The Houston Arcade Expo is Nov. 2-3.
Check it out HERE.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Friday, October 19, 2012
FILTERED FUTURE REVIEWED ON AMAZON
My book of short stories, Filtered Future, received the following review on Amazon today:
This collection of tales is a diverse, rich treasure trove for fans of dark fiction. Whether your taste is for sci-fi, fantasy, or horror, Weiss has something here for you. He engages each of these areas with originality and a marked intellectual approach. Fans of all three genres will devour this volume with sheer delight. And these stories are far above mere escapist mind candy--Weiss explores philosophical and existential themes without his material coming across as contrived or pretentious. These tales have something substantive to say and do more than just entertain--they also provoke thoughtful reflection.
Stylistically, Weiss combines elements reminiscent of Poe, Lovecraft, Bradbury, Asimov, and Shelley--names I don't drop lightly. With memorable characters, authentic dialogue, optimal pacing, and plot twists that surprise while avoiding the deus ex machina pitfall, this collection of short stories is well worth your time. Highly recommended.
You can order the book HERE.
This collection of tales is a diverse, rich treasure trove for fans of dark fiction. Whether your taste is for sci-fi, fantasy, or horror, Weiss has something here for you. He engages each of these areas with originality and a marked intellectual approach. Fans of all three genres will devour this volume with sheer delight. And these stories are far above mere escapist mind candy--Weiss explores philosophical and existential themes without his material coming across as contrived or pretentious. These tales have something substantive to say and do more than just entertain--they also provoke thoughtful reflection.
Stylistically, Weiss combines elements reminiscent of Poe, Lovecraft, Bradbury, Asimov, and Shelley--names I don't drop lightly. With memorable characters, authentic dialogue, optimal pacing, and plot twists that surprise while avoiding the deus ex machina pitfall, this collection of short stories is well worth your time. Highly recommended.
You can order the book HERE.
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Fan Days - Oct. 19-21 Near Dallas
My preview of Fan Days, where I'll be set up as a vendor, appeared in the new issue of AntiqueWeek. Here's that article:
FAN DAYS
IRVING, TX—Hosted by Ben Stevens and Philip Wise, who also run a
similar event called the Dallas Comic-Con, Fan Days is a geeky gathering of
comic book fans, dealers, writers, artists, and anyone else interested in the
four-color adventures of men and women in tights. And, as with most of the
bigger cons, Fan Days is a place to meet and greet sci-fi celebrities.
This year’s Fan Days, which will take place at the Irving
Convention Center Oct. 19-21, is a star-studded attraction, boasting the likes
of Stan “The Man” Lee, Bruce Campbell (Army
of Darkness), Sean Astin (Lord of the
Rings), Robert Englund (A Nightmare
on Elm Street), Steven Yeun (The
Walking Dead), Lance Henriksen (Aliens),
and animator/director Ralph Bakshi (Cool
World, Wizards), among numerous
others.
And, of course, there will be the requisite dealer’s room, with
vendors selling Golden and Silver Age comic books, rare paperbacks, first-edition
hardcover books, vintage movie posters, out-of-print CD soundtracks, graphic
novels (many of which will be marked down to 50% off), old toys, and much more.
Johnny Loyd of Fort Worth, who has been going to comic book
conventions since 1985, never misses a local sci-fi celebration, and he
frequently travels out of state to go to indulge his favorite hobby. Loyd
collects super-hero action figures and Star Trek items, and he still remembers
a find he made at a Dallas Fantasy Fair during the late 1980s.
“I got a rare Cyborg Super Powers action figure in the package for
just $50,” Loyd said. “Now he goes for $350 to $400.” (Cyborg, a member of the
Teen Titans at the time, was released in relatively low numbers in the third
and final wave of Kenner’s beloved Super Powers line, which was in production
from 1984-1986).
Loyd also collects celebrity autographs and photos. At Fan Days,
he’s looking forward to meeting Casper
Van Dien and Dina Meyer, both of whom starred in the 1987 cinematic hit, Starship Troopers. Meyer also played
Oracle in the short-lived Birds of Prey
television series (2003), which was based on the DC comic book of the same
name.
“Convention organizers have gotten smarter over the years,” Loyd
said. “They emphasize celebrities more, and that brings people in.”
At the most recent Dallas Comic-Con, which was May 19-20, Ben Stevens
was hoping for around 15,000 fans. What he got instead was close to 25,000
attendees, which meant long lines, long waits, and some frustration among fans.
Anticipating a similar turnout for Fan Days, Stevens has increased the
forthcoming event to three days, rearranged various line configurations, and
added extra concession stands.
Contact:
(972) 966-0680
www.scifiexpo.com/DCC/fandays.html
Father and daughter enjoying cosplay (costume play) at last year’s
Fan Days.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Dynamite Magazine
My article on Dynamite magazine appeared in a recent issue of AntiqueWeek. Here's that article, reprinted in its entirety:
If you were in elementary school in America during the mid-to-late 1970s,
you probably remember Dynamite
magazine, a pop culture publication aimed at kids and published by the
Scholastic Book Club.
Dynamite received some newsstand distribution, but it was primarily sold
through Scholastic, who each month would send brochures to school teachers
across the country. The teachers, eager to promote reading, would hand out the
brochures to their students, who would check off the books they wanted to
purchase and return the next day (or shortly thereafter) with money from their
parents.
After receiving the order forms, Scholastic would print the
publications in the numbers requested. This was an ideal business model for a
magazine, since the far less predictable newsstand distribution system
virtually guaranteed that hundreds or even thousands of issues would be
returned at a loss to the publisher.
