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Sensor Sweep: Streranko, Wulf, Space Warships, Seven Ronin – castaliahouse.com

Sensor Sweep: Streranko, Wulf, Space Warships, Seven Ronin

Monday , 19, November 2018 4 Comments

Artists (DMR Books): Jim Steranko‘s eightieth birthday snuck up on me. Hard to believe that number, because he’s still out there rollin’ like a boss. Jim is possibly the coolest eighty-year-old I know of.

This is a last-minute post, so I’ll have to keep things brief. I first became aware of Jim in fifth grade when I encountered one of his iconic Nick Fury covers in a Marvel coloring book.

 

 

 

 

 

Comic Books (Paintmonk): So you’re probably wondering what I’m thinking when I suggest that an obscure character might have become as legendary as Mike Grell’s Warlord. 

Let me explain.

There’s nothing sadder than an interesting and creative comic character marching off into the sunset. From the CrossGen Comics brand to the ill-fated Atlas Comics pseudo-relaunch in 2010-2011, seeing comics fail because of business-related issues is always a tragedy.

 

Comic Books (Mark the Aging Hipster): Stan Lee (1922 – 2018)

What the hell do you even say? Where do you even start? Ninety-five years. A long life—a charmed, stone-cold lucky, twice over, fairy tale roller coaster of a life—a living reward for a body of creative work that is worth billions today. He died knowing he was beloved, lionized, and canonized the world over. We should all be so lucky.

 

Fiction (Publisher’s Weekly): Creating an extensive new world full of swords, archery, magic and bravery, Jones (a longtime Pathfinder Tales tie-in novelist) takes readers on a harrowing journey through Darassus, a realm where a few heroes face an abundance of enemies.

 

Fiction (An Sionnach Fionn): We know from several sources that Tolkien read Conan Doyle, and upon closer examination one can’t but be struck by some of the general similarities between the death and revival of the fictional wizard Gandalf the Grey in The Fellowship of the Ring, the first part of The Lord of the Rings “trilogy”, and the fate of Sherlock Holmes in The Final Problem.

 

Fiction (Western Genre Musings): That bit of informed descriptive genius is from Jack London’s story of survival in the Yukon “Love of Life.” London, an adventurous sort and no mere poseur or pretender to life, knew hunger and suffering and struggle in his early days and he brings that vivid in-the-midst experience to stark life in this, rightly, high-regarded tale.

 

Popular Culture (Davy Crockett’s Almanack): Sea Raider Gum Cards 1933.

 

 

 

 

Science Fiction (Future War Stories): One of the most important elements in most science fiction works that contain a combat warship that will take a starring role is the design/style of that spacegoing warship. While it may be sad to think that the visuals account for the failure or success of an sci-fi spaceship, it is the truth. In the realm of science fiction, there those combat starships that have been an influence on all elements of wider culture and all areas of science fiction. This was a tough list to assemble and I had to limit the list to iconic actual combat spaceships that were (mostly) tasked with standard naval duties and operated under a military organization framework.

 

Fiction (DMR Books):Cealwyn was once a Celtic prince but is now a slave. He was captured by the Carthaginian noble Adherbal, who ravished and slew his sister Creoda. Cealwyn attempts a daring escape. Although he fails, Adherbal’s niece Tiratha is impressed by his heroic manliness and demands the Celt be given to her. Cealwyn, not wanting to end up like all of Tiratha’s other pleasure slaves, plots a revolt with a native of Rome and a Greek mercenary. It does not quite go as planned, but he manages to break free and rescue Tiratha’s chaste handmaiden, Valeria (did Robert E. Howard read this novel?), thus bringing him one step closer to fulfilling his oath of revenge against Carthage.

 

 

 

 

 

Science Fiction (Adventures Fantastic): This one seems to be getting some buzz, although I have to admit I hadn’t heard of it until I saw it in B&N.  This review is probably more appropriate for Futures Past and Present, but I’m posting it here because this is the main blog and gets more traffic.

 

Fiction (Barbarian Bookclub): Last week during my long walks to work I decided to start listening to The Lord of the Rings on audiobook. The narrator is fantastic. I’ve read the series almost two decades ago, but a lot of it is intertwined with the Peter Jackson movies. Also when I read the books I didn’t possess the depth of knowledge concerning history, mythology, and religion to fully appreciate the book as intended.

 

Gaming (Niche Gamer): Antimatter Games and Tripwire Interactive have just released a new free update for Rising Storm 2: Vietnam.

Rearmed and Remastered adds several new weapons, including the MP40, 200-round belt fed variant of the RPD, deployable DShK, Fougasse mine, and the M2 Browning. Two new maps have also been added, which are actually remastered versions of popular Rising Storm maps that have been given a Vietnam reskin.

 

Gaming (Table Top Gaming News): A new set for Test of Honour is available to pre-order from Warlord Games. In this case, it’s a set of seven ronin. For those that don’t know, ronin were masterless samurai who traveled around the countryside, helping those in need. They’re also the only people I know of who made the man-bun hairstyle look good. Anyway, you can get your orders in now so that these seven samurai don’t walk past your door.

 

4 Comments
  • Emmett Fitz-Hume says:

    Thanks for sending me down the rabbit hole this morning!

    The list of 10 Sci0Fi warships was a great read.

    Which led me to the Omega class destroyer of Babylon 5.

    Which led me to Babylon 5. Where the hell was I when this series was on and how did I not know about it? I think of myself as a Sci-Fi nerd and yet it seems my Sci-Fi knowledge is akin to swiss cheese, with huge gaps and holes.

    To make a long story short, I just ordered the first Babylon 5 novel and have moved the series Season 1 to the beginning of my queue.

    Articles like this are what I love. Discovering something old yet new.

    • CMB says:

      Tips for B5:
      Don’t watch the movie “In the Beginning” first – it has a lot of spoilers for the first season.

      The first season takes a while to get going – episode 8 (“The Sky Full of Stars”) is where it really starts to take off.

      B5 was originally planned to have 5 seasons, but near the start of the 4th season PTEN, the distributor, folded. This lead to the 4th season being rushed as they didn’t anticipate getting a 5th season, regardless of results. They got the 5th season anyway, but the disruption to the story arcs is quite obvious. It is worth sticking out to the end though.

    • deuce says:

      IMO, Bab 5 was the best SF series ever on television. It had its flaws, but it had big virtues as well. Everything built to the last couple of seasons. Epic stuff.

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