you use code SLZM30 at check out, you’ll get 30% off the title. So, the $57 book now becomes $39.99. Nice!

ECOF 2025

In September of 2025 there will be an Edgar Rice Burroughs Chain of Friendship (ECOF) event down in Willcox, AZ. This event is to celebrate the 150th birthday of Burroughs while also honoring him with a plaque in the town due to his stationing with there the 7th U.S. Calvary in the 1890s. (Note: another ERB convention was held in Willcox back in 2019 and an event recap of that can be read at ERBZine #7059).

Here is a flyer for the 2025 event:

I’ll share more information about the event as I find out more on my website updates. There currently is a fundraiser going on to raise funds for the ERB plaque, and details for that can be found in the QR code in the above graphic, or by checking out the donation page at the Sulphur Springs Valley Valley Historical Society. 3.8K of 5K has been raised already. 

Michele and I will be in attendance for this convention, so I’ve added it to the appearances section of my website as well. 

Publishing Recap

Below is a recap of my publishing endeavors so far in 2024.

Cover of the journal portrays a scene from John Carter's Mars. There is a multi-armed green skinned alien holding a spear riding atop of a multi-legged blue mount that looks like a horse and a brontosaurus? Next to them is Woola, a puppy-like alien with 10 legs. They are on the martian landscape which is very orange.
National Capital Panthans Journal #326.

Comic Book Review: “Carson of Venus: The Flames Beyond#1″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #326.

Cover shows a scene from a John Carter moment. There is a free multi-armed alien atop a blue steed. There are robots on spider legs firing weapons. There are round domed buildings that dot the rocky landscape.
National Capital Panthans Journal #327.

Comic Book Review: “Carson of Venus: The Flames Beyond#2″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #327.

Cover art by Mark Wheatley. It shows Tarzan atop a barren tree trunk, pulling the string on a bow.
National Capital Panthans Journal #328.

Comic Book Review: “Carson of Venus: The Flames Beyond#3″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #328.

Cover is called "Stand with Thoris" by Mark Wheatley. It shows Dejah Thoris wearing a dress and holding a long sword in her right hand. There is a domed building in the distance.
National Capital Panthans Journal #329.

Comic Book Review: “Carson of Venus / Warlord of Mars #1″ reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #329.

Cover shows a sail boat, manned by three folks, on a green sea against a pink sky.
National Capital Panthans Journal #330.

“Wondercon 2019 Coverage: Tarzan, John Carter, and Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.: What’s New?” reprinted in the National Capital Panthans Journal #330.

Calls for Papers/Proposals

Here are some new pop culture CFPs that have crossed my paths. Links to these will also be in the CFP page on the navigation bar.

Contemporary Indigenous Horror

Deadline for Abstracts: May 30, 2025

Contact: nborwein@uwo.ca

Edited by Dr. Naomi Simone Borwein and Dr. Krista Collier-Jarvis

Building on discussions in the edited volume, Global Indigenous Horror (University Press of Mississippi, 2025), this is a call for chapter proposal submissions focused on the topic of Contemporary Indigenous Horror. Beautiful, luminous and resonant moments of horror exist in the work of writers like Shane Hawk, Kim Scott, Tiffany Morris, Waubgeshig Rice, or Ambelin Kwaymullina. But Indigenous horror tales thrive in many narrative or storying forms—from fiction, plays, and music, to graphic novels, art installations, or experimental films fortified by sonic and oral manifestations.

In response to the forthcoming inaugural essay collection, Global Indigenous Horror (2025)Judith Leggatt states, “Global Indigenous Horror is a timely and welcome addition to the growing field of Indigenous Horror studies.” Over the past decade, there has been a (re)surgence in Indigenous works focusing on tales of horror, such as Anoka: A Collection of Indigenous Horror (2011; Hawk); Ajjiit: Dark Dreams of the Ancient Arctic (2011; Tinsley and Qitsualik); Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Anthology Collection (2023; Hawk and Van Alst Jr.); Whistle at Night and They Will Come: Indigenous Horror Stories (2023; Soop); Midnight Storm, Moonless Sky: Indigenous Horror Stories (2022; Soop); Taaqtumi: An Anthology of Arctic Horror Stories (2019), Moosebumpz: Scary Stories from the Rez, and The Land Has Spoken—Tales of Indigenous Horror (2024; Hawk and Rogers), and Zegaajimo: Indigenous Horror Fiction (2024; Akiwenzie and Adler), just to name a few.

Responding to the widening gap between Indigenous horror and academic responses to it, editors Naomi Simone Borwein and Krista Collier-Jarvis solicit contributions for Contemporary Indigenous Horror. Shane Hawk broadly defines horror as that which “prioritizes the fear factor, often using graphic depictions of violence, monstrous beings, or otherworldly threats to achieve its effect. The ultimate purpose of horror is to confront the reader with their deepest fears, creating an experience that is visceral and unsettling.” When taken up by Indigenous storytellers, horror often engages with a colonial past that has never really passed, and as such, it haunts contemporary Indigenous peoples and communities. Indigenous horror thus often blends traditional stories as well as Indigenous ways of knowing and being with contemporary issues. In many cases, Indigenous horror is about our lived experiences, not as the victim of ongoing coloniality, but as resistance. According to Elizabeth Edwards and Brenna Duperron, “Indigeneity is a resistance — in the usual sense of opposition, repudiation, and refusal to comply […but also] resistant to assimilation. Indigeneity is the lived and embodied experience of peoples who have participated in that resistance” (94). In many other cases, Indigenous horror is about what Scott Gordon calls “colonial whiplash,” where “white people who haven’t turned into zombies [or other monsters] are at the mercy of the oppressed”—their Indigenous saviours. And in other cases, what Indigenous horror is has yet to be revealed.

Chapters (6,000-8,000 words including bibliography) may examine modern, contemporary representations of Indigenous Horror from a variety of perspectives. With a focus on analysis of current horror (narrative) production by self-identifying artists, writers, and other creators, some areas of consideration include, but are not limited to:

  • the future of Indigenous Horror;
  • Indigenous futurisms;
  • Indigenous futurism in relation to Afrofuturism;
  • the post-apocalyptic;
  • after the Anthropocene (or other labels);
  • pre-contact/post-contact;
  • Indigenous “monsters”;
  • Indigenous identity/identities;
  • unsettling, activism;
  • love, reciprocity, and horror;
  • Indigenous horror and visual, digital, or textual sovereignty;
  • mixed media, experimental media;
  • virtual, embodied, extended, or augmented reality;
  • multisensory installation and the horror experience;
  • ecological discourses and horror manifestations in relation to speculative narratives;
  • interrogation of “rewilding” and alternatives;
  • decolonization of Indigenous stereotypes in mainstream Horror and their counterparts in Indigenous narratives;
  • authentic Indigenous horror images, visions, “metaphors” or “motifs”;
  • social media and h/Horror in relation to fiction marketization;
  • sonic landscapes of horror;
  • systems of Indigenous horror that move between fiction, film, music, and other media;
  • NDN and Horror media;
  • inter-tribal horror/Horror and trans-Indigeneity or pan-Indigeneity;
  • exploration of various land-based, place-based, sky-based, star-based, or water-based horrors in narratives by Indigenous creators;
  • blood, heredity, categorization, and holocaust/genocide narratives;
  • reconciliation;
  • virtue signalling, horror, media cultures and spaces;
  • metacommentary;
  • analysis of Indigenous Gothic and Horror;
  • Indigenous Horror fiction and ways of knowing;
  • reading (and teaching) Indigenous horror fiction;
  • horror systems as epistemologies;
  • Indigenous Horror fiction and scholarship;
  • and more.

This follow-up collection seeks contributions from self-identified Indigenous scholars in any stage of their academic journey. We also encourage submissions from allies to the community. To acknowledge the various ways in which Indigenous scholarship may emerge, we welcome both traditional as well as more exploratory approaches, including submissions of proposals for non-fiction works by self-identified Indigenous storytellers reflecting on the process of writing, or otherwise producing, horror.

Please send a 250-word abstract and a 100-word bio to editors Naomi Simone Borwein (nborwein@uwo.ca) and Krista Collier-Jarvis (Krista.Collier-Jarvis@msvu.ca) by May 30, 2025. Accepted chapters will be due June 30, 2026.

Miscellaneous Tidbits

Some fun things and shout outs from these past few weeks.

Gladiator 2 Cinemark Popcorn Bucket

Collectable popcorn buckets are becoming a big thing now. Gladiator 2 has one, of course. Thankfully this bucket could be ordered online instead of actually going to a Cinemark theater. So, of course I ordered a bucket:

Gladiator 2 popcorn bucket. Gold in colour. Looks like the colosseum. It says "Gladiator II" on the side.
Gladiator 2 Popcorn Bucket – Side View
Popcorn bucket that is in the shape of a colosseum. It is gold in color.
Gladiator 2 Popcorn Bucket – Top View

Sword and Sandal Blu-rays

Coinciding with the release of Gladiator 2 in November, there’s been a handful of older pepla getting new releases on UHD/Blu-ray. In mid November three came in the mail: Steelbook edition of the original Gladiator (2000), a new cut of Caligula (1979), and a new edition of Hercules Returns (1993).

Three movies, left to right are Gladiator, Hercules Returns, and Caligula. Gladiator shows Russell Crowe, squatted down, holding a sword and shield. Hercules Returns shows Hercules flexing. Caligula shows the coin with Caligula on it, blood as tears running down his cheek from his eye.
4K/Blu-ray releases of Gladiator, Hercules Returns, and Caligula.

Rest in Peplum Tony Todd

Tony Todd, horror actor extraordinaire best known for his portrayal as Candyman, passed away. He starred in a handful of pepla: Xena (1995-2001), Hercules (1995-1999), Beastmaster 3 (1996), and Minotaur (2006).

Michele and I had the honor to meet him way back in 2008 at a horror con in SeaTac. He autographed my Criterion Collection edition of The Rock (1996):

DVD of The Rock. It's all black, with a tiny Alcatraz at the bottom right. It says "The Criterion Collection" at the top. In silver pen it is signed "To Nick 'Where is the money?" Peace, Tony Todd."
Criterion Collection version of The Rock, autographed by Tony Todd.

When Candyman 2021 came out I did an article on bands that sample dialogue from the original Candyman (1992). Do check out that article to see some innovative ways that Todd lives on via textual sampling.

Art of Michele Brittany

Michele has started a Facebook Page devoted to her crafting and art. If you want to check out her projects or purchase some of her journals, give the page a like and follow!

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565895377463

Screen capture of Michele Brittany's Facebook account/banner. It shows Michele in purple hair, and a collage of all her scrap books and other crafts.
Art of Michele Brittany Banner