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spaceintruderdetector · 6 months
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The Antarktos Cycle : Chaosium : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
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littlegoldenbirdie · 4 years
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An observation
When did Antarctica become such a magnet for literary weirdness? We have Lovecraft’s ‘Mountains of Madness’, the late 50′s movie ‘The Land Unknown’, ‘The Thing’ and all its variants, Edgar Rice Burroughs’ ‘Pellucidar’ series...
As a matter of fact, an ancient beast entombed deep within Antarctic ice appears in H.P Lovecraft’s ‘Antarktos’ sonnet, number 15 in his Fungi from Yuggoth cycle.
“Deep in my dream the great bird whispered queerly Of the black cone amid the polar waste; Pushing above the ice-sheet lone and drearly, By storm-crazed aeons battered and defaced. Hither no living earth-shapes take their courses, And only pale auroras and faint suns Glow on that pitted rock, whose primal sources Are guessed at dimly by the Elder Ones.
If men should glimpse it, they would merely wonder What tricky mound of Nature’s build they spied; But the bird told of vaster parts, that under The mile-deep ice-shroud crouch and brood and bide. God help the dreamer whose mad visions shew Those dead eyes set in crystal gulfs below!”
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weirdletter · 6 years
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Spectral Realms, No. 9, edited by S.T. Joshi, Hippocampus Press, Summer 2018. Cover art by Daniel V. Sauer, info: hippocampuspress.com.
A Weird Poetry Journal
Contents:   Poems The Visionary – Ian Futter Final Library – Ann K. Schwader Flesh Flowers – John Shirley Forty Years in Innsmouth – M. F. Webb A Dream of Vengeance (In Imitation of Robert E. Howard) –  Michael Fantina The Thing in the Forest – Frank Coffman The Urge to Write – Liam Garriock The Sorceress’s Lament – Ashley Dioses Cornflower Valley – Christina Sng The Willful Child – Fred Chappell Cat Girl Cantata – Michael D. Miller A Voyage Too Far – J. T. Edwards Are We Not Beautiful in Our Decay? – Allan Rozinski The Song of the Siren – Chelsea Arrington Acrostic Sonnet in Memory of Providence, R.I., 8 August 1936 – Charles Lovecraft A Bloodless Man – Mary Krawczak Wilson Great Mother – David B. Harrington Three Witches – David Barker Angry in His Grave – Darrell Schweitzer Toads – Wade German The Witch’s Son – Adam Bolivar Halloween Reverie – K. A. Opperman Contemplate the Alchemy of Dancing Quantum Particles – Kendall Evans Rek-Cocci Stirs – Scott J. Couturier The Loved – Ian Futter Antarktos Sequence – Manuel Pérez-Campos On a Poet’s 80th Birthday – Leigh Blackmore Spectral Realms: An Homage – Frank Coffman The Angel’s Pen – Charles D. O’Connor III Gautier Ghost Story – Chad Hensley Lucifer Romantico – Tatiana We Are the Owls – Jessica Amanda Salmonson Thalía – Manuel Arenas The Wendigo – Michelle Jeffrey She’s a Legend: A Song Sung by the Unsung – John Shirley Elegy for Futurism – Liam Garriock Spectral Noir – Deborah L. Davitt Graveyard Feline Morning – Benjamin Blake The Vampire’s Mother – Christina Sng The Dark Reclaims Us – Ann K. Schwader The Unseen – Mary Krawczak Wilson The Last God – David Barker Night Thoughts of a Nonentity – Manuel Pérez-Campos When Black Tom Came – Scott J. Couturier Scholar and Sorcerer: For S. T. Joshi, on His 60th Birthday  (22 June 2018) – Michael Fantina Flowers from Another World – Kendall Evans Dark Entry IV – Chad Hensley The Last Illusion of Robert Houdin – Jessica Amanda Salmonson On Wings of Fire – David B. Harrington The Merman – Tatiana Of Hooves and Horns – Michelle Jeffrey Weird Tales, the First Run: An Homage – Frank Coffman In Ligno – Deborah L. Davitt . The Mermaid – Christina Sng When Nightfall Comes to Ooth-Nargai – Manuel Pérez-Campos . The Autumn Sphinx – Liam Garriock   Classic Reprints   The Creaking Door – Madison Cawein . The Fairy Changeling – Dora Sigerson Shorter   Articles Clark Ashton Smith and Robert Nelson: Master and Apprentice: Part  – Marcos Legaria   Reviews   In the Footsteps of the Masters – Donald Sidney-Fryer A New Formalist – Frank Coffman Drowning in Delicious Weird – Russ Parkhurst Musings Philosophical and Religious – Donald Sidney-Fryer   Notes on Contributors
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ESSAY: Are the ALIEN Films Dinosaur Movies?
