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Apr 27, 2021 6 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Britquiz: which of these images most haunted your childhood? ImageImage
Britquiz: which of these is the real British superhero? ImageImage
Britquiz: which of these shows had the best final episode? ImageImage
Britquiz: which of these shows was Yorkshire Television's finest hour? ImageImage
Britquiz: which of these posed the greater danger? ImageImage
Britquiz: who would win in a fight between Magpie and Blue Peter? ImageImage

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More from @PulpLibrarian

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
Oct 31
Time once again for my occasional series "Women with great hair fleeing gothic houses!"

I assume everyone's doing it this #Halloween ? Image
The Legend Of Crownpoint, by Monica Heath. Signet Books, 1974.

A lot of moss on that heath... Image
The Legend Of Holderly Hall, by Kate Cameron. Leisure Books, 1974.

This is number one in a series of four novels, proving that nobody really reads Trip Advisor hotel reviews... Image
Read 11 tweets
Oct 28
In January 1919 a new magazine heralded the dawn of the Weimar era. Its aesthetic was a kind of demented Jugendstil, and its stories were dark gothic fantasies.

This is the story of Der Orchideengarten... Image
Der Orchideengarten: Phantastische Blätter (The orchid garden: fantastic pages) is probably the first ever fantasy magazine. Published in Munich by Dreiländerverlag, a trial issue appeared in 1918 before the first full 24 page edition was published in January 1919. Image
"The orchid garden is full of beautiful - now terribly gruesome, now satirically pleasing - graphic jewelery" announced the advanced publicity. It was certainly a huge departure from the Art Nouveau of Jugend magazine, which German readers were already familiar with. Image
Read 12 tweets
Oct 22
Time for a pulp countdown now, and today I'm looking at my top 10 animals in pulp horror! Image
At no 10: cats! Pretty evil, but can be easily defeated with a laser pointer. Image
At no 9: bees! They only attack if you annoy them, or if you're standing near a jam sandwich. Best to take care in either situation. Image
Read 12 tweets
Oct 15
If stock photography has taught us one thing it's how to recognise a hacker! But how much do we really know about these shady characters, with their ill-fitting balaclavas and their Windows 7 laptops?

Here's my essential stock photography guide to cybersecurity... Image
First things first, hacking has come on leaps and bounds in the last few years. Backing up your sensitive data on C60 cassette and labelling it "Flock of Seagulls Megamix' is no longer enough to keep your information safe! Image
And hackers are actually very hard to spot. That's because they dress head-to-toe in black (or very very very dark grey) since they live on the Dark Web and want to blend into the background. Image
Read 12 tweets
Oct 5
Time once again for our occasional series "Women with great hair fleeing gothic houses!"

And today I count down my Top 10 of most gothic goths a' fleeing... Image
At No 10: The Unlamented, by Dorothy Daniels. Pocket Books, 1975. That's a great goth coat! Image
At No 9: The Haunting of Drumroe, by Claudette Nicole. Fawcett Gold Medal, 1971. Who says a gothic lady can't rock a white nightie in the snow? Image
Read 12 tweets

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