Wednesday, January 14, 2015

The Englishman Who Explained Muhammad and Islam...

...did so almost a century ago!
You've probably heard of him...
Yep, the guy who wrote War of the Worlds, Time Machine, Things to Come, and numerous other seminal sci-fi tales also did quite a bit of highly-acclaimed non-fiction, including the incredibly-popular Outline of History: Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind, first published in 1919!
It caught on first in Britain and America and then throughout the rest of the Western world, selling over two million copies in its first decade of publication, receiving highly enthusiastic reviews.
(Even twenty years after its initial publication, The Outline of History was so well-known to the public that, in The Maltese Falcon, Sidney Greenstreet's malevolent Kasper Gutman tells Humphrey Bogart's Sam Spade that the legend of the Falcon is true..."These are facts, historical facts, not schoolbook history, not Mr. Wells' History, but history nevertheless.")

Coming right after the carnage of World War I, the Outline was neither unduly pessimistic and cynical about the human condition nor Pollyannaish about humanity's future.
Instead, it offered an account of the development of the world's civilizations (including Asian and African, usually left out of Eurocentric "histories") up to the (then) present, to convince readers that an enlightened future depended on a clear, unprejudiced/un-nationalistic view of the past.
His look at Islam and Muhammed, found HERE, is a fascinating piece of scholarship.
I suggest you read it...with the caveat that the OCR scanning or keyboarding has a couple of glitches.
The complete Outline can be downloaded from The Gutenberg Project HERE or read and/or downloaded from Archive.Org HERE.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

We Stand with Charlie Hebdo...

...as they return to the public forum...
...on newsstands and the Net!
BTW, we're showing more guts than CNN, New York Times, and others who "talk the talk", but don't "walk the walk" by running the cover itself!

Monday, January 12, 2015

Reading Room ALARMING TALES "Secret Weapon"

We've worried about homeland security for decades...
...but, quite frankly, we're damned good at it!
OK, maybe we haven't produced an invisibility device/formula...yet, but we Americans can handle anything terrorists (religious or political) can throw at us, as this never-reprinted Silver Age story from Harvey's Alarming Tales #4 (1958) shows!
BTW, it's written by Jack Oleck (a talented novelist and comic book writer who was the brother-in-law of Alarming Tales editor Joe Simon) and illustrated by Johnny Quest's co-creator Doug Wildey!

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Pop-Culture 2015 12-Month Calendars

Plus MANY MORE!
Classic comic book and pulp magazine covers and movie posters, scanned from the originals and digitally-remastered and restored!
NOT available in stores, only on-line! Order now...before time runs out! ;-)

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Reading Room CAPTAIN QUICK AND THE SPACE SCOUTS "Mystery of the Moon of Mars"

Here's the first of three short features...
...that appeared in the second Tom Corbett: Space Cadet comic series.
Though the art for this never-reprinted tale from Prize Comics' Tom Corbett: Space Cadet V2#1 (1955) is credited solely to Marvin Stein at the Grand Comics Database, the layout appears to be by Jack Kirby, which would make sense since Simon & Kirby's studio was packaging the book for Prize.
Beyond being set in the future, there was no connection to Tom Corbett.
This "Captain Quick" is no relation to the suave secret agent character played by Adam West in early 1960s Quick commercials...

...which many attribute to causing the producers of a new show to cast him as their campy caped crusader!
BTW, in a weird bit of comic numbering, this second series' #1 is Tom Corbett's first #1!
The earlier series (from Dell Comics) began with #4 since the first three issues were part of the Four Color series (378, 400, and 421)!