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  • peteOcha
    replied
    Great covers indeed!

    Leave a comment:


  • TJCams
    replied
    Black Static series looks awesome!

    And....some of those "Unexplained" posts from earlier - some of the pics you extracted and posted remind me so much of a book I had when I was a kid (lat '70's early '80s), that was about "monsters" - and touched on stuff like yeti, kraken (not the black rum), etc.

    Leave a comment:


  • bookworm 1
    replied
    Some of those covers are real creepy.Love them.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    Thanks guys. Here is another round of Black Static covers for you, and a list of stories within each issue for anyone interested.



    Issue 7
    The Reason For The Season by Bruce Holland Rogers
    The Hodag by Trent Hergenrader
    Blood God Blood by Eric Gregory
    The Talent Girl by Daniel Kaysen
    Pages From A Broken Book by Tony Richards
    The Deep Walker by Alison J. Littlewood
    Bait by David Sakmyster
    Includes Q&A with Tim Lebbon

    Issue 8
    At The Gates by Patrick Samphire
    These Things We Have Always Known by Lynda E. Rucker
    Noppero-bo by Steve Rasnic Tem
    There's Something Wrong With Pappy by James Cooper
    The Book Of Ruth by Steven Pirie
    Taking on Life by Gary Fry
    Includes Q&A with Simon Clark

    Issue 9 (Another brilliant cover!)
    The Lonely Heart by Aliette De Bodard
    The Plain by Tim Lees
    Haunt-Type Experience by Roz Clarke
    The Pain Of Blue Eyes by Daniel Kaysen
    Changeling by Al Robertson
    Fear by Stephen Volk
    Includes Q&A with Tony Richards

    Issue 10
    Piano Man by Christopher Fowler
    The Chair by Gary McMahon
    Washer Woman by Scott Lambridis
    Vic by Maura McHugh
    Because Your Blood Is Darker Than Mine by James Cooper
    Eastlick by Shannon Page
    Includes Q&A with Thomas Ligotti

    Issue 11
    De Profundis by Al Robertson
    None Had Sharp Teeth by Will McIntosh
    The Likeness by Lawrence Conquest
    Served Cold by Gary Couzens
    Off With The Furies by Daniel Kaysen
    Red Ribbons by Stephanie Briggs
    Includes Q&A with Steve Mosby

    Issue 12
    My Brother's Keeper by Nina Allan
    Bryson Feeds Families by T. F. Davenport
    Flatrock Sunners by Sarah Totton
    Stone Whispers by Tim Casson
    Charles by Steve Rasnic Tem
    Unearthed by Kim Lakin-Smith
    Includes Q&A with Gary A. Braunbeck

    I'll be back shortly with some more. In the meantime it's back to the NaNo novel as I'm still owing 1500 words for the day!

    TTFN.

    Leave a comment:


  • peteOcha
    replied
    Cool stuff! Great choice of ebooks by the way.

    Leave a comment:


  • Martin
    replied
    Those Black Static covers are beautiful!

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  • bookworm 1
    replied
    Nice adds.

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  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    As mentioned earlier, here is a brief run of covers for Black Static, the UK's premier horror fiction magazine. The bi-monthly magazine has been running since 2007 and follows a similar format to Cemetery Dance, with around half a dozen stories in each issue along with book/DVD reviews, interviews and commentaries. A special mention must go to the artwork, though, as the standard is often of a high standard.

    Okay, so here is a snap of issues 1 to 6 and a list of stories you can find inside.



    Issue 1
    Bury The Carnival by Simon Avery
    Pale Saints And Dark Madonnas by Jamie Barras
    Acton Undream by Daniel Bennett
    Votary by M. K. Hobson
    My Stone Desire by Joel Lane
    Lady Of The Crows by Tim Casson
    Includes Q&A with Michael Marshall Smith

    Issue 2
    In the Hole by Lisa Tuttle and Steven Utley
    The Serpent & The Hatchet Gang by F. Brett Cox
    Must See To Appreciate by Scott Nicholson
    Unknown by Steve Rasnic Tem
    In The Shape Of A Dragon by Melanie Fazi
    Ash-Mouth by Lynda E. Rucker
    Holding Pattern by Andrew Humphrey
    Includes article on Mick Scully

    Issue 3 (My favourite cover!)
    The Pit by Alexander Glass
    The Mist of Lichthafen by Seth Skorkowsky
    The Sentinels by Tony Richards
    The Difference Between by Ian R. Faulkner
    The Morning After by Carole Johnstone
    The Fantasy Jumper by Will McIntosh
    The Toad And I by Matthew Holness
    Includes Q&A with Sarah Langan

    Issue 4
    Cleaning The Western Kittiwake by Tyler Keevil
    Atwater by Cody Goodfellow
    Zombie by Conrad Williams
    Salt by Nicholas Royle
    Ye Shall Eat In Haste by Steve Nagy
    This Much I Remember by Barry Fishler
    Includes a Q&A with Conrad Williams

    Issue 5
    How Deep Is His Loneliness by Kathleen Winter
    The Second Death Of Johan Klupe by Tim Casson
    Night Game by Tony Richards
    The Rising River by Daniel Kaysen
    Winter Journey by Joel Lane
    Slap by Gary McMahon
    Less A Dream Than This We Know by Christopher M. Cevasco
    Includes a Q&A with Jack Ketchum

    Issue 6
    The Better Part Of You by Simon Avery
    Back On The Road by Melanie Fazi
    Special Needs by Peter Tennant
    En Saga by Nina Allen
    All Mouth by Paul Meloy
    Viva Las Vegas by Ray Cluley
    Includes Q&A with Scott Sigler

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    ...and a smashing collection that I've seen advertised in the latest issue of Cemetery Dance (#68):



    It's not on Apple, but easily purchasable via Kindle. (Thanks for the accept for the Facebook group by the way, C.W. Very useful and some great names in there too! )

    More pics to come. I'm trying to get hold of two fairly recent back issues of Black Static and then I'll put the whole run of covers on here with an index of stories. I hope that appeals!

    All the best for 2013 in the meantime!

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    Hello all! It's been a while since I've disgraced this corner of the forum, due largely to a farrago of NaNoWriMo, Cemetery Dance's submission window and that whole Christmas thing. I thought this time I'd put on a few piccies that I took around the same time as The Unexplained magazine covers, but never got off my phone 'til now.

    So here's one I bought from the Apple bookstore the other month...



    I see this guy's going places!

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    Thanks, bookworm. I loved that photo too. I thought I'd post a bit of detail on each issue as the images are currently hosted via my blog. It's a just-in-case measure. That and it was a lot of fun digging through the books and the internet for updates on the stories. You may have gathered I'm also a sucker for a good picture!

    I'm glad I've tickled your interest in the magazines. I note there aren't too many doing the rounds on eBay.com but there are a number of copies of the Reader's Digest's "Mysteries of the Unexplained". While I can't say I'm a massive fan of Reader's Digest (it reminds me too much of waiting rooms) the "Mysteries of the Unexplained" book is flat-out brilliant. I'll post an image of my copy in due course, but there are some truly excellent stories in there. The account of the waxwork of Monsieur Léopold-Lépide at Turner's Waxwork Theatre damn near froze my blood when I first read it - I even read it out to my English class at school around Halloween time when I was a lot younger. (Unaccustomed as I am to public speaking too.) Great stuff!

    Leave a comment:


  • bookworm 1
    replied
    That is great!!!!!! I also like the new posts very interesting stuff.You seem very detail oriented.Makes me kind of envyous.It also makes me want to hunt down some of those magazines.
    Originally posted by Lucian Poll View Post
    Hi, bookworm. When I saw that particular photo I knew I had to include it here! Pop his name into Google images and you'll see some incredible images of other unfortunate people with the same (and sometimes more extreme) condition. And Halle Berry in a bikini top. Swear to God, I don't know how the internet works sometimes...

