Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The City in the Sea by Christopher Golden & Mike Mignola-Part One

Born in Berkeley, California, in 1960, Mike Mignola is a comic book artist and writer. He has also worked as an illustrator, designer, and artist in the movie business. His co-author on "The City in the Sea: A Hellboy Story," Christopher Golden, was born in 1967 in Massachusetts. He is a novelist, editor, and scriptwriter for animated cartoons, comic books, and at least one movie, a Hellboy movie in fact. Among his credits are TV tie-in books and prose adaptations of comic book characters. Mike Mignola is one of his co-authors. So is Tim Lebbon, who also has a story in Weird Tales #367. Already we can see a pattern developing in the Cosmic Horror Issue.

The cover illustration for Weird Tales #367, dated 2022, is by Mike Mignola. The same drawing is in the interior as a full-page illustration on the title page of the story. There are also pieces of it used more or less as spot drawings or filler, and so it does triple duty. Although there have been comic book-like covers before in Weird Tales, I think this is the first that is overtly in that style and that features a comic book character. As far as I know, this is also the first story ever in Weird Tales adapted from a comic book. So already there are new things here, but only to Weird Tales, for Hellboy has been in comic books since 1993. He has also been in movies, animated cartoons, and video games. Maybe these are firsts, too: Hellboy may be the first character from each of these media or forms to appear in the magazine. On the other hand, all are just adaptations from Hellboy's original comic book appearances. Maybe we can expect to see soon a story in Weird Tales adapted directly from a TV show or movie with no other origins and no stops in between.

The inside information in "The City in the Sea" begins with the main character himself. If you have never read Hellboy comic books or seen him on screen, you might not know who or what he is and you probably know nothing at all about his origins or purpose. There isn't even a very good description of him in his own story. If you want to know what he looks like, see the illustration. In this way, Hellboy continues to work as a comic book character in that, in this story, the words and pictures must be taken together if we are to understand fully what's going on. The good thing in reading it is that you can get by without knowing very much about the main character. That's partly because the authors carefully observe the conventions and employ the trappings of genre fiction in their storytelling. The character may be unknown to you, but you have seen everything else here before. Maybe we can call this institutional weird fiction.

There is in "The City in the Sea" a mystery. A man is missing, an old scholar who lives in an old house in an old town somewhere in America at some indeterminate time in the past or present. He has a lone housekeeper, who explains that he has vanished after having received a mysterious package. It's clear that Hellboy is an investigator, like Edgar Allan Poe's C. Auguste Dupin and hundreds of other detectives--occult or not--born since then. He finds that the package contains a statuette of a woman. In gazing upon it, Hellboy is transported into an otherworldly vision or experience, an encounter with the missing man, who has preceded him on his journey, and what he calls the Black Goddess, alive but dealing death in the city of the title. There is narration of other, strange times and places, of vast, mysterious, and possibly menacing realms. This is a kind of crossing-over that is almost diagnostic of weird fiction, except that Hellboy is already a supernatural being. There really isn't any crossing-over. He has seen and experienced things like this before. An encounter with the supernatural can mean very little to him, nor can it have much effect. "The City in the Sea" isn't a very long story, and so Hellboy returns soon enough to the real world, alone, to where he was sitting in the old man's study. He may have gained some kind of knowledge or insight, but as proof of the lack of effect upon him, his final thought is of his hunger: he has his eye on a diner down the street.

To be continued . . .

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, October 14, 2024

The City in the Sea & Edgar Allan Poe

Weird Tales #367 (2023) is a themed issue. The theme is cosmic horror, with the sub-theme being the 100th anniversary of Weird TalesThese two themes kind of go together. H.P. Lovecraft was not in the first issue of March 1923, but Weird Tales is associated with him more closely than with any other of its authors. Lovecraft wrote a particular kind of weird fiction. People call it Lovecraftian horror, also cosmic horror. Lovecraft, or shadows of Lovecraft, hang over this issue and over weird fiction in general, even unto today. If you're going to observe a centennial in 2023 and you want people to join in, you might as well return to form and go with some name recognition--and with what you believe will bring in the dough, if anything in print will bring in the dough these days.

The cover story and lead story in Weird Tales #367 is "The City in the Sea: A Hellboy Story" by Christopher Golden and Mike Mignola. "The City in the Sea" has its Lovecraftian elements, but the foundation of the story is in a poem entitled "The City in the Sea," written by Edgar Allan Poe and published in its final form in 1845. The story in Weird Tales begins with an excerpt from the poem. That excerpt serves as an epigraph. Poe used epigraphs in many of his own stories. So right away we have a story with its title taken from Poe, that begins with an epigraph by Poe, and that has the use of an epigraph as in Poe. The story also describes a city like that described by Poe in a poem that can well be described as apocalyptic in its vision. In beginning with Poe, the Cosmic Horror Issue goes back even further than a century and the beginnings of Weird Tales. It actually taps into the early years of American literature and the apocalyptic vision that has been with us and in us since our own origins on these shores and in these forests, both bright and dark. By the way, "The City in the Sea" was loosely adapted to film in City Under the Sea, directed by Jacques Tourneur, starring Vincent Price, and released in 1965.

