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Books & Literature

‘Corrections Today’ Advertisements, 1981 – 1988

Though it was Richard Nixon who declared a “war on drugs” in 1971, it was Ronald Reagan’s “zero tolerance” policies in the 1980s that led to a massive spike in incarceration rates for nonviolent drug offenses: from 50,000 in 1980 to over 400,000 by 1997…

March 15, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Double Exposure: ‘The Uninvited: A True Story’ and ‘UFO-Dynamics’

By Richard McKenna and Michael Grasso

Not many books have actually changed my life, but The Uninvited is one of them. Somehow, it coalesced the long-accumulating supernatural- and UFO-related ephemera I had been cramming into my eyes and ears at every opportunity and weaponized it against me…

February 27, 2017 in Books & Literature.

‘Corporate Crime Comics’, 1977 – 1979

Edited by underground writer-cartoonist Leonard Rifas and published by Denis Kitchen’s Kitchen Sink Press, both issues of Corporate Crime Comics present a “collection of corporate atrocity stories” written and illustrated by a variety of prominent voices in the underground comics scene…

February 23, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Is There No Alternative?: The Life and Work of Mark Fisher

By Michael Grasso

Two years ago at Christmas, I parlayed a then-recent obsession with the weird, haunted media of 1970s Britain and the field of hauntology into an Amazon Wish List. When my wife and I were in the UK visiting family, I found most of that list waiting for me under the tree. A king’s ransom, for me the Yank, of barely-remembered and never-seen British television series…

February 21, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Technology Worship and Human Debasement in Erich von Däniken’s ‘Chariots of the Gods?’

By K.E. Roberts

The idea that alien astronauts visited the Earth at some point in primitive human history, endowing us with imagination and ingenuity—and possibly our genetic code—has become the cult religion of a hyper-materialistic Western world that consecrates nothing beyond its own egomaniacal gadgetry…

February 6, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Double Exposure: ‘Compute!’s Guide to Adventure Games’ and ‘Owning Your Home Computer’

By Brother Bill and Mikey Walters

Compute!’s Guide to Adventure Games is one of a series of small, spiral-bound books intended for home computer users and programmers, produced by Compute! magazine, at the time a major reviewer of hardware and software…

January 18, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Double Exposure: ‘After the Bomb’ and ‘The Last Ranger’

By Richard McKenna and K.E. Roberts

It ought to be easy to be glib about After the Bomb. A “young adult” book from the mid-’80s about nuclear war is surely bursting with pastel-clad teens exchanging Valley Girl dialogue and adjusting their melting shoulder pads in the white heat of international brinkmanship…

January 5, 2017 in Books & Literature.

‘Baby and Child Care’ by Dr. Benjamin Spock, 1946

In the rapidly changing, highly prosperous world in which they found themselves after the Second World War, American parents began to seek more modern sources of information regarding the best way to rear their offspring…

January 3, 2017 in Books & Literature.

This Is the End: American Apocalypse in Ira Levin’s ‘Rosemary’s Baby’

By K.E. Roberts

Rosemary’s Baby, both Ira Levin’s 1967 bestseller and Roman Polanski’s meticulously faithful film adaptation of 1968, seeded the American consciousness with infernal terror at precisely the moment the country was supposed to be suffering its most desperate crisis of faith…

January 2, 2017 in Books & Literature.

Temples Among the Stars: AudiSee Adventures and the Mormon Sci-Fi Connection

By Richard McKenna

“Brace yourself for an exciting, realistic sight and sound journey into another world…” Such was the promise emblazoned on the star-spangled blue packaging of the AudiSee titles, a series of “stereo dramatizations,” science-fiction audiobooks on cassette, each accompanied by a glossy, full-color illustrated booklet…

December 7, 2016 in Books & Literature.

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