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Jul 4, 2020 12 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Time for a pulp countdown now, and today it's my top 10 weird drinks adverts!

Stand by for a world of sophistication... #PubsReopening Image
At #10: port! It's basically turbo-wine for getting through Christmas. Port & Pepsi however is an anytime pick-me-up... Image
At #9: Guinness! Liquid power that tastes... well let's just say there's a reason they don't sell it warm any more. Image
At #8: Rosé. It's kinda creepy... Image
At #7: Canadian whisky! Where's that hand going young lady? Image
At #6: Blatz! Liberace loves it, and that's good enough for me.

"I wish my brother George was here..." Image
At #5: Dry Sack! Ask any man for details. Image
At #4: Haig whisky! Chug! Chug! Chug! Image
At #3: vodka! The most important meal of the day... Image
At #2: Babycham! Look how happy he is! Image
And at #1: Jägermeister! It's just happy juice... ImageImageImageImage
More pulp countdowns another time. I'll leave you in the capable hands of the Tennent's Lager Lovelies!

Sylvia says "drink responsibly..." Image

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More from @PulpLibrarian

Dec 19
Today in pulp I'm looking back at some Michael Moorcock books, and having a think about the New Wave of science fiction that started in the 1960s... Image
In Britain the New Wave is often associated with New Worlds magazine, which Moorcock edited from 1964 to 1970. Financial troubles caused the magazine to close in 1970, but it made sporadic comebacks over the subsequent years. Image
However he started as editor of Tarzan Adventures in 1957, where he introduced Sojan the Swordsman - perhaps his first stab at creating an 'eternal champion' character Image
Read 20 tweets
Nov 22
Today in pulp I'm looking back at one of the greatest albums of all time.

What are the chances... Image
By 1976 Jeff Wayne was already a successful composer and musician, as well as a producer for David Essex. His next plan was to compose a concept album. Image
War Of The Worlds was already a well known story, notorious due to the Orson Wells radio play production. For Wayne it seemed like a great choice for a rock opera. Image
Read 15 tweets
Nov 17
Shall we take a look at some classic pinball table backglass art?

I think we should... Image
"Do you like gladiator movies?"

Mars: God of War pinball (Gottleib, 1981) Image
Dr. McCoy has been seriously working out!

Star Trek pinball (Bally, 1979). Image
Read 14 tweets
Nov 12
Today in pulp I'm looking back at a very popular (and collectable) form of art: Micro Leyendas covers! Image
Micro Leyendas (mini legends) are a Mexican form of fumetto, small graphic novels normally pitting the everyday hero against the weird, the occult and the unfathomable. Image
The art of Micro Leyendas is bold, macabre and very funny. The books often tell a cautionary tale of revenge or humiliation, much like a modern folk tale. Image
Read 9 tweets
Nov 9
Today in pulp: what makes a good opening sentence for a pulp novel?

Now this is a tricky one… Image
The opening sentence has an almost mythical status in writing. Authors agonise for months, even years, about crafting the right one. Often it’s the last thing to be written. Image
Which is odd, because very few people abandon a book if they don’t like the first sentence. It’s not like the first sip of wine that tells you if the Grand Cru has been corked! Most people at least finish Chapter One. Image
Read 17 tweets
Nov 7
The Time Machine, Brave New World, 1984: these weren’t the first dystopian novels. There's an interesting history of Victorian and Edwardian literature looking at the impact of modernity on humans and finding it worrying.

Today in pulp I look at some early dystopian books… Image
Paris in the Twentieth Century, written in 1863, was the second novel penned by Jules Verne. However his publisher Pierre-Jules Hetzel rejected it as too gloomy. The manuscript was only discovered in 1994 when Verne’s grandson hired a locksmith to break into an old family safe. Image
The novel, set in 1961, warns of the dangers of a utilitarian culture. Paris has street lights, motor cars and the electric chair but no artists or writers any more. Instead industry and commerce dominate and citizens see themselves as cogs in a great economic machine. Image
Read 25 tweets

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