Poe is in the introductory essay in the Cosmic Horror Issue, too, specifically, in a brief discussion of his only novel-length work, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, from 1838 (which has meta content or meta origins of its own). Poe was also in the first year of Weird Tales, and his spirit in all of the years in between. As we know, Lovecraft was inspired by Poe. In his first letter to "The Eyrie," published 101 years ago last month, Lovecraft wrote: "My models are invariably the older writers, especially Poe, who has been my favorite literary figure since early childhood." And it was almost certainly for a nineteenth-century hardbound collection by Poe that Weird Tales was named. It's fitting, I guess, that the Cosmic Horror Issue of Weird Tales would begin with Poe and with meta-references and inside information about him and his literary offspring.

To be continued . . .


"The City in the Sea"

by Edgar Allan Poe

(Illustration by Edmund Dulac, 1912)

Lo! Death has reared himself a throne
In a strange city lying alone
Far down within the dim West,
Where the good and the bad and the worst and the best
Have gone to their eternal rest.
There shrines and palaces and towers
(Time-eaten towers and tremble not!)
Resemble nothing that is ours.
Around, by lifting winds forgot,
Resignedly beneath the sky
The melancholy waters lie.

No rays from the holy Heaven come down
On the long night-time of that town;
But light from out the lurid sea
Streams up the turrets silently—
Gleams up the pinnacles far and free—
Up domes—up spires—up kingly halls—
Up fanes—up Babylon-like walls—
Up shadowy long-forgotten bowers
Of sculptured ivy and stone flowers—
Up many and many a marvellous shrine
Whose wreathed friezes intertwine
The viol, the violet, and the vine.
Resignedly beneath the sky
The melancholy waters lie.
So blend the turrets and shadows there
That all seem pendulous in air,
While from a proud tower in the town
Death looks gigantically down.

There open fanes and gaping graves
Yawn level with the luminous waves;
But not the riches there that lie
In each idol's diamond eye—
Not the gayly-jewelled dead
Tempt the waters from their bed;
For no ripples curl, alas!
Along that wilderness of glass—
No swellings tell that winds may be
Upon some far-off happier sea—
No heavings hint that winds have been
On seas less hideously serene.

But lo, a stir is in the air!
The wave—there is a movement there!
As if the towers had thrust aside,
In slightly sinking, the dull tide—
As if their tops had feebly given
A void within the filmy Heaven.
The waves have now a redder glow—
The hours are breathing faint and low—
And when, amid no earthly moans,
Down, down that town shall settle hence,
Hell, rising from a thousand thrones,
Shall do it reverence.

* * *

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, October 11, 2024

Weird Tales #367-The Eyrie

The first installment of "The Eyrie" appeared in the first issue of Weird Tales, published in March 1923. It began as a way for the editor--then Edwin Baird--to communicate with readers and for them to communicate with him, and with each other. For decades the magazine recognized that it would live or die by its readers. It respected its readers, invited them to write, published what they wrote, weighed their tastes and choices, asked their opinions, and invited them to submit their own works for possible publication. H.P. Lovecraft was among the authors who had a letter in "The Eyrie" before he had a story in what was then and for a long time afterwards rightly called "The Unique Magazine."

There is an installment of "The Eyrie" in Weird Tales #367, ostensibly published one hundred years and two months later, in May 2023. There aren't any letters or excerpts from letters. This installment is for the editor alone. He is Philadelphia-born Jonathan Maberry, who, in addition to being an author, is involved in television and comic books. He has also written movie and TV tie-in books. His essay is entitled "Cosmic Horror and Weird Tales Go Hand-in-Tentacle." It's 23 column-inches long, or a little more than 1-1/3 pages. About 3-1/2 column-inches, or about 15 percent of the total length, is a list of authors. As I have written before, lists are not writing. Anyone can make a list. Even AI can make a list. At their best, which isn't very good, lists are filler. At their worst, they're namedropping. Either way, they're not very useful, although a name-dropper at least does us the service of letting us know what kind of person he is (or may be).

I think we should all admit that Lovecraft himself was something of a name-dropper. He wrote a signature story called "The Outsider," but his namedropping appears to have been an attempt to show himself as an insider, as someone with some special inside knowledge, and because of that, perhaps some special status. I think he was insecure or lacking in self-esteem in his personal life. Maybe these were ways of building himself up. In any case, there are lots of inside jokes and self-references in his work, as well as in the works of his circle. Some of that is okay. A lot of it is too cute or even annoying. So maybe Lovecraft made the beginnings of self-references and meta-references in weird fiction, in which case the weird fiction of today is simply a continuation of Lovecraft, even if some people are still trying to move past him.

Most of Mr. Maberry's essay is a discussion of what is called cosmic horror. (Wikipedia has an entry on that term, the Online Encyclopedia of Science Fiction apparently does not.) At least we have that. He uses three variations on his term, "dark fiction," "dark cosmicism," and "dark, weird fiction." Writers, editors, and critics of weird fiction today love their dark.

I commented the other day on the emphasis in genre fiction on the naming and claiming of genres and sub-genres. That continues here. These genres and sub-genres are not very often defined very well, and there is little if any literary theory, analysis, or criticism behind them. The naming seems to be the important part, and because of that, the names of genres and sub-genres have become more or less brands. Call it genrefication. And because they have been divided so finely--that process continues apace--they confine themselves to ever-smaller niches within the marketplace. The authors, editors, and critics involved in genre fiction have taken to trading in brandnames the way an advertising agency trades in the names of commercial products and services. The resulting branded products--genres and sub-genres of fiction--are placed on a shelf for our consideration, all lined up next to each other and each with a slightly different list of ingredients than the next. Anyway, I hope you like dark, because there's a lot of that. To use one of Lovecraft's favorite words, such a fascination with dark seems puerile to me.

The long-dead authors behind these genres and sub-genres have also become brandnames. Lovecraft is chief among them, but there are others. (Maybe lists of authors double as lists of ingredients. Or maybe lists of descriptors--"dark," "dark weird," "new weird," "dark fantasy"--let us know the ingredients of each branded product.) Robert W. Chambers has been added to the list of brandname authors in recent years. He and Lovecraft are in fact the first two brandname authors mentioned in Mr. Maberry's essay. Edgar Allan Poe comes next, but Poe seems to me to be an author so prominent and so significant in our literature that he defies branding, even if we have at hand the word Poesque. (Blogger doesn't like it though.) Poe has been commercialized, of course. That happened especially in the early 1960s with Roger Corman's several Poesque films, one of which, The Haunted Palace (1963), is actually Lovecraftian in origin.

It's worth noting here that Jonathan Maberry writes that Lovecraft "namechecked" Chambers, that he "borrowed" from Poe, and that he "leaned into Poe's use of a 'Gainex ending'." (p. 2) (According to the website TV Tropes, the term is actually "Gainax ending.") So again, maybe all of these meta-references began with Lovecraft. Those who continue with them today may be working further in what are called "tropes," which are so common in weird fiction, especially in Lovecraftian fiction. (See the previous parenthetical statement regarding tropes. Mr. Maberry uses the word trope in his essay by the way.) They may also be continuing and compounding some of Lovecraft's literary offenses, which are, we should also admit, manifold.

One "trope" that has become one of the tropiest of tropes is the use of tentacles in weird fiction. There are tentacles on the front cover, in Mr. Maberry's title, in several illustrations and advertisements inside, and, in miniature, at every break in prose in the interior. Tentacles return on the cover of the most recent issue of Weird Tales, the Occult Detective Issue, published in 2024, apparently only as a digital rather than an analog product. That's a shame. I'd like to have an issue in print and have no use for a digital version. Anyway, tentacles have become kind of tiresome, I think. What's next, tentacled zombies?

There are what I call 21st-century inanities in the Cosmic Horror Issue. The first of these, I think, is "leaned into." It appears in this introductory essay. There will be more. Be ready to block them out if you can. There are also misspellings, misused words, improper tenses, and inconsistencies in Weird Tales #367. It used to be that these were typographical errors, but there's no such thing as a typesetter anymore. Or more accurately, in this digital/Internet age the author is his or her own typesetter. There isn't any linotype operator standing between him and the printed page. (Remember, everything now is do-it-yourself.) If he or she gets it wrong, it's up to the proofreader or editor to catch the error. If it isn't caught, that is in the end the fault of the editor. And every editor should know that he or she should show his or her work to another editor before putting it into print. That way errors--such as the misused word "therefor" (p. 3, col. 1)--are caught and corrected before they can start any trouble.

Like I said, there is namedropping or the use of brandnames in "The Eyrie." That includes the titles of several movies. As I pointed out last time, many of the authors in this issue have worked in movies and television in one capacity or another. I have made a point before that the first generations of weird-fictional authors were formed before there were movies. They had a certain sensibility that must have been pretty well wiped out once people--especially young people, budding authors--could see stories projected onto the silver screen rather than simply read them on paper. That same kind of thing happened again once television arrived in American homes in the late 1940s and early 1950s. It probably happened again when people began playing video games and computer games. Maybe this is another kind of stepping down. And now I think that what has been done can probably never be undone. We will never go back to the written word as the formative influence upon young writers. (Reading is active. Watching is more nearly passive.) And so writers of certain generations have come to think in cinematic terms--perhaps more accurately in series-TV terms--when they are imagining and writing their fictions. The dream of every one of them is no doubt to have his or her creations adapted to screen. Once that happens, he can put the drudgery, anonymity, and penury of prose-writing behind him. Like the Beverly Hillbillies, she can look forward to living in a land of swimming pools and movie stars.

