Take Advantage of Holiday Discounts at Lulu.com
I got a reminder from Lulu.com this morning that the window for placing Holiday orders in time for Christmas is closing. Thanks Lulu!
Plus, they sent me the handy coupon at right. It’s good for 20% off any order (up to a total of $100 savings) until Dec 31, 2010.
I hope I don’t get in trouble for sharing it. Probably not. But if anybody locks you in a small room and shines a bright light in your face and demands to know where you got this coupon, remember these handy phrases: “I’ll talk! It was Gordon van Gelder.”
Or just go get your own coupon online, at their Daily Deals page.
Lulu is the leading Print on Demand (POD) publisher. Need a reminder of all the great titles available at Lulu?
Over the past year we’ve told you about the two volumes of The Clayton Astounding reprints, Vagabonds of Space and Planetoids of Peril.
For gamers, there’s the new role playing game of heroic rodents, Hyperborean Mice, featuring grim swords & sorcery action… with talking mice.
For short fiction lovers, there’s G.W. Thomas’ terrific Dark Worlds magazine, featuring tales of modern adventure fantasy, and the new incarnation of pulp magazine Startling Stories, from Wild Cat Books (shown at left).
And don’t forget Charles R. Saunders’ latest Imaro novels, The Naama War, and The Trail of Bohu.
At that and much more. Support your favorite small press publishers, and get some great gifts at the same time. How cool is that?


A little context: I am a huge fan of the old-school Stan Lee/Jack Kirby THOR run from the 1960s. Not the entire run, mind you, just the really good second half when Kirby was really off the hook. The Origin of Galactus, Ego the Living Planet, the ManGog, Tales of Asgard, just amazing and timeless Kirby goodness. There’s a reason this guy was called the King of Comics, and this series shows it like no other.


It gives me great pleasure, now, to invite Leah here to talk to us about Ideomancer and its exciting current issue.
Confession: I watch almost no TV. Well, that’s not quite true: NFL football, an occasional news program, and the odd episode of The Simpsons aside, I watch no TV. Lost is lost on me. There aren’t enough hours in the day for 24. The Sopranos? Fuggedaboutit. There are too many good books to be read in the world and not enough time for television.
During the course of the past few days I’ve had the pleasure of chatting with a goodly number of writers. It’s been good for my soul to talk shop with knowledgeable peers. But one question that invariably cropped up concerned my method of writing. How did I prepare my drafts? And as I explained it, curious looks would blossom over the visages of my brother-and-sister scribes.
In his famous essay “The Simple Art of Murder” (1944) noir author Raymond Chandler discusses the separation between loftiness of subject in writing and its literary success: