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Please enjoy the wacky world my pencils and paints create for you. As an illustrator I try to bring you a world in which you have not read before or have seen in movies yet. My minds eye comes from behind the curtain in that chocolate factory that Willie Wonka didn't let you peer behind. Now I am opening it for you! Come in and take a look...

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Black Cat Magazine Salem MA

Here Pussy, Pussy...


Salem House Press's Arkham: Tales From the Flipside is not the first magazine from Salem. Take a look at these covers from a distant time in this great city's past.


The magazine's first editor was Herman Umbstaetter (1851–1913).[3][4] It is best known for publishing the story "A Thousand Deaths" by Jack London in the May 1899 issue.[5] Umbstaetter's magazine also carried material by Rupert Hughes, Susan Glaspell, Ellis Parker Butler, Alice Hegan Rice, Holman Day, Rex Stout, O. Henry, Charles Edward Barns, and Octavus Roy Cohen.[2] Although most of its fiction was nonfantastic, The Black Cat occasionally published science fiction stories by authors such as Frank L. Pollack, Don Mark Lemon and Harry Stephen Keeler.[3] It is notable for publishing, in May 1902, an early and uncharacteristically "weird" story by O. Henry entitled "The Marionettes." It also printed the horror story "The Mysterious Card" (1896) by Cleveland Moffett. Clark Ashton Smith contributed two adventure stories to The Black Cat.[3] One noted writer who appeared in the magazine's later years was Henry Miller.[6]

For now check out Arkham: Tales From the Flipside back issues on Amazon.com and visit their page on Salem House Press's website to get free Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Adventure, and Fairy Tale eBooks and streaming Old Time Radio Shows like X-Minus 1and more!!!

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