And now it occurs to me that there are two kinds of screens involved in all of this, actually four. These are the analog movie screen (which is not electronic), the analog TV screen, the digital TV screen, both of which are electronic, and the digital movie screen, which is basically, I think, just a giant digital/electronic TV screen. If analog forms and media are closer to reality, thus closer to us, than are any digital/electronic equivalents, then old-fashioned movies, committed to film and projected onto a screen strictly by analog processes, stand alone here. And maybe that's why they are so powerful in our imaginations and why film--pioneered in this country and having reached many of its greatest pinnacles here--is one of the truly great new art forms, possibly the only one. In France, it was the Seventh Art. In America, it is or was, according to Gilbert Seldes, one of the seven lively arts. By the way, his book of that title was first published one hundred years ago as I write this.

(And now I see as I look at a list of movies released in 1924 that Jew-hatred was a subject then, just as it is now--this very week in fact--and that there were then, as there are now, people who wish to see Jews expelled from the company of non-Jews, "company" being sometimes a euphemism for "the earth." If you want to know what I'm talking about, read for yourself about the 1924 Austrian film Die Stadt ohne Juden--The City Without Jews. Understand, too, that this film is Utopian, or Dystopian, depending on whether you find yourself on the sharp or blunt end of the bayonet.)

And so movies have a place in the introductory essay of this story magazine of 2023. You can decide for yourself whether that's appropriate. (Mr. Maberry mentions moviemaker George Romero in his essay. He has also written a book with George Romero. That sounds like product placement or a subliminal/commercial message to me. In either case, it's meta.) Like I said, every genre author born after a certain year no doubt has as his or her most fervent wish to write for the electronic screen. Failing that, he or she wants to break into comic books, which are or have become a poor man's kind of filmmaking. We shouldn't discount at all the writer's drive to build himself up, to improve her status. The writer of real personal power and confidence is probably a rarity. (Wallace Stegner might have been one.) If writers of prose can have their works adapted to movies, TV, or comic books, or if they can work in those forms as scriptwriters, directors, producers, and so on, then they can earn for themselves the esteem, better yet the envy, of their fellows. They can leave the slums and garrets of prose-writing behind them. Just like anybody else, writers need to pay their bills, but you can't put a dollar figure on social climbing and the simple ego-boost that comes from improved status.

(We should remember here that movies and comic strips are very closely related in their history and development and that they were born at about the same time, that is, in about 1895-1896. Pulp magazines are also from that period. This is one of the reasons why I call the period 1895-1896 the birth years of popular culture in America. The King in Yellow, by Robert W. Chambers, was also published in 1895, and so maybe cosmic horror as a sub-genre, or sub-sub-genre, is of the same vintage.)

I wrote about the possible motivations and the possible process behind Weird Tales #367. Now, with "The Eyrie," we have at least a partial answer. Jonathan Maberry writes:

     I invited a bunch of my outside-the box writer friends to bring new thought, new interpretations, new invention to their original works. (p. 3)

I'm not sure that I see much that is new in this issue. There's actually a lot that is old, conventional, and tropey. A lot of people who live inside of boxes like to think of themselves as living outside. I guess that helps them feel better about themselves. But at least we can see now that Weird Tales #367 is, more or less, a vanity project or a creation of a sort of clique. Their box is actually a sandbox. Some, though not all, of the authors in this issue are inside of it, I think. It must be cramped in there. To use the metaphor in a different way, it looks as though Mr. Maberry reached into the box of his friends and pulled out some of their stories, which are really nothing new under the sun, or not much anyway. (I'll have more on possible new things, such as they are, later in this series.) There are other writers in this country and abroad, people who truly are--I think and I hope--living and writing outside of boxes. Can we read their work? Can Weird Tales be for the rest of us, too? Or is it only for people in the box?

To be continued . . .

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Weird Tales #367-Analysis, Part Two

There are fifteen written works in Weird Tales #367, nine short stories, three essays, and three poems. (The table of contents lists "The Forest Gate" by Samantha Underhill as fiction but it is in verse form and is obviously a poem.) These fifteen works were written by fifteen authors. One story, "The City in the Sea," has two co-authors, Christopher Golden and Mike Mignola. One author, F. Paul Wilson, contributed two works, an essay and a short story.

Of the fifteen authors in Weird Tales #367, ten are men and five are women. All three poems were written by women, so of twelve works in prose, ten are by men, including all three essays and seven out of nine short stories. I'll have more the authors in a while.

* * *

In reading their works and reading about the authors represented in Weird Tales #367, I find there to be a lot of emphasis on awards, as well as on the authors' accomplishments, if you can call them that, outside the act of writing itself. The writing and storytelling seem to have become secondary to the penumbrae, if you can call them that, of writing and storytelling. Another word for all of this might be meta. There is in fact a lot of meta, not only in this issue of Weird Tales, not only in genre fiction or in fiction as a whole, but in all of the world, or at least wherever there are smartphones and Internet connections.

The authors in the Cosmic Horror Issue seem to be watching themselves as they think and write. They also write about watching themselves as they think and write. In their fictional works and in their biographies--or I guess we should call them resumés, better yet, curricula vitae--there are lots of meta-references, self-references, self-consciousness, namedropping, invocations of long-dead authors, naming and claiming of genres and sub-genres--call it branding--and mentions of brandnames. A lot of this is basically product placement, which is, truth be told, an offense against art, and all of it works against art. We don't want product placement. We don't want commercials. We want the part that happens between the commercials.

In Weird Tales #367, the branding and product placement begin on the cover. It's the Cosmic Horror Issue after all, cosmic horror being less the name of a genre or sub-genre than it is a brandname, in other words, a word representing a commodity. Inside, we find it again in the very first work, the editor's introductory essay in "The Eyrie." ("The Eyrie" used to be for readers. Significantly, it has been appropriated for the exclusive use of the editor. Readers seem to have become relegated to some lower status in all of this. The purpose of the magazine instead seems to be to serve the publisher, the editor, and its contributors.) Even the advertisements are self-referential, or meta. You won't see an ad for a truss or a gun or anything about the Rosicrucians. Not that we want to. But all you can buy now from inside the pages of Weird Tales are books, magazines, and other merchandise that are about Weird Tales and its many genres and sub-genres. Again, meta. Maybe that's what the illustration on the last page is about, in which case, it, too, is meta, or actually doubly meta.

* * *

I have noticed how much emphasis there has been in recent years on the naming and claiming of genres and sub-genres. Again, this emphasis is on the penumbrae of writing instead of on the writing itself. It's another kind of self-consciousness, self-reference, and a needless distraction. Just write your story. Engage yourself in crafting your bit of fiction. Leave the analysis and the critique to someone else. (I guess in this Internet age everything is do-it-yourself.) Besides that, why would any writer want to narrow himself or herself down into some small category? Instead of: "I'm a writer of dark-underground-alt-fantasy and gotho-cosmic horror," why not just say: "I'm a writer"? Instead of thinking about where you are in the great chain of being, just be what you are, which is a human being, and write what you're going to write, which is a story.

This emphasis on genres and sub-genres is in the Cosmic Horror Issue of Weird Tales, in the works themselves as well as, seemingly, in the minds of their authors before they even sat down to write. They all want us to know in which genres and sub-genres they work and in which they're most interested. They also want us to know who are their favorite authors. Those authors are or were of course also genre authors. In every generation, then, there appears to be a stepping down. This has been going on in comic books for decades. Instead of looking outside their own fields and forms, too many creators these days remain inside and their horizons shrink and shrink as the years go by. As genres and sub-genres proliferate, there will naturally be more shrinking, all of it within evermore shrinking fields and forms. At some point every creator seems likely to become a point--and then wink out.

The proliferation of genres and sub-genres is a topic that has been on my mind for a long time now. I'm still planning to write about it, but that's still something for the indefinite future. In any case, the emphasis on genres and sub-genres is curious to me. It indicates, I think, something not very positive or healthy. You could fairly say that the naming and claiming of genres and sub-genres is a kind of branding, in which case art and literature become commodified, actually within themselves rather than outside of themselves. It all becomes just another kind of meta. 

In regards to everybody's favorite authors from the past: instead of being themselves, too many authors (artists, too) try to be someone else who came before them, whom they admire, and who is, unfortunately, long dead. Too many authors and editors keep trying to milk a dead cow. They work in what are by now some pretty tired conventions and they employ some very old tropes, which is really just a nice word--a hoity-toity kind of word--for clichés. One of the first lessons in English composition and creative writing is to avoid clichés. Even if you call them tropes, they're still clichés. So avoid them.

* * *

Again, there is an extreme interest in, emphasis on, and reference to the author, his or her life, biography, experience, thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and interests. Again, meta. One of the things that has happened in our culture is that we have moved away from real things to talk of "the narrative." We have inserted this "narrative" and its teller between ourselves and what is really happening in the world so that "the narrative" and the teller become the story rather than the story itself being the story. How many news headlines have you read in which the emphasis is on the telling of the facts instead of on the facts themselves (if there are even facts involved in most stories these days)? I find this odd, jarring, and off-putting. Very often it's just click-bait, and it's at work in fiction just as it is in the real world. The business of the storyteller is to tell a story, not to tell us about himself or herself, or about what brand of camping gear or camera his or her characters use, or what TV shows they like to watch. Yes, that happens in the Cosmic Horror Issue. The storyteller should also not go meta on us unless it serves a good and compelling purpose. The French Lieutenant's Woman--good. Most other examples--not so good. And no one ever should use the term "the text" when referring to a story, or "the canon" when discussing a body of work. Like I've said before, anyone who uses the word canon should be shot out of one--after an -n- has been inserted in the middle of it of course.

So the worldview and the language of media and academia (narrativetrope, text, canon) has entered into genre fiction, just as it has in every other field, but the larger issue is the insertion of an intermediary between one person and another, between the person and the thing, the world, or the experience. My guess is that this is an artifact of digital phenomena in our lives, for one of the essential facts of the digital realm is that, within it we are not in fact connected but separated--separated from each other, from life and experience, from the world, and even from ourselves. There isn't any better example of this than to watch a person as he watches what is happening right there in front of him not with his naked eyes but through his phone.

