About

Besides posting book reviews, once in a while I will be posting articles on the subject of pulps. I hope we can generate more interest for the Blog. If you would like to share an article on the pulps, you can send me a message in the Comments of a post.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Savage Land of Jur


Coming soon from NTD, “Savage Land of Jur” by Tom Johnson, the sequel to “Jur: A Story of Pre Dawn Earth”, with a new cover by talented artist, Teresa Tunaley. Originally written in 1970, this has been newly edited, and tightened from the previous editions.
Tom

Saturday, June 2, 2012

City of Brotherly Death


City of Brotherly Death takes on New Life

Some time ago, the Blood Moons and Nightscapes book Tom and I collaborated on had run its contract. So I had in mind to publish my share of the stories through the Night to Dawn imprint. Steel Rose and its sequel, Blood Moon Rising, have been my major focus these last several months, and an editor is reviewing Steel Rose now. So when I started putting together my anthology, I saw it as a quick stop-off between my magazine and my works in progress. Then I started going through the stories that were published by The Masque Noir, The Vampire’s Crypt, and the Fading Shadows magazines. I want to take this time to thank Margaret L. Carter, Ginger Johnson, and Rod Marsden for giving these stories a home.
I had fun playing with these tales, tweaking them, and in some cases, coming up with new spins on them. Particularly “Garden of Souls” and “One Last Favor.” All of them take place in Philadelphia, my home town. I spent several months trying out different titles without success. Then I got to thinking, since we have a lot of revenants and zombies, William Penn’s beloved Philadelphia has become a city of brotherly death. Hence my title.
So what did self-publishing mean for me? It meant I didn’t have to rely on a publisher’s timetable or their choice for a cover or editor. It also meant responsibility. I had to handle my own distribution, buy the ISBN’s, and handle my own formatting, editing, cover, and marketing. If you don’t have the skills to do those things, then you hire a team to handle the jobs. I was ahead in the ballgame because I’ve been publishing books for other people.
Dreamstime and Getty Images have great looking cover images for a reasonable price. Designing a cover isn’t my strongest suit, though, and those companies couldn’t help me with that. You have to pick the right size font and color for your title to stand out and look good. NTD illustrator Teresa Tunaley does just that. She took over titling the covers that she illustrated for the NTD books. Lulu and CreateSpace are user-friendly sites for self-publishing, and they have illustrators who can do covers, too.
If you format the interior yourself and work with Lulu or CreateSpace, find out their requirements before you begin. I found this out the hard way with the NTD books. For a 6 by 9 inch trade paperback, for example, your front and back cover dimensions should be about 6.125 by 9.25 inches. Not more, and not less. All print and images should be ½ inch away from the border to avoid getting cut off during manufacturing of the book. Your chapter headers should be about 1/3 way down the page. More important, your headers should be at a consistent level in all chapters. It is best to stick with Garamond or Times New Roman fonts.

I’ve been doing the formatting for the NTD books, including City of Brotherly Death. What helped me was looking at some of the trade paperbacks in a bookstore to get ideas on setting up title page and chapter headers. Each time I begin a new chapter, I count spaces from the top of the page. If you’re new at formatting, Word software can prove a formidable foe. If formatting makes you nervous, Lulu and CreateSpace have people who can format the book for you for a fee.
Your first page should be the title page – Title, author, and the name of your book company. To look professional, you should treat your writing like a business and that means creating your own publishing company.  The next page will have your masthead: your editor, ISBN, illustrator, contact, and copyright information. This is the spot where you mention “Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental, etc.”
I would never self-publish any work without consulting an editor because no writer can see their own mistakes. So a good editor is a wise investment. Alas, so many self-published books turn out badly because of multiple typos and lack of content editing. If money is a constraint, a lot of editors will find a way to work with you. Belonging to a writer’s group will help. Perhaps someone there can refer you to a reputable editor.
I confess to major jitters, and my buddies at the Bucks County Writers’ Group assured me this is normal. Judicious use of Mylar balloons and time spent with my friends helped me to get through that. The book has gone live, and it’s available on Smashwords and Kindle. I’m actually having fun promoting this book, thinking of Philadelphia being overrun by zombies and revenants. I’ve posted my webpage with illustrations of scenes from some of the stories at http://bloodredshadow.com/about/night-to-dawn-magazine-and-books/barbara-custers-night-gallery/city-of-brotherly-death/.
One thing does concern me. If William Penn gets a whiff of the tales I’ve been spinning about his beloved Philadelphia, he might come and haunt me.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Vendetta Receives 5-Star Review