When I was a kid, my mom would let me order three Scholastic items
each month. In addition to ordering books, such as H.G. Wells’ War of the Worlds and The Time Machine, I always checked off Dynamite magazine, which I would eagerly
devour as soon as it arrived a few weeks later.
The first issue of Dynamite
was published in 1974 and featured Hawkeye and Radar—characters from the M*A*S*H TV series—on the cover. The last
issue, #165, released in 1992, showcasing actors Julia Roberts and Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
In between those book-marking issues, such diverse pop culture
icons as Cher, Bruce Lee, The Brady Bunch,
Alfred E. Neuman, Rick Springfield, and The Incredible Hulk graced the covers.
Each issue of Dynamite
was colorful and entertaining and featured such items as interviews, articles,
recipes, comics (including the super-hero strip, “Dynamite Duo”), photo
features (such as a “Celebrity Yearbook Quiz”), “Count Morbida’s Monthly Puzzle
Pages,” and Magic Wanda’s magic tricks. One of the favorite regular
features was “Bummers,” which were comic panels derived
from reader-submitted ideas—a successful entry netted the entrant a whopping $5.
Debuting in an era before VCRs, cable television, personal computers,
and video games (or at least before video games had become ubiquitous), Dynamite was a hit from the get-go, giving
kids a good way to pass the time and keep a finger on the pulse of popular
culture. According to former DC Comics publisher Jenette Kahn, the brainchild
behind Dynamite, the magazine was
once the best-selling publication in the history of Scholastic.
In an interview published in the February installment of Back Issue (#57), Kahn told Robert Greenberger that Scholastic approached her with the idea for
starting a juvenile magazine. “Executives at Scholastic were aware of Kids [a previous periodical Kahn had
published] and asked if I would conceive of another magazine for them,” she
said.
Dick Robinson, the head of Scholastic, contracted Kahn to produce
three issues of Dynamite. The
magazine sold extremely well—too well, in fact. “Dynamite was so phenomenally successful that we weren’t able to
come to terms,” Kahn said. “Even when I offered to accept a 1% royalty instead
of the 4% royalty that every other author of the book-club section received,
Scholastic said I’d be earning too much money and turned me down.”
With Kahn out of the picture, Dynamite
soldiered on under the editorship of Jane Stine, wife of children’s author R.L.
Stine, creator of the Goosebumps
series.
Most kids who bought Dynamite
magazine read the issues multiple times and/or passed them around to friends.
Since the magazine sold so well and most copies were heavily read, Good and
Very Good copies of Dynamite aren’t particularly
difficult to locate. However, copies in Fine or better condition are very hard
to find, especially complete.
Well-worn copies of Dynamite
sell for just $2 to $3 apiece while Very Fine to Near Mint issues with inserts
intact (trading cards, posters, and the like) can command anywhere from $10 to
$50 each, depending on the popularity and scarcity of the issue. Issues
featuring such icons as Elvis Presley (#24) and Farrah Fawcett (#40) on the
cover usually sell for more than those sporting such lesser known talents as Mark
Fidrych (#38) and Shields and Yarnell (#48). Also, earlier issues are typically
worth more than later ones.
There are two issues of Dynamite
magazine in particular collectors should keep an eye out for. A special edition
3-D Poster Book with Neal Adams art
is fairly difficult to find, as is a special promo edition of issue #49 (featuring
Cheryl Ladd on the cover) that was free with the purchase of any size of
Concentrated All Detergent. A water-stained copy of the latter with missing
inserts recently sold for $45 on eBay.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Thursday, September 27, 2012
The Stoogeum -- Three Stooges Museum
The Three Stooges is currently showing on AMC, so I thought I'd reprint this article I wrote on the Stoogeum, which originally appeared in AntiqueWeek.
“Dewey, Burnham, and
Howe.” “Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.” “Moe! Larry! The Cheese!”
If the above phrases
don’t make you chortle, chuckle, grin, or guffaw, you have no soul. Okay,
that’s more than a little hyperbolic, but even those who don’t quite “get” the pinching,
poking, pummeling antics of The Three Stooges will have to admit that the tussling
trio is one of the most popular comedy teams of all time, arguably more well-known
than such dynastic duos as Abbot and Costello and Laurel and Hardy.
Originally a part of
the vaudeville comedy team Ted Healy and His Stooges, which began performing in
1925, the Stooges didn’t officially became The Three Stooges until 1934, when
they broke away from Healy and signed with Columbia pictures. During their 23
years at Columbia, the Stooges starred in five features and 190 film shorts.
Remnants from the Stooges’ Columbia days and much more are on
display at The Stoogeum museum, a three-story, 10,000-square-foot facility
billed as “the world’s first and only museum of Three Stooges memorabilia.” In
addition to such offerings as a research library, an 85-seat theater, and a
16mm film storage vault, the museum boasts nearly 100,000 pieces of Three
Stooges artifacts, from games to toys to movie props to costumes to artwork to
rare photos (spanning 50 years of Stooges history).
The Stoogeum is home to a number of unique items, including Joe
Besser’s passport, Larry’s driver’s license, and Shemp’s discharge from the
United States Army. One of the coolest one-of-a-kind items currently on display
at the Stoogeum is a custom Three Stooges pinball machine, which was built and
designed by Eric Strangeway. The pinball is set up on free play, as is a 1984
arcade game manufactured by Mylstar. There’s even a Three Stooges slot machine
customers can try their luck on.
Regrettably, unlike most museums, The Stoogeum does not keep
regular hours. Rather, they are only open approximately one day per month
(admission is free, but visitors should feel free to make a donation). To find
out when you can get your “nyuks” on at The Stoogeum, check their website.
Contact:
267-468-0810
www.stoogeum.com
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