* * *

Another thing I noticed in reading about the authors in Weird Tales #367 is that a lot of them are involved in movies, television, and/or comic books. In fact, the cover story is about a comic book character, Mike Mignola's Hellboy, which is a first for the magazine I think. That's a development. Whether it's good or bad is up to you to decide. Anyway, there's nothing wrong with scriptwriters writing stories in prose. The same kinds of writers wrote for Weird Tales from the 1920s or '30s onward. One thing to know here is that a writer can now earn a lot more writing in one of those forms than he or she can writing for a story magazine that can only have a vanishingly small readership. You can't blame them for doing so. But it seems as though many of the stories in Weird Tales #367 were drawn from writers who work in movies, television, and comic books rather than from authors who deal strictly or mostly in prose. Make of that what you will. Maybe writing for Weird Tales has become a prestige thing or a vanity project rather than anything else. Maybe these are authors with whom the editor has a personal or professional relationship and he turned to them when he needed some content, or he wanted to add a cachet to his publication, or the authors approached him because they wanted to boost their own careers. To put it another way, I suspect that few if any of the authors submitted their unsolicited work to the magazine. Maybe there's a slush pile at Weird Tales, but I doubt that very much if anything ever leaves that pile. It just gets taller and slushier. Or maybe only the poetry came from unsolicited submissions and everything else made it into print in some other way.

All of this has implications when you consider the pretty scant content of the Cosmic Horror Issue. Is this all the editor could find for publication in his magazine? On all of this vast continent are there only these few people whose work is available for printing in a story magazine? Couldn't the editor find anyone or anything else? Or did he simply not go looking?

As for the content itself, again, it's scant. It doesn't cost any more to print one thousand words on a page than it does to print five hundred. Why skimp? I don't know, but then we're not allowed to know. Anyway, what you will find in these pages has so obviously--and I guess unashamedly--been expanded to fill 96 pages, but to what purpose exactly? It's like a college term paper with everything made slightly larger, all to stretch eight or nine pages of content into the required ten. Except that nothing is gained here by doing so, and quite a bit is actually lost. Anyway, if you don't have enough content to fill your magazine, just go out and find more. It's there. It's got to be there. (Or maybe not. Yikes!) And you don't even need very much more content. After all, Weird Tales appears only once or twice a year. If you can't fill 150 to 200 pages with content every year, that's an indication of a real problem. Maybe there's a supply chain issue. (Imagine Weird Tales, the Supply Chain Issue: 100 blank pages.)

As recently as the 1990s and early 2000s, Weird Tales and other genre magazines were published on a frequent and regular schedule and they were chockfull of content. So what happened? I guess the Internet and social media happened. Smart phones, scrolling, and texting happened. Computer games, video games, video websites, streaming, podcasts, Marvel movies, 500 channels, and on and on happened. In other words, electronic screens happened, I guess, and the printed word stopped happening. So maybe we shouldn't be so hard on editors and publishers after all. If we're descending into Idiocracy, they're descending with us. It isn't their fault if there are only a few people still writing good prose. It's not their fault if no one reads anything on paper anymore. But I don't believe there are only a few people out there writing good prose. I think something else is at work here, but I don't know what it is.

* * *

Of the fifteen authors in the Cosmic Horror Issue, nine are American or I presume them to be American, meaning, they were born in the United States rather than simply living here now. Three authors are British, one Irish, one Canadian, and one, Francesco Tignini, unknown. Maybe he's an American, too. The British or British-oid (i.e., Canadian) content is obvious in these stories, even if it's just in the spellings of certain words, for example "colour" and "odour" instead of "color" and odor." But again, only nine or ten authors are American. Nine or ten out of a country of nearly 350 million.

At least two of the authors are atheists or agnostics, and there is materialism as an implicit or explicit worldview in some of the stories. That shouldn't come as any surprise. After all, this is the Cosmic Horror Issue. If the Cosmos is essentially a place of horror, or at least of indifference to human existence and the human condition, then that doesn't leave much room for a loving and caring God. He has been pushed out. Actually he hasn't been pushed out. We have simply retracted, like a worm into its hole. Anyway, I think it's okay to posit or assume that kind of thing in your storytelling. After all, to read a story is to immerse oneself, for a time, in alternate worlds and alternate lives, even if they're not very pleasant. We get our scare or our thrill while reading and then relief upon our return. This is true even in mainstream literature. But what dreary lives people who believe these things must live in the real world. What else is the purpose of art except to drill closer to the truth? To look for the treasure and discard the dross? Anyway again, it's worth noting that one of the authors, Paul Cornell, is married to a vicar. I don't know what are his beliefs. Maybe his honey-do list has just one word on it: Believe.