NOTE: This essay contains spoilers for the film ALIEN: COVENANT (2017, Dir. Ridley Scott)  
At first glance it’s a question that appears to be a total non sequitur. After eight films and countless comics, novels and video games there has never once been any indication that the Xenomorphs – the genetically engineered, black skinned, bio-mechanical, shape-shifting “perfect organisms” at the heart of the ALIEN franchise - are dinosaurs, let alone a product of terran evolution. Even the Xenomorphs’ most direct literary antecedent, the Coeurl from A. E. van Vogt’s 1939 short-story “Black Destroyer,” is decidedly mammalian – feline to be precise – in nature.  
Nevertheless these facts apparently were not enough to give scholar W.J.T. Mitchell pause while writing his groundbreaking cultural study of dinosaurs, The Last Dinosaur Book (University of Chicago Press, 1998), in which he posits that…
“Ridley Scott’s ALIEN films are an exception to this rule in their adherence to the most pessimistic logic of dinotopia. The initial discovery of the petrified alien creature is presented as a paleontological find. The space travelers descend into the fossilized belly of an ancient subterranean dragon, a vaulted, cavernous labyrinth supported by enormous ribs. Their presence revives the dormant eggs waiting in the giant womb, and unleashes the rebirth of a monster whose blood is not merely cold, but composed of metal-eating acid. The reborn monsters are ‘body-snatchers’ who breed by using human bodies as temporary wombs until they are ready for their ghastly and deadly ‘birth.’ The monsters are regarded as a potentially valuable military technology by the intergalactic corporation financing the expedition. The alien, it becomes clear, is actually the ‘monstrous double’ of the very corporate state that wants to exploit its power.” (p. 38-39)
When Mitchell uses the term “dinotopia” he is not referring to the acclaimed series of illustrated novels by writer/artist James Gurney. Rather he means any fictive world in which dinosaurs and humans are imagined as coexisting. The “rule” of such imaginary realms, which Mitchell observes here, is the often inherently violent conflict for survival which dinosaurs and humans appear to be perpetually engaged in. Moreover, in most instances it is the humans who emerge triumphant: “Dinotopia seems to require a happy ending for mammals, no matter how arbitrary.” (p. 38) The ALIEN movies then are an exception to this rule in that the human characters always loose. Oh true, there may occasionally be survivors of encounters with the Xenomorphs, but as was the case with the series’ early protagonist Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) survival is no guarantee of a happy ending.*
But even if this is true, it is an idea still predicated on the notion that the ALIEN movies are somehow dinosaur films. How could this be? The screenplay for the original ALIEN (1979, Dir. Ridley Scott) was written by screenwriter and director Dan O’Bannon (1946-2009) who openly acknowledged on multiple occasions that he owed the idea for ALIEN to a number of different cinematic, sequential and literary sources; one of the most significant film influences being the 1958 sci-fi film IT! THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE (Dir. Edward L. Cahn) about a reptilian humanoid extraterrestrial that sneaks adored an Earth bound spaceship departing from Mars and subsequently begins picking off the human crew one by one until they can eventually blast it out the airlock (Valaquen).
But while ALIEN may borrow IT!’s narrative structure, the film’s thematic elements come from none other than American horror icon H.P. Lovecraft. O’Bannon was a huge devotee of Lovecraft and even wrote and directed several films based on Lovecraft’s stories with ALIEN owning much of its affect to Lovecraft’s seminal 1936 novella At the Mountains of Madness about an Antarctic expedition lead by a team of paleontologists/geologists who subsequently stumble upon the ruins of a prehistoric alien city buried in the ice. Exploration of the city leads to the shocking discovery that these aliens were probably responsible for the creation of human life and the horrifying revelation that the synthetic shape-shipping monsters, called Shoggoths, which did them in are still alive and on the prowl. Of all the films in the ALIEN series it is PROMETHEUS (2012, Dir. Ridley Scott) which makes the greatest use of the themes of “cosmic horror” found in Lovecraft’s novella (McWilliam, 531-545), but nearly all the films – even 2004’s ALIEN VS. PREDATOR (Dir. Paul W.S. Anderson) – owes a slight debt to this story.      
As maybe evident from the occupation of the protagonists, Lovecraft scholars are largely in agreement that H.P.’s primary influence for writing Mountains was his reading of contemporary paleo-fiction beginning with Katherine Metcalf Roof’s now painfully obscure 1930 short-story “A Million Years After” about a revivified dinosaur egg (Joshi and Schultz, 11) as well as classic Edgar Rice Burroughs’ works including 1914’s At the Earth’s Core (Fulwiler, 64) and 1918’s The Land that Time Forgot (Debus, 79), as well as John Tain’s 1929 novella The Greatest Adventure about an Antarctic expedition which discovers a lost world of mutant dinosaurs created by an ancient technologically advance race (Price, 141 & Debus, 77-78). As in Lovecraft’s Mountains, the scientists in Tain’s novella discover that the ancient race which created the mutant dinosaurs ultimately wiped themselves out when their experiments lead to the cultivation a deadly parasitic spore – a plot point which leads us back around to latest installment in the ALIEN franchise; ALIEN: COVENANT.
Considering this lineage it is now possible to draw a line directly linking the ALIEN movies to paleo-fiction thus further legitimizing Mitchell’s claim. While the fact remains that the Xenomorphs are not dinosaurs in even the loosest sense of the term, it is possible to argue that they are still influenced by the kind of stories we tend to tell about dinosaurs.
On this latter point I am reminded of Joshua Bellin’s provocative book Framing Monsters (Southern Illinois University Press, 2005) which argues that the ALIEN and JURASSIC PARK film series both play off American cultural anxieties concerning the fear of infertility among the ‘right’ kind of people (i.e. white, patriarchal, heterosexual, married couples) in the face of the illicit and unregulated explosion of offspring among the ‘wrong’ kind of people whether that be “clever [LGBTQ] girls” who have figured out how to reproduce in a “single sex environment” as in JURASSIC PARK (1993, Dir. Steven Spielberg) or the black-skinned “super-predators” of ALIENS (1986, Dir. James Cameron) ruled over by their matriarchal Queen who Bellin sees as an embodiment of WASP boggart that is the unwed African-American welfare mother (Bellin, 106-136).
Whether one agrees with Bellin’s analysis or not depends on how convincing one finds his arguments in which case I would encourage those interested to seek out his book, but personally I do find them convincing insofar that I see both the ALIEN and JURASSIC PARK franchises as promoting a narrative which celebrates the archetype of the hetero-normative nuclear family while figuratively and literally demonizing – be those demons dinosaurs or extraterrestrials – those who by choice or circumstance do not wish to confine their future to the American dream of a married life in which the husband works and the wife remains in their white picket fenced home with their two kids and a dog. Indeed, those who reject such a lifestyle are either naïve workaholics – such as Claire Dearing of JURASSIC WORLD (2015, Dir. Colin Trevorrow) – who only need to be shown the folly of their ways and given the opportunity to redeem themselves by accepting the role of foster-mother to the children whose lives their refusal to be responsible parents has imperiled, OR they are mad scientists who, in an almost textbook example of the feminist interpretation of the myth of Frankenstein, have decided to try and take the process of baby-making into their own hands and as a result created something unnatural and monstrous.
This once again leads back around to the new film ALIEN: COVENANT which pushes this latter idea to the furthest limits it has ever been since James Whales’ classic BRIDE OF FRANKENSTIEN (1935), with its revelation that the Xenomorphs are the creation of PROMETHEUS’s sociopathic, sexually frustrated and now possibly gay (or at least bi) android David who has given rise to such horrors as a byproduct of his angst over his inability to [pro]create.  
As Mitchell noted it does appear that, in the end, the alien – and dinosaur – are indeed actually the “monstrous double” of the very systems of social indoctrination and control which surround our everyday lives. And even more troubling, according to the ALIEN films, they’re winning.      
SOURCES    
Bellin, Joshua. Framing Monsters (Southern Illinois University Press, 2005)
Debus, Allen A. Dinosaurs Ever Evolving (McFarland Press, 2016)
Fulwiler, William. “E.R.B. and H.P.L.” in Black Forbidden Things, Edited by Robert M. Price (Starmont House, 1992)
Joshi, S.T. and David E. Schultz. An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia (Hippocampus Press, 2004) 
McWilliam, David. “Beyond the Mountains of Madness: Lovecraftian Cosmic Horror and Posthuman Creationism in Ridley Scott’s Prometheus (2012)” in the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts Vol. 26, Iss. 3 (Idaho State University, 2015) 
Mitchell, W.J.T. The Last Dinosaur Book (University of Chicago Press, 1998)
Price, Robert M. “About The Greatest Adventure” in The Antarktos Cycle 2nd Ed., Edited by Robert M. Price (Chaosium Inc., 2006)  Valaquen, “Alien and its Antecedents” (Feb 26, 2015) at Strange Shapes: https://alienseries.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/alien-and-its-antecedents/
* The ALIEN films are particularly notorious for ending on what seems to be a positive note only to pull the rug out from under the characters in the sequel. ALIEN ends with Ripley seemingly having survived her encounter with a Xenomorph only for the sequel, ALIENS, to reveal that she has been in hypersleep for 57-years with everyone she’s ever known and loved having died. ALIENS then ends with Ripley being granted a surrogate family in the form of Newt and Hicks only for ALIEN3 to open with the revelation that Newt and Hicks were killed while in hypersleep. PROMETHUS likewise seems to end on a somewhat positive note with Shaw having survived and it is only in ALIEN: COVENANT that we learn that Shaw was subsequently murdered and experimented on by David. COVENANT actually breaks with tradition by ending on an overt downer; it is clear in the film’s closing moments that Dany and everyone else onboard the Covenant is doomed.         
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verdaidealisto · 6 years
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ANTARKTO: «LA GLAĈERO DE LA MORTO» PERDIS 14 MILIARDOJN DA TUNOJ DA GLACIO EN DAURO DE 3 JAROJ
ANTARKTO: «LA GLAĈERO DE LA MORTO» PERDIS 14 MILIARDOJN DA TUNOJ DA GLACIO EN DAURO DE 3 JAROJ
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05/02/2019
Giganta kavo, kiu disvolviĝas funde de la glaĉero Thwaites en Antarkto estis malkovrita de la Nasa. Se tiu ĉi plu grandiĝos, la nivelo de la akvoj leviĝos danĝere.
La glaĉero Thwaitesestas unu el la plej vastaj en okcidenta Antarkto, kaj estas ankaŭ unu el la plej studataj de la sciencistoj, kiuj timas ĝian baldaŭan disfalon, dum tiu jarcento. La lastaj datumoj pri ĝi ne…
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Mansarovar lake
I’ve been told that the entire continent of Antarctica groaned at the moment of my birth. The howl tore across glaciers, over mountains and deep into the ice. Everyone says so. Except for my father; all he heard was Mother’s sobs. Not of pain, but of joy, so he says. Other than that, the only verifiable fact about the day I was born is that an iceberg the size of Los Angeles broke free from the ice shelf, a few miles off the coast. Again, some would have me believe the fracture took place as I entered the world. But all that really matters, according to my parents, is that I, Solomon Ull Vincent, the first child born on Antarctica-the first and only Antarctican-was born on September 2nd, 1974. If only someone could have warned me that upon my return to the continent of my birth, thirteen years later, I would be kidnapped, subjected to tortures beyond comprehension and forced to fight…and kill. If only someone had hinted that I’d wind up struggling to survive in a subterranean world full of ancient warriors, strange creatures and supernatural powers. Had I been warned, I might have lived a normal life. The human race might have remained safe. And the fate of the world might not rest on my shoulders. Had I been warned… This is my story-the tale of Solomon Ull Vincent-The Last Hunter. This collected edition of The Antarktos Saga includes all five books in the series-Descent, Pursuit, Ascent, Lament and Onslaught, as well as never before seen art and character designs inspired by the series, an exclusive short story titled “The Children of Antarktos” and an interview with bestselling author Jeremy Robinson, composed primarily of questions asked by fans of the series. [amz_corss_sell asin=”0988672553″] The Last Hunter I've been told that the entire continent of Antarctica groaned at the moment of my birth. The howl tore across glaciers, over mountains and deep into the ice.
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gipsiking · 10 years
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Paperback Domain
Paperback Domain The Last Hunter - Pursuit: Antarktos Saga, Book 2 http://bit.ly/1tOs6NZ
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