“Vendetta” by J. Douglas Knauer receives 5-Star review from Brandon Awbrey: "Great thriller! An interesting thriller with deep layers of conspiracy. One man's horrible childhood experience leads him to seek the ultimate revenge, no matter the cost. Complex and well written, hope to see more from this author." 

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Treasure of Jur Available On Kindle


Tom Johnson’s “Treasure of Jur”, the 5th novel in the popular Jur saga. Nazi Germany has found a time portal giving them access to the treasures of a prehistoric land. But even with superior weapons, Hitler’s supermen may not win through to the ultimate prize. Jungle excitement and thrills await the reader in this current tale of greed and murder in a savage pre-dawn world.

Now available on Amazon Kindle for $2.99.
http://www.amazon.com/Treasure-of-Jur-ebook/dp/B007YJ93SK/ref=pd_ybh_1

Tuesday, April 24, 2012


After receiving - and reading - the long awaited 1st issue of the new Shadow series from Dynamite comics, I am again disappointed in the portrayal of Walter Gibson's creation. The comic book has a cover price of $3.99, and contains  36 pages counting front and back cover. There is 22 pages of Shadow story, plus the cover for a total of 23 pages, then 13 pages of advertisements for Dynamite's other comics. In fact, the center pages are devoted to a two-page advertisement for Dynamite's Prophesy. Again, the buyer should feel cheated that this wasn't a two-page spread for The Shadow instead! Seems to me the buyer is paying for their advertisements, and getting very little story for the price. The artwork is good, and The Shadow looks okay, but Lamont Cranston and Margo Lane do not capture the familiar images from the pulps. Nor does the dialog. Yes, The Shadow blurts "The Weed of Crime", etc., but his foolish dialog while shooting crooks is not like the character, but belongs to the modern sensibilities I suppose. Margo Lane seems to merely be a sexual companion for Lamont Cranston. Except for the costume and name, this could have been a modern comic book set in the 1930s or '40s. The cover of my copy is the one with bats in the background. I suppose to connect the image to Batman. My personal opinion? Forget this version of The Shadow. At the price, we deserve much more than this.
Tom

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Vendetta By J. Douglas Knauer


This thriller novel is available at Amazon:


The book costs $5.99, but is FREE between April 19 and April 23, 2012. Author’s website address: www.suspenseiskillingme.net

When you’re in love, you can’t worry your lover by telling him that men are chasing you and killing people in their path. A continent away, your lover’s situation is no less dire. He can’t reach you to warn you to hide from possible danger, and he won’t tell you that since his plane landed at O’Hare in Chicago, he was kidnapped and is under threat of death from a former friend he helped bury back in Iran.
Those situations have spun Ava Sevani’s and David Badalian’s lives out of control. What they don’t know is that Ava’s former lover, Dirk Brown, a pipeline tycoon, is also Homeland Security’s most wanted mercenary, known simply as Nail.  Brown/Nail wants Dr. Badalian to relieve his chronic pain from a spinal injury…before he kills him to get Ava back, along with her father’s deadly formula.
Nail lives with debilitating pain and a manic vendetta to rid the world of the Republic of Islam, where his mother was stoned to death when he was a teen. But he wants the world to do the job for him. For that to happen, he has to give them a good reason.  Gutting the Heartland by exploding pipeline pump stations using nano-technology that bears an Iranian logo, then placing the poison chemical into municipal water systems, might do the trick.