At least six of the authors were born in the 1960s. At least one, the editor Jonathan Maberry, was born in the 1950s. (He has worked in comic books, too.) And three, F. Paul Wilson, Ramsey Campbell, and Nancy Kilpatrick, were born in the 1940s, all in 1946 in fact, the first year of the Baby Boom. (Three of our last five presidents were born in that year, too. Maybe the successes of this cohort, such as they are in some cases, are due to their having reached the age of seven before electronic screens held too much sway in our culture and society.) I don't know the birth years of five of the authors, but I assume them all to be younger and not quite established yet. If any of them would like to write to me, I would be happy to hear from them and to write about them in this space if that's possible.

Out of all of this analysis, I think the most significant issues to be: first, the meta-referential and self-referential viewpoint of the author in which the emphasis is moved away from the story and towards its penumbrae, or what we might call metadata. And, second, the dearth of content in this issue of Weird Tales in particular, more generally and by implication, the seeming lack of writing talent in America, which used to support a lively, fecund, prosperous, and widespread culture of books, literature, reading, and literacy. Being an artist, I sometimes kid my writer friends that they're a dime a dozen. But maybe their value has gone up as their numbers have gone down, if in fact their numbers have gone down. But that's only if good, literary writing is still in demand: a questionable proposition. Maybe Weird Tales is from another culture and has had its day. Or maybe it can still survive but should be in other hands, or at least handled in a different way where it is.

Copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Weird Tales #367-Analysis, Part One

Usually you do your analysis after you have covered your topic. This time I'm going to do the analysis first.

Weird Tales #367, the Cosmic Horror Issue, published in 2023, contains 96 pages in its interior. There are fifteen written works in all. These include nine short stories, three essays, and three poems.

For now I'm going to include the front and back covers and the inside front and back covers in the page count. That makes 100 pages in all.

Of those 100 pages, 9 pages are full-page advertisements, two for Weird Tales merchandise and seven for books and magazines.

Of the remaining 91 pages, 11 pages are full-page illustrations (including the front cover), and about 4-5/8 pages are made up of partial-page illustrations.

Of the remaining 75-3/8 pages (approximately), about 1 page is blank, these blank areas being at the bottoms of several pages. This does not include pages with poetry.

The table of contents and indicia make up another 1 page.

So, about 26-5/8 pages, or more than one-fourth of the magazine, does not include any text. If you take away 7 pages of poems, which are printed using large typefaces on illustrative backgrounds, then 66-3/8 pages are left for works in prose, or almost exactly two-thirds of the magazine.

I don't have word counts for any of the stories or essays, but I can tell you that they are printed in pretty large fonts with wide spacing between lines. It looks like most of the text in prose is printed in about a 9-point font. However, the last story, "Call of the Void--L'appel du Vide" by Carol Gyzander, is printed in about an 11-point font. To me that looks like an attempt to fill out the remaining page count with what would otherwise have been a shorter story.

In terms of paper and printing, Weird Tales #367 is a very well-made magazine. The cover stock and interior paper stock are high in quality and suitably heavy. I believe copies of this magazine will last a long time. The main title logo on the cover has been reworked slightly, but only to digitize it, I think. It looks basically perfect, and I can't complain about it at all. The typefaces used on the cover and in the interior are good and attractive. Most of the illustration looks digital, but it isn't overly dark, as if it had been soaked in coffee before being reproduced, which is what so much digital art looks like to me. (Witness most U.S. postage stamps now, which have become pretty terrible.) But when it gets down to it, the reader is not really getting very much for his or her money here. I think any reader can recognize that and accept the proposed bargain: lay down your $14 and you'll get an issue of Weird Tales in print. I accepted that bargain, except that Weird Tales the business sent me just one copy for the price of two. So no good bargain for me. Shame on them.

Again, I don't have any word counts available, but I suspect the total of nine stories and three essays would probably have filled about two-thirds and possibly only about one-half of an issue of the Weird Tales of the past, even of the not-very-distant past. Consider that in your purchasing plans. And remember, don't buy from Weird Tales unless you want to risk being cheated. Find your copy elsewhere if you can.

To be continued . . .

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Sunday, October 6, 2024

Weird Tales #367-Contents

The Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDb) doesn't include Weird Tales #367 (2023) in its issue grid of the magazine. It does, however, have an entry on that issue and lists it as a digital audio download. I can attest that Weird Tales #367 was in fact put into a print. I have a copy here in front of me, even if that copy is only half of what I ordered from Weird Tales. And thereby hangs a tale that you have heard before.

On October 16, 2023, I ordered two copies of Weird Tales #367 from the Weird Tales website. My order was confirmed. Cool. And so I waited . . . and waited . . .

Finally, in January 2024, I contacted Weird Tales through the email function on its website, letting them know that I hadn't received what I had ordered from them. And what do you know, a few days later, I received a package in the mail . . .

Except that the package enclosed just one copy of the magazine.

By that time, I was no longer able to use the email function on the website. I don't think my browser or my computer like that website. I think one or both consider it unsafe. That's not surprising. The Weird Tales website has had problems for years and years. I can't say why. You would think that a publishing company based in New York City would have figured out the Internet by now. Anyway, I still haven't received my second copy, and it might be too late. It could be that there are no longer any print copies available. I have lodged a complaint with my credit card company. Maybe I'll get my money back eventually, but not all of it, for I'm still out the postage for two copies. Maybe I should look into other options for holding Weird Tales to account for essentially ripping me off, the way they have, I think, with readers in the past. I'll just say that if you want Weird Tales-related merchandise, do your best to find it somewhere else. Don't buy from the business behind the magazine. You're likely to lose out.