    Anyway, here's a picture of how the lad looks following the surgery:hat is great!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    How do, everyone. This is it, the last of The Unexplained covers. These photos cover the issues 147 to 157, plus a few odds and ends to wrap things up:





    And here is a rundown of the contents of each issue:

    Issue 147
    Pied Piper - fact?
    Born to be psychic?
    The inventor of psi
    A dolphin's world
    Mirabelli
    (The image is of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. The illustration, along with a few others in the article, is taken from a 19th-century German book: Der Rattenfänger von Hameln. I love that word: Rättenfanger!)

    Issue 148
    Meaning of colour
    Mazes: the inside story
    The way of Subud
    Freud and psi
    Iridology
    (The image accompanies an article on iridology - detecting illness through the markings in the iris. "A dark area and a separation of the fibres at the 'two o' clock' position in the iris of this right eye indicate an underactive thyroid gland. A 'lymphatic rosary' is also visible - a circle of patches near the outer edge of the iris, indicating congestion of the lymphatic system.")

    Issue 149
    Jung and psi
    Who killed William Rufus?
    American kangaroos
    Dead soldier's tale
    Bright beasts
    (My photography skills fail me again, but, through the glare, the image shows a finch using a thorn to poke out a grub from a crevice in some tree bark. It "holds the thorn under once claw and eats the grub, then resumes its probing.")

    Issue 150
    Radionics
    Pontefract's poltergeist
    Livingston UFO terror
    Princes in the Tower
    The French prophet
    (The image shows the Two Princes, a famous disappearance from the history books, as depicted in a 19th-century painting by Paul Delaroche.)

    Issue 151
    A female Pope?
    Eugene Aram: innocent?
    Zigmund Jan Adamski
    More than mere pets
    The miracle machine
    (The image: "Pope Joan is delivered of a child in the midst of a papal procession in this 15th-century illustration from Boccaccio's Decameron." Pope Joan's papacy is believed to be between 855 and 858, though this is open to argument, as is the existence of Pope Joan herself. This made for an amusing question on a popular quiz show here in the UK called QI that revealed an unusual requirement of medieval Popes to sit on a special throne with a hole cut in the seat, so that a cardinal could put a hand through and check the pontiff for testicles. Again this is open to conjecture, but very funny nonetheless!)

    Issue 152
    Sacred geometry
    Swedenborg's strange world
    Edgar Allan Poe: murderer?
    An answer to Livingston?
    Roy - king of deceit
    (The image is of Leonardo Da Vinci's iconic 'Vitruvian Man' from the article on sacred geometry.)

    Issue 153
    Magnetic people
    Valentine Greatrakes - healer
    Adamski: UFO drama
    Sacred symbolism
    World of fantasy
    (The image is "a painting by a drug addict showing visions experienced as withdrawal symptoms" from an article that discusses people who live in a dream world all the time.)

    Issue 154
    Birth of the gods
    The Western witch doctor
    Pachita: psychic surgeon
    The Campden wonder
    A walk with death
    (The image illustrates a young girl called Durdana's impression of God following a near-death experience. "When asked to describe what God looked like, she could only say 'blue'." I'm not sure where the flora comes into it, but there you go.)

    Issue 155
    The case for God
    Faces from another world?
    Krakatoa: a true story?
    Twilight of the gods
    Left and right brain
    (The image is detail from a 17th-century painting by Peter Paul Rubens called Achilles Slays Hector. It accompanies an article on how we no longer see signs from gods and godesses - the twilight of the gods. Here's the full image:



    Issue 156
    The Oz factor
    Reality: a Fortean view
    The great psi debate
    A healthy forecast?
    Modern myths
    (The image is a still from the 1939 film The Wizard Of Oz. The article discusses timelessness and a feeling of dislocation associated with close encounters with UFOs.)

    And finally there is issue 157, which is an index of the entire 3 year run of The Unexplained. Beneath these issues you can see the glossy jacket that held issue 1, and the (folded up) poster that accompanied it. (The full poster is little more than a large advertisment.)

    So that's it for this run of covers. Once again I must thank Partworks.co.uk for kindly including these loose covers with my purchase of these books. It was unexpected, beyond the call of duty and, above all, really appreciated.

    I hope these covers have sparked interest in some of the topics covered. It's given me a few ideas for stories if nothing else!

    Leave a comment:


  • Lucian Poll
    replied
    Evening all. Time for me to dip my toes into The Unexplained again, this time issues 138 to 146:



    And here, in time-honoured fashion, is a look through the contents:

    Issue 138
    Shamanism
    Haunted Penkaet Castle?
    Peter Hurkos challenged
    Joanna Southcott's box
    Betty Hill's star map
    (The image is detail from "a painting from the journals of Father Nicholas Point" from the article on shamanism. "It's caption reads: 'One becomes a medicine man only after making a pilgrimage during which he [sic] prays fervently, fasts from four to eight days, and eventually receives a "sign" from a bear, a red deer, a green ram, or perhaps even a monster.")

    Issue 139
    How old is man?
    Saucers as scapegoats?
    Salem's grim legacy
    Psychic dentistry
    St. Joan: witch?
    (The image is from an article on the origins of man. It shows a reconstruction of "skull 1470" by Meave Leakey, which was found by her husband at Koobi Fora in Kenya. "The blue material does duty for missing parts of the fossil.")

    Issue 140
    Practical ufology
    The soul and the shaman
    Ghost of Ardachie Lodge
    Miracle in Tibet
    Teleportations
    (Not a classic cover! The image shows "one of the many unidentified objects over Montserrat." This is the mountain district of Montserrat in Spain, not the Caribbean island that was nearly destroyed by a volcano in the mid-1990s.)

    Issue 141
    Life: a fine balance
    UFOs: who's watching who?
    Ancestral arguments
    The Vandy mystery
    End of Ardachie
    (The image is detail from the frontispiece of a Lutheran bible of 1534 and fronts an article on those who reckon the Universe was created by an intelligent being for intelligent beings to live in: the anthropic principle. It's a philosophical debate I won't go into here, you'll be glad to hear. Instead here's the full image, which, while not my bag, is striking all the same:



    Issue 142
    The angels of Mons
    Modern witchcraft exposed
    Legend of Prester John
    Isa Northage - medium
    Neanderthals today?
    (The image is from The Illustrated London News. "Patriotic Britons in the First World War, convinced that their cause was a righteous one, eagerly seized on news that their army had received supernatural aid from ghostly archers, angels - even St. George himself." Here's the full image:



    Issue 143
    No angels at Mons?
    Message from a drowned man?
    UFOs: the great cover up?
    Ghost of Fyvie Castle
    Witches - and worse
    (The image is a German illustration from 1555 of a witch being burnt at the stake. Goodness knows what is grabbing the other witch by the throat!)

    Issue 144
    Secret UFO files
    The Schneider brothers
    Ghost with wet boots
    Prester John: found?
    The dead speak out
    (The image shows the Camperdown ramming the Victoria on 22 June 1893, as depicted by the French magazine Le Petit Journal. "The Admiral seemed a trifle absent-minded as he ordered his flagship to her doom. Was he also 'absent in spirit' - on a ghostly visit to his London home?")

    Issue 145
    Croglin vampire
    Mons: who were the angels?
    The mystery of mazes
    English MIB threat
    Birth and re-birth
    (The image is an illustration from James Rymer's Varney the vampire, published in 1847.)

    Issue 146
    UFO picture gallery
    Raymond Lodge returns
    The Judge Hornby case
    UFOs: an open secret?
    The Schneider scandal
    Can animals think?
    (The image accompanies an article on animal intelligence. It is an 18th century illustration of a learned pig "well versed in all languages" and "a perfect Arithmetician, Mathematician and Composer of Musick". There were many learned pigs doing the rounds and they were mostly, if not all, owned by showmen - I reckon we can all imagine how these animals "learned" their craft...)

    That's all for now. I'll post the final round of covers tomorrow.

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe315
    replied
    I forgot about that episode.

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