Cover of “Amazing Stories,” Ed Valigursky, November 1958

Ziff-Davis Publishing.

 

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That “Alien Interrogation” video on Youtube.

That headline above is probably misleading — I’m sure there are more than one “alien interrogation” videos on Youtube.

But this is the one I happened across a while back and … quite like.  I just shared it with a friend the other night.  It’s a neat little sci-fi short film with some damned cool ideas in its four and a half minutes.  Check it out.

 

“The Forest Horizons,” Ivan Shishkin, 1884

Oil on canvas.

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Iron Gate, Virginia, January 2017

The past week’s cold facilitated a rare occurrence — the freezing of the Cowpasture River in Iron Gate.  My friend posted these yesterday.

I think that second shot is really damned cool.  I believe that’s the spot where the protruding rocks make the mini-rapids that they call “riffles.”

 

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Cover to “Death: the High Cost of Living” #3, Dave McKean, 1993

Cinamon Hadley, who was Neil Gaiman’s visual inspiration for the design of his character “Death,” died on January 8th.  She was 48 years old.

 

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Throwback Thursday: “Omni” magazine in the late 1980’s (and that weird Stephen King cover)

Omni in the 1980’s was an absolutely unique magazine dedicated to science fiction and science fact — it was always weird and occasionally wonderful.  Its content was consistently a good deal trippier than anything you’d find in more mainstream contemporaries like Scientific American or Discover — futurism, the paranormal, and short stories that were pretty damned abstract.  (I remember Patricia Highsmith’s “The Legless A” being a real head-scratcher for me.)  And the covers to Omni were frequently awesome.

I had a subscription around 1989 or so — I believe I got a year’s subscription as either a Christmas or birthday present.  I still remember it arriving in the mailbox.  I think I had all of the issues you see below — except the third one.  That issue is from January 1983, and I never had it.  I’m including it here because it’s too interesting not to share.

Stephen King fans will recognize Don Brauitgam’s artwork for the cover of King’s classic 1978 short story collection, “Night Shift.”  Brautigam apparently sold it to the magazine later.  (Interesting, too, is the similarity of the artist’s name to a key character in King’s subsequent “Hearts in Atlantis” and his “The Dark Tower” series — the kindly psychic, Ted Brautigan.)

Anyway, if you were geeky enough to enjoy this back in the day, the entire run of Omni is currently available at Amazon for $3 a pop.  It was available online for free for a while, and I think you can still find all of the short stories uploaded in pdf if you google them — I found a bunch, including Highsmith’s story.  (I wonder if I’d get a better sense of it if I read it today.)

 

 

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“In the Wild North,” Ivan Shishkin, 1891

Oil on canvas.

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The relic of a rural Christmas.

Nothing says post-holiday closure like a lone, discarded ornament, like an improbable, platinum, round egg in the tangled, tan tall-grass.

 

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“A Kolkhoz Celebration,” Sergey Gerasimov, 1937

Oil on canvas.  The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia.

Source: http://russianartgallery.org/

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