So there's an important distinction to be made here between the business and the magazine. You can examine and judge the magazine based on its merits, regardless of what the business behind the magazine does or fails to do. That's what I would like to do in this series. I have a bias against the business. I'll do my best not to let that cloud my judgment of the magazine, which I will take piece by piece, like what I did with the first issue of March 1923, beginning on March 6, 2023

Weird Tales #367, the Cosmic Horror Issue (2023), is a perfect-bound book of 8 by 10-1/2 inches, or close to the dimensions of a Golden Age comic book. There are 96 pages inside and fifteen individual works, including three essays, three poems, and nine short stories. The cover art, dated 2022, is by Mike Mignola. Illustration in the interior, most of which appears to be digital, is uncredited. Jeff Wong may be its creator. Mike Mignola's cover is reproduced inside as well, and there are reproductions of previous covers of Weird Tales.

Following are the contents of Weird Tales #367, published, I believe, no earlier than the summer of 2023. All are short stories unless otherwise noted.

  • "Cosmic Horror and Weird Tales Go Hand-in-Tentacle" by the editor, Jonathan Maberry. Mr. Maberry's essay is the whole of "The Eyrie."
  • "The City in the Sea: A Hellboy Story" by Christopher Golden and Mike Mignola, a prose story featuring Mr. Mignola's comic book character Hellboy.
  • "When the Stars Are Right: The Weird Tales Origins of Cosmic Horror," an essay by Nicholas Diak.
  • "A Ghost Story for Christmas" by Paul Cornell.
  • "The Forest Gate," a poem by Samantha Underhill.
  • "Night Fishing" by Caitlín R. Kiernan.
  • "The Traveler" by Francesco Tignini.
  • "Cosmic vs. Abrahamic Horror," an essay by F. Paul Wilson.
  • "The Last Bonneville" by F. Paul Wilson.
  • "Lost Generations" a poem by Angela Yuriko Smith.
  • "Concerto in Five Movements" by Ramsey Campbell.
  • "Mozaika" by Nancy Kilpatrick.
  • "Inkblot Succubus," a poem by Nicole Sixx (Nicola Sixx in the table of contents).
  • "Laid to Rest" by Tim Lebbon.
  • "Call of the Void--L'Appel du Vide" by Carol Gyzander.

To be continued . . . 

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Weird Tales at 100

More than one hundred years ago, in May/June/July 1924, Weird Tales magazine had what it called its anniversary number, and if you had laid down your money--four whole bits--you could have had 192 pages of stories, essays, and little pieces of non-fiction to pore over for the next several months. And it had to last that long because the next issue didn't show up until November.

Throughout 2023, some of us waited for a centennial issue of "The Unique Magazine." And we waited . . . and waited . . .

And finally it arrived.

On October 16, 2023, I ordered two copies of Weird Tales #367. In the email message confirming my order, this issue was identified as having been dated May 2024. I don't think it was available in May. I'm pretty sure I placed my order as soon as it was available on the Weird Tales website. In any case, in Issue Number 367, published in 2023, Weird Tales magazine finally observed its own one-hundredth anniversary.

Weird Tales #367 is a themed issue. The theme is cosmic horror. That term, cosmic horror, is evidently a synonym for Lovecraftian horror, named of course for H.P. Lovecraft. In publishing a cosmic horror issue, Weird Tales appears to have been returning to form. In 2012, Jeff VanderMeer had urged us to move past Lovecraft. That doesn't appear to have worked. We're still reading Lovecraft, and there are still lots of people reading and writing Lovecraftian fiction. I would hazard that the long-dead Lovecraft sold more books last year than did Mr. VanderMeer.

Weird Tales is also, like I said, an anniversary issue. On the front cover is a small design element that looks something like this:

1923 W 2023
100 Years of Weird

Anniversary- or at least history-related content inside includes the following:

  • "Cosmic Horror and Weird Tales Go Hand-in-Tentacle" by the editor, Jonathan Maberry. Mr. Maberry's essay is the whole of "The Eyrie," which used to be a letters column.
  • "When the Stars Are Right: The Weird Tales Origins of Cosmic Horror," an essay by Nicholas Diak.
  • "Cosmic vs. Abrahamic Horror," an essay by F. Paul Wilson.
  • A full-color illustration on the last interior page showing Cthulhu chasing a $100 bill stuck on a fishhook, à la the Nirvana album Nevermind. And maybe that's a nod, after all, to Jeff VanderMeer and his sentiments about Lovecraft and Lovecraftian fiction.

On the back cover is an announcement for an anniversary anthology of Weird Tales. I might cover that anthology later. For now I would like to write about Weird Tales #367, the Cosmic Horror Issue.

To be continued. . . 

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley