In
which we take a closer look at each issue of the magazine. For our capsule
history of the magazine, go here.
Volume
1, number 12 (March, 1982)
Cover
art: Tito Salomoni
TZ Publications, Inc.
President
& Chairman: S. Edward Orenstein
Secretary/Treasurer:
Sidney Z. Gellman
Executive
Vice Presidents: Leon Garry, Eric
Protter
Executive
Publisher: S. Edward Orenstein
Publisher:
Leon Garry
Associate
Publisher & Consulting Editor: Carol
Serling
Editorial
Director: Eric Protter
Editor:
T.E.D. Klein
Managing
Editor: Jane Bayer
Assistant
Editors: Steven Schwartz, Robert
Sabat
Contributing
Editors: Gahan Wilson, Robert
Sheckley
Design
Director: Derek Burton
Art
and Studio Production: Georg the
Design Group
Production
Director: Edward Ernest
Controller:
Thomas Schiff
Administrative
Asst.: Doreen Carrigan
Public
Relations Manager: Jeffrey Nickora
Accounting
Mgr.: Chris Grossman
Circulation
Director: William D. Smith
Circulation
Manager: Janice Graham
Eastern
Circulation Mgr.: Hank Rosen
Western
Newsstand Consultant: Harry Sommer
Advertising
Manager: Rachel Britapaja
Adv.
Production Manager: Marina Despotakis
Advertising
Representatives: Barney O’Hara &
Associates, Inc.
Contents:
--In the Twilight Zone: “Pleasant Dreams
. . .” by T.E.D. Klein
--Other Dimensions: Books by Robert
Sheckley
--Other Dimensions: Screen by Gahan
Wilson
--Other Dimensions: Music by Jack
Sullivan
--TZ Interview: Fritz Leiber
--“The Man Who Never Grew Young” by
Fritz Leiber
--“The New Man” by Barbara Owens
--“The Return of the Screw” by Kevin
Cook
--“Crusoe in New York” by Ron Goulart
--Some THING wicked This Way Comes! by
Ed Naha
--TZ Screen Preview: Stab by James Verniere
--“The Bite” by Elizabeth Morton
--“Incident on Park Bench 37” by Robert
E. Vardeman
--“Three Bananas” by Larry Tritten
--“Sleep” by Steve Rasnic Tem
--“Breakthrough” by Richard Stooker
--Show-by-Show Guide: TV’s Twilight
Zone: Part Twelve
--TZ Classic Teleplay: “A Passage for
Trumpet” by Rod Serling
--Looking Ahead: In April’s TZ
--In
the Twilight Zone: “Pleasant Dreams . . .” by T.E.D. Klein
-Klein
spends his editorial space writing about dreams and their influence on fantasy
fiction. He alludes to H.P. Lovecraft’s dream stories, particularly the early
story “The Statement of Randolph Carter,” and muses on the origin of “Persons
from Porlock,” a term denoting the incident in which Samuel Taylor Coleridge
was interrupted by a visitor from Porlock while attempting to complete his dream-influenced
poem “Kubla Kahn,” which he never finished. Klein then introduces this issue’s
contributors with brief bios and thumbnail images.
--Other
Dimensions: Books by Robert Sheckley
-Sheckley
reviews a clutch of then-current fantasy and horror books. Briefly, here’s what
he had to say:
On
Ghost
Story by Peter Straub: “Straub’s interweaving of details, action, and
apparently unconnected events is finely done. This is a first-rate horror
novel, in a class with the work of Stephen King and one or two others: not to
be missed.”
On
Congo by Michael
Crichton: “Crichton is fun to read. His prose is clear, he knows what he’s
talking about, and he tells a compelling story. What else must the guy do?
Can’t we forgive him for not revealing the darkest secrets of the human heart?”
On
The
Fantastic Stories of Cornell Woolrich
edited by Francis M. Nevins: “Woolrich
lacked a way with words. Reading him, we know why the pulps died.”
On
The
Nameless by Ramsey Campbell: “I wasn’t much taken with this novel, but I suspect
it’s a pretty fair one. The pace picks up steadily throughout; there are some
scary sequences, and a neat resolution at the end.”
On
Splatter
Movies by John McCarty: “This is a large-format paperback with many black and
white stills from splatter movies past and present, and an informative and
interesting commentary.”
On Is Nothing Sacred? by Gahan
Wilson: “Wilson is a master of graveyard humor. He comes up with bizarre twists
on everyday situations and everyday twists on bizarre situations.”
--Other
Dimensions: Screen by Gahan Wilson
-Wilson
reviews the delightful 1981 British fantasy film Time Bandits, written
and directed by the American expatriate Terry Gilliam, a member of Monty Python
who also directed such well-regarded SF films as Brazil and 12 Monkeys. Wilson spends the majority of his glowing review on the cast and it is
an impressive one: Sean Connery, David Warner, Shelley Duvall, Ian Holm,
Michael Palin, Ralph Richardson, and John Cleese, among others. The late
Beatle, George Harrison, was an executive producer on the film and provided the
song “Dream Away” for the production. Wilson briefly examines fantasy films
concerning children who find their way into a fantasy world, such as Dorothy in
The Wizard of Oz. Since Wilson
enjoyed the film he gives it a thorough comb through to uncover interesting
instances of character and circumstance. Wilson’s reviews are far more
informative than the average offering and as such come recommended.
--Other
Dimensions: Music by Jack Sullivan
-Sullivan
is back with another installment in his examination of classical macabre music.
Sullivan provides listings of the best then-current recordings of the
selections he covers. If you have an interest in classical music, particularly
macabre music, then this essay series is required reading. It is a thorough,
dense examination of a niche subject and the only place I have seen such space
devoted to cataloging the subject.
--TZ
Interview: Fritz Leiber: SF’s Wizard-in-Residence
Interview
by Paul Sammon
-If
you read this blog regularly then you likely know my affinity for the works of
Fritz Leiber (1910-1992). Leiber was one of the finest of the late-era pulp
writers who made titles such as Unknown
and Weird Tales essential reading for fantasy and horror fans. Leiber was the son of
successful stage and film actors and initially pursued an acting career before
discovering a love of writing through voracious reading and correspondence with
his friend Harry Fischer. Inspired by Fischer, Leiber began his most notable
work, the stories and novels recounting the adventures of the sword-and-sorcery
duo Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. The first story in the series, “Two Sought
Adventure” (1939), was Leiber’s first professionally published work of fiction
and began a series he would continue to work on for the rest of his life. Leiber
refined the sword-and-sorcery genre by adding humor and a high literary style
to his tales. Later in life Leiber was paid regular royalties by game publisher
TSR for the influence of Leiber’s tales on the popular roleplaying game Dungeons
& Dragons. Leiber was awarded Grand
Master recognition in the fields of science fiction, fantasy, and horror.
-This
interview shines a light on many aspects of Leiber’s personal and professional
lives, including his early acting roles, his work in the pulps, his
correspondence with H.P. Lovecraft, the occasional adaptations of his works in
film and television (including two Night
Gallery episodes: “The Dead Man” and “The
Girl With the Hungry Eyes” as well as Burn, Witch, Burn (aka Night of the Eagle) an adaptation of Leiber’s novel Conjure
Wife by writers Richard Matheson and
Charles Beaumont), his current projects, and even his battle with alcoholism.
Leiber’s incredible range as a writer comes through clearly. He was equally
adept at the story, novel, or essay in the genres of horror, fantasy, science
fiction, and, occasionally, detective fiction. Leiber speaks on his influences
in all of these genres and his inspiration in creating some of his most notable
works, such as his World Fantasy Award-winning masterpiece Our Lady of
Darkness.
-The
one aspect of the magazine I have been most impressed with since beginning this
read-through is the interviews with the leading genre writers of the day. These
interviews are conducted by seasoned genre journalists and are very in-depth.
Often the interviewer will have conducted the interview with the subject over a
number of days, not hours, as was the case with Sammon’s interview of Leiber.
If you are a fan of such interview books as Faces of Fear by Douglas E.
Winter or Dark Dreamers by Stanley
Wiater then I highly recommend tracking down these early issues for the
interviews.
-Paul
Sammon, interviewer, is a longtime genre journalist and editor probably best
known for Future Noir, his book-length examination of Ridley
Scott’s film Blade Runner. Sammon
also edited two now-collectible anthologies from the ‘90s: Splatterpunks:
Extreme Horror (1990) and Splatterpunks
II: Over the Edge (1995).
--“The
Man Who Never Grew Young” by Fritz Leiber
Illustrated by José Reyes
“The classic tale of a backwards
Methuselah and a future that didn’t work.”
-An
old man witnesses the course of human events turn backwards from the future to
the earliest civilizations.
-Accompanying
the interview with Fritz Leiber is this 1947 story. It was first published in
Leiber’s first book, Night’s Black
Agents (Arkham House). The collection is
a Leiber sampler, with examples of his supernatural horror, his urban horror,
and his sword-and-sorcery with “The Man Who Never Grew Young” serving as a
transition piece from the older settings of the fantasy pieces to the
contemporary settings of the horror tales. It is a short, clever, and affecting
meditation on the failures of mankind. It is told from the point of view of an
aged man who witnesses the world around him grow young (revert backwards) while
he remains old. Leiber alludes to several notable events in human history and
ends the story on a haunting, open-ended note. The story has been reprinted
many times. It was first reprinted in Avon Fantasy Reader No. 9 (1949) and included in The Best of Fritz
Leiber (1974), a collection which focuses
on the best of Leiber’s science fiction.
--“The
New Man” by Barbara Owens
Illustrated by E.T. Steadman
“In which madness takes the form of a
smiling, freckle-faced twelve-year-old boy.”
-A
recovering alcoholic is confronted by a young boy who claims to be his son. The
young boy’s unwanted presence in the man’s life brings madness and ruin.
-Although
Barbara Owens’ story is an effective horror tale, very much in the style of The Twilight Zone, it
is even more effective as an examination of a recovering alcoholic. Owens
perfectly captures the daily struggles of the recovering alcoholic, from having
to say no to a drink with the boss to the inability to repair trust issues with
a family that has been burned too often. Owens uses a rather simple setup to
propel the story into a bleak, character-driven tragedy. The story was later
adapted as the premier episode of Tales from the Darkside (after the pilot episode, “Trick or Treat,”
which aired the previous year). The tale was adapted by writer Mark Durand and
director Frank De Palma, starring Vic Tayback as recovering alcoholic Alan
Coombs, Kelly Jean Peters as his long-suffering wife, and Chris Hebert as
Jerry, the young boy who brings ruin to Coombs’ life. The television adaptation
slightly alters the ending of the tale, somewhat muting its effectiveness, but
the episode can be recommended on the strength of Tayback’s harrowing
performance. T.E.D. Klein included the story in the premier issue of the TZ
Magazine sister publication Night Cry.
-Barbara
Owens (1934-2008) wrote a number of short horror, fantasy, and mystery stories
in the ‘80s and ‘90s, with “The New Man” marking her first sale to an SF
magazine. She published another story, “Something Evil,” in the August, 1982
issue of TZ Magazine as well as the story “Portrait: Edward Larabee” in the
August, 1986 issue and a final story, “Sliding,” in the August, 1988 issue. She
published a number of stories in The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction as
well as in mystery digest magazines. Her story, “The Cloud Beneath the Eaves,”
published in the January, 1978 issue of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, won the Edgar Allan Poe Award, beating out
the likes of Bill Pronzini and Donald E. Westlake.
--“The
Return of the Screw” by Kevin Cook
Illustrated by Randy Jones
“When a 15X2 hex-head cap screw says
he’s sending alligators after you, chances are he’s telling the truth.”
-A
slovenly laborer is confronted by an alien intelligence housed inside a screw.
The alien informs the man that everything humanity has ever experienced is
fabricated by the alien and his fellow kind. An unfortunate accident proves the
alien is telling the truth.
-This
first in an overabundance of humorous stories in the issue is largely composed of
a series of gags played on a hapless human by an unseen alien intelligence,
including a liberal use of alligators to keep said human in line. The story
builds to a punchline ending in which the screw which houses the alien
intelligence is accidently knocked into a boiling vat of zinc, the only
chemical element able to subvert the alien intelligence. After this occurrence,
the world and everything in it falls away since the alien was creating all the
narrator perceived. Kevin Cook placed another story with the magazine with
“Omniscient Mitch & The Million-Dollar Pain & Gain Machine,” which
appeared in the August, 1988 issue. He is also a frequent letter-writer to
genre magazines.
--“Crusoe
in New York” by Ron Goulart
Illustrated by Bruce Waldman
“Maybe it was lonely at the top; it was
certainly desperate at the bottom. But what a destiny awaited him!”
-A
struggling writer of throw-away paperbacks is brooding at the location of a
very successful writer’s latest publicity stunt when he encounters a time
traveler from the future. The time traveler is not only a fan of the writer’s
works but informs the writer that he is admired as a major literary figure in
the future after the success of his novel Crusoe in New York. Elated by
this news, the writer returns to the scene of his rival’s publicity stunt only
to suffer an accident and seal his fate.
-Goulart
(b. 1933) makes another appearance in the magazine with this ironic and
humorous fantasy. The most interesting aspect of the tale is a connection to
writer Harlan Ellison. I have no idea what sort of relationship, if any,
existed between Ellison and Goulart but Ellison is clearly the model for the
successful writer envied by the narrator. In the story, the successful writer
makes use of a specific type of publicity stunt which was also utilized by
Harlan Ellison: writing in a bookstore window. For Ellison, this was a way to
show the public that writing was work and that there was no magic formula to
creating fiction other than sitting down and putting one word after another.
Although this practice is disparaged in the story it was likely nothing more
than a friendly dig at a colleague. “Crusoe in New York” was included in
Goulart’s 1990 collection Skyrocket
Steele Conquers the Universe and Other Media Tales.
--Some
THING Wicked This Way Comes! by Ed Naha
“Hollywood – and a piece of Alaska – are
doubling for Antarctica in John Carpenter’s remake of ‘The Thing.’ Ed Naha
reports from the set.”
-Although
it was generally not well-received during its initial release, John Carpenter’s
The Thing (1982) has become a defining horror film of the 1980s. As much as this
writer enjoys Halloween (1978), The
Thing will remain Carpenter’s best film
to my mind. An adaptation of John W. Campbell, Jr’s 1938 story “Who Goes
There?” it is the tale of a team of scientific explorers besieged at a research
station by a malevolent, shape-shifting alien lifeform. Carpenter’s film is a
more faithful adaptation of Campbell’s story which eschews the love interest of
the first film adaptation, 1951’s The Thing from Another World, and focuses more on the shape-changing
abilities of the alien. The highlights of the film include the cast and makeup
artist Rob Bottin’s stunning creature effects.
-Naha
(b. 1950) is a prolific and accomplished genre journalist and occasional
fiction writer with notable work including a long tenure with Starlog magazine
and several movie novelizations. Naha also wrote two novels during the horror
paperback boom of the 1980s that have become collectible: Breakdown (1988) and Orphans (1989). Naha structures his set visit with interviews with star Kurt
Russell and director John Carpenter. Since the special effects for the film
were kept highly secretive during production, Naha can only hint at what was in
store for audiences in 1982. The interview segments with Kurt Russell and John
Carpenter are rather in-depth and give insight into the process of remaking a
beloved SF film as well as the challenges of shooting the film on a
claustrophobic set. Highly recommended for fans of the film.
--TZ
Screen Preview: Stab by James
Verniere
“Scheider and Streep join Benton and
Newman in a hush-hush modern-day ‘Jack the Ripper’ tale. James Verniere tracks
down a few important clues.
-This
is a full-color preview of the 1982 psychological thriller film Still of the Night, working under the production title Stab. It is a film largely forgotten today which is surprising considering
the star power in front of and behind the camera. It stars Meryl Streep, Roy
Scheider, and Jessica Tandy and was directed by Academy Award winner Robert
Benton. The film largely functions as an homage to Alfred Hitchcock with
several overt sequences recreating memorable moments from Hitchcock’s films. Contemporary
reviews praised the acting and direction but faulted the script for the film’s
lack of success. 1982 was also a very strong year in film and this film likely
suffered from the fact that Streep’s performance in Sophie’s Choice was on its way to winning an Academy Award.
-As
Still of the Night is ostensibly a Jack-the-Ripper tale, an
inset article explores Jack the Ripper in cinema. Naha gives a brief overview
of Red Jack on film, beginning with Hitchcock’s The Lodger (1927) and continuing with the 1944 remake
starring Laird Cregar and directed by John Brahm. Other films covered include A
Study in Terror (1965), Hands of the
Ripper (1971), Murder by Decree (1979), and Time After Time (1979).
--“The
Bite” by Elizabeth Morton
Illustrated by Frances Jetter
“Beware of dogs that bite . . . and also
those that keep their teeth clenched.”
-A
woman comes home to her apartment to find her dog in a corner clenching its
teeth and refusing to open its mouth. She brings it to the vet who has an
office in the building and returns to her apartment. The vet soon calls the
woman and urges her to quickly get out of the apartment. He has found two human
fingers in the dog’s mouth.
-This
story has the feel of a dark urban legend or one of Fredric Brown’s shocking
short-shorts. Sharp and effective. Morton was a pen name for Rosalind Greenberg
(b. 1951) an anthologist and occasional short fiction writer who was married to
prolific anthologist Martin H. Greenberg (1941-2011). “The Bite” was reprinted
in the Fall, 1985 issue of Night Cry.
--“Incident
on Park Bench 37” by Robert E. Vardeman
Illustrated by Marty Blake
“It was fun to sit and watch the world
go by . . . and some things not of
this world!”
-An
old man who sits on the same park bench to feed pigeons each day is suddenly
witness to a form of futuristic punishment as criminals from the future are
sent into the past and appear on his park bench. The old man decides to steal
the time travel mechanism from the next time traveler to appear in order to
escape his dull existence.
-Another
humorous story about time travel. This one runs overlong but is crowned with a
nice ending. Vardeman (b. 1947) is a hugely prolific author of SF and fantasy,
creator of many novel series and prolific writer of media tie-in books.
Interested readers can check Vardeman’s entry on the Internet Speculative
Fiction Database for a listing of his work in SF.
--“Three
Bananas” by Larry Tritten
Illustrated by Larry Blizard
“It was a tough case, but the private
eye knew he’d crack it. All he had to do was comb 21st-century San
Francisco in search of . . .”
-In
the future, a private eye is hired by a wealthy man to track down the only
three known bananas in the world. Fruit has become scare after the attrition of
wars and ecological disaster. The private eye dives into the grimy world of
pornographic video to track down the fate of the bananas.
-This
humorous ode to Raymond Chandler is a bit too self-aware and the intentionally
cartoonish writing style grows tired. It is also the longest story in the
issue. Most of the story functions as humorous imaginings of the foibles of
future society. Tritten (1938-2011) was a prolific short story writer who
placed stories with TZ magazine while also appearing in most of the major SF
magazines of the 1980s and 1990s. His TZ Magazine stories include: “The Grey
Lawns Cold” in the Nov/Dec, 1984 issue and “Televisionaries” in the Feb, 1986
issue. He also placed a story, “Bugs,” in the second issue (Summer, 1985) of Night Cry.
--“Sleep”
by Steve Rasnic Tem
Illustrated by D.W. Miller
“The lucky ones, they say, die in bed.
The unlucky simply lose their way.”
-A
woman who experiences particularly vivid dreams has a premonition of her
husband struggling against a mass wandering people inside a tunnel. She awakens
her husband only to find that he has become lost in the dream world and another
person has taken residence in his body.
-Another
effective short-short with a shock ending. I really enjoyed this story due to
the fact that Tem subverts the reader’s expectations by not playing the drama
for horror but for sadness. The trope which Tem is playing with is astral
projection, the idea that the essence of a person can leave the physical body
during unconsciousness. Tem (b. 1950) is a prolific author known for his
idiosyncratic horror fiction, mostly short stories. He collaborated often with
his wife Melanie Tem (1949-2015). Steve Rasnic Tem has won many awards for his
fiction, including the British Fantasy Award, the Bram Stoker Award, and the
International Horror Guild Award. “Sleep” was reprinted in 100 Great Fantasy Short Short Stories (1984). Valancourt Books recently released a
career retrospective of Tem’s fiction titled Figures Unseen: Selected
Stories.
--“Breakthrough”
by Richard Stooker
Illustrated by Gregory Cannone
“Is he a madman . . . or a messiah?
Perhaps the answer lies in this case history.”
-The
tale of a violent and mentally deranged young man whose life may hold the key to
a larger aspect of existence and the universe.
-This
story is structured like the case history of a mental patient. There are intimations
that the subject, a violent psychotic, is also capable of impossible
intellectual feats, including writing, reading, and speaking dead and ancient
languages. The hints to the subject’s abilities are layered throughout the case
history until the revelation that the subject has engineered an escape from the
mental hospital and is perhaps set to end or take over the world. It is a story
which is intentionally ambiguous and as such will not be to every reader’s
taste. Richard Stooker wrote a few SF stories in the 1970s, including
appearances in Fantastic and Amazing Stories. “Breakthrough” has not been reprinted.
--Show-by-Show
Guide: TV’s Twilight Zone: Part Twelve by Marc Scott Zicree
-Marc
Scott Zicree continues his episode guide to the original series. This issue
begins his coverage of the fourth season and he includes an essay on the
troubles the show underwent after getting abruptly canceled following the third
season before being picked up as a replacement series in an hour-long format.
Zicree gives credits for cast and crew along with Rod Serling’s opening and
closing narrations and a summary for the following episodes: “In His Image,”
“The Thirty-Fathom Grave,” “Valley of the Shadow,” and “He’s Alive,” all of
which we have covered here in the Vortex.
--TZ
Classic Teleplay: “A Passage for Trumpet” by Rod Serling
-Rod
Serling’s classic episode is presented in script form accompanied by stills. “A
Passage for Trumpet” was Serling’s It’s
a Wonderful Life inspired tale about a suicidal
trumpet player who comes to realize the value of life. The episode is notable
for being the first appearance of TZ regulars Jack Klugman and John Anderson.
It originally aired on May 20, 1960 and was directed by Don Medford. You can
read our full review here.
--Looking
Ahead: In April’s TZ
-Next
month’s issue looks to be a good one. We have Dan Simmons’ award-winning first
story, “The River Styx Runs Upstream,” as well as stories from Joan Aiken,
Ramsey Campbell, and Harlan Ellison. The interview subject next time is the man
himself, Rod Serling. Mike Ashley returns to educate us on another classic
horror writer. This time it’s William Hope Hodgson. Ashley includes Hodgson’s
classic tale of nautical horror, “The Voice in the Night,” and I’ll share some
bonus illustrations of the story from my personal collection. The issue also includes a special section detailing
a party celebrating the publication of Marc Scott Zicree’s The Twilight Zone Companion, the guest list of which included many of the writers, actors, and
technicians that Zicree interviewed for his book. See you next time when we’ll
take a closer look.
-JP