Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Weird Westerns!

While getting ready for the next Grind Pulp Podcast, I've been delving deep into the weird western genre and let me tell you there is a lot of great stuff out there. If you've never heard of weird westerns then let me fill you in. Weird westerns are pulp stories set in the old west that have a fantastic element to them. 

How can you not love this cover?
A recent example of a weird western is the movie Cowboys and Aliens (2011)  that came out a few years ago. Although I have not seen it, I have plans to watch it in the next day or two in preparation for episode #2 of the Grind Pulp podcast. We're gonna be checking out at least three movies and three stories in the weird western genre. 

In the past week, I've read four anthologies that I highly recommend: How the West was Weird, How the West was Weird Volume #2, How the West was Weird: Campfire Tales and Six Guns Straight From Hell. There are many stories  that stood out but the one that caught my eye was Of All Plagues a Lover Bears by Derrick Ferguson. You can find it in How the West was Weird. This story features the exploits of a mystical gun(and sword)slinger named Sebastian Red. He travels the old west in search of adventure and finds it in the form of sultry babes, zombies, vampires and many other creatures of the night. 

Sebastian Red playing poker with a demon
After I finished reading Of All Plagues a Lover Bears I flipped through those other anthologies and found The Tale of The Baron's Tribute and Storms of Blood and Snow. These are two more wild tales featuring Sebastian Red. This trio of tales epitomizes the concept of grind pulp, which is a bloody, fast paced, gritty stories that have a bit of the absurd that makes them a fun read. The author of these stories, Derrick Ferguson, is quickly becoming one o my favorite writers. I first came across his dynamite work in the newly released anthology Black Pulp. But I will talk about that in another post soon.  



Lone Crow, Courtesy Miskatonic University
Another newjack pulp writer I like is Joel Jenkins. He writes a character named Lone Crow whose exploits are as wide and varied as Sebastian Red's and can also be found in the anthologies I mentioned above. Lone Crow is another mystical cowpoke that fights against the forces of darkness and boredom. So check them out!

Both Derrick Ferguson and Joel Jenkins inspire me to write but I get distracted because I want to read stories like theirs. But when you get down to it I truly believe the more I read the better writer I become. I wrote just over a thousand words for my Black Sam story today after reading two weird western anthologies. Pretty soon I will be posting some excerpts on this blog. So stay tuned!




Jeronimo









Monday, May 6, 2013

The Grind Pulp Podcast is officially in the building! We just released the very first episode of our brand new podcast hosted by yours truly, and my esteemed colleagues James Malone and Andrew Crevier. We rap about new school and old school pulp in prose and on film. You can listen to it by going to the Grind Pulp Podcast blog.

How can you not love this cover?
In this first episode we chop it up about pulp stories like Samaritan by 2013 Pulp Ark Award winner Bobby Nash, Long Hair Death Farm by Clifton Wetzel-Bulinger Cameron Ashley and Satan's Homepage by Ron Goulart

We also review Dog Soldiers (2002) with Kevin McKidd, Hobo with a Shotgun (2011) with the legendary Rutger Hauer, and the classic film Big Trouble and Little China (1986) directed by Sci-Fi deity John Carpenter and starring the modern John Wayne, Kurt Russell. 

Reminds me of Stringer Bell

Lastly, we try to tackle the question: What the hell is grind pulp?, and how it differs from new and classic pulp. The best way I can describe Grind Pulp is to recommend you read "Longhair Death Farm" and you 
will know exactly what it is. You can get it from the Blood and Tacos #1 AnthologyDefinitely check it out and check out our podcast cause frankly, you ain't got nothing better to do. 


Jeronimo