“Indeed I do… the Power of all Hell-Fire!”, by Mike Ploog, with Letters by Jon Costa, and a Script by Gary Friedrich.
Pics: Inspiring HPL.
1. Irvin S. Cobb - American writer, editor, humorist & columnist hailing from Paducah, Kentucky¹.
He was the highest paid staff reporter on the NY World newspaper².
Irvin would write 60+ books & around 300 short stories.
Some of which were adapted into silent movies. And, 2 of his later tales were actually filmed, by the famed John Ford³, during the 1930s!
2. Cobb's "dark side" (horror works) of the otherwise lighthearted comedian & the story in question.
3 & 4. Comedic frontpieces(?) for books by Cobb. The 2nd even boasts an Abraham Lincoln quote!
5. Cover to Cobb's collection of other authors's short horror tales.
6. Inside art from Fishhead's ending...
1913 Addendum -
Intro: Irvin Cobb's infamous short story "Fishhead" is set in the back- wood bayous of the vast Reelfoot Lake⁴.
Plot: The tale concerns the murder of a local outcast freak by "poor whites."
With its surprise Jaws⁵-like ending, this gruesome work reminds readers of an issue of EC comics⁶!
Criticism: Lovecraft lauded Cobb for, "... Carrying on our (own) spectral tradition is the gifted... humorist, I.S. Cobb, whose works... contain some finely (made) weird (tales)."
Of the plot, Howard stated that, "Fish- head" (is) an early achievement, ... banefully effective in its portrayal of (an) unnatural... hybrid idiot & the strange fish of an isolated lake."
Lovecraft further opined, "It is (my firm) belief... that... few short stories of equal merit have been published anywhere (else)..."
Legacy: Cobb's "Fishhead" is seen as a major influence on Lovecraft's own "Shadow Over Innsmouth."
Robert M. Price⁷ noted that, "What (Howard) found revolting was the idea of interracial marriage (&) of different ethnicities mating, (thus) 'polluting' the (white? human?) gene pool."
Fishhead is supposedly "the son of a Negro father & a halfbreed Indian mother." It's never mentioned what her other half was from...
This is the same premise behind HPL's "The Shadow Over Innsmouth."
Except that Lovecraft calls them Deep Ones & has a whole city that's been 'turned'...
More when we get to this story...
Notes:
1. Paducah, as 1 out of 9 U.S. Creative Cities, is a haven for thinkers, artists & creators!
Architectural Digest recognizes this city's historic district as 1 of the most beautiful main streets in America.
There are 20 downtown blocks listed in the National Register of Historic Places!
Weird Shit: Paducah's nickname is "The Atomic City."
This was because it was once the U.S.'s only uranium plant, making atomic bombs for our Defense Department...
2. The NY World newspaper began (in 1860) as a leading voice for the US Democratic Party.
But, once under Joseph Pulitzer, it became a pioneer in "yellow journalism."
Catching readers's attention with sensational (sex, sport & scandal) news stories.
This raised their circulation past the 1 million mark!!
Best known for being among the 1st to publish daily comic strips.
They actually created "Hogan's Alley", "Everyday Movies", "Little Mary Mix- up" & "Joe Jinks!"
Merged with The NY Telegram in 1931.
Revived - online - in 2011 by Columbia U. But, hasn't had any new content since 2016...
3. John Ford was an American movie director who won Oscars for "The Informer", "The Grapes of Wrath", "How Green Was My Valley" & "The Quiet Man."
The best of his many Westerns are "The Searchers", "Stagecoach" & "My Darling Clementine."
4. Reelfoot Lake is a real lake best known for its shallowness - about 5½ feet on average.
It's located in western Tennessee &, strangely enough, no swimming is allowed there...
The lake is named after an 1800's Chickasaw warrior with a deformed leg...
Reelfoot Bayou, with its cypress trees, flows out of the lake to join the Obion River - which runs straight to the Mississippi.
5. "Jaws" is, of course, director Steven Spielberg's 1st international master- piece.
And it doesn't need any hype, from me, for you to see it again!
97% on Rotten Tomatoes!!
Enough said...
Make it so!
6. E.C. Comics was an American publisher specializing in horror, crime, dark fantasy & sci-fi comicbooks.
William Gaines printed mature tales of war, adventure, satire, etc...
Noted for its stories high quality, shock endings & progressive social awareness.
Among the themes that EC creators touched upon are: racial equality, anti- war sentiments, nuclear disarmament & even early environmentalism!
Sadly, official censorship forced EC to focus on its "Mad" magazine - which became it's greatest success!!
EC has just been revived, by Oni Press, on this past February of 2024!!
Good times guaranteed...
7. R.M. Price is an American biblical scholar, author & an authority on H.P. Lovecraft.
His works include: "Deconstructing Jesus", "The Reason Driven Life", "The New Lovecraftian Circle", "World War Cthulhu", "The Disciples of Cthulhu", "Arkham Detective Agency", "The Da Vinci Fraud", "The Apartheid State in Crisis" & more great stuff!!
Price was the editor of the greatly lamented Crypt of Cthulhu, Midnight Shambler & Eldritch Tales fanzines.
He even edited a whole series of Mythos anthologies for Chaosium.
Today, Price is editor of The Journal of Higher Criticism!
Busy little tentacle, ain't he...
Check out this page. Been digging it for a minute.
HP Lovecraft is STAGGERINGLY influential. But he’s on the cusp of people not knowing what he was about/liking his creative output. The person was a fucking zero. An incel, a basement mushroom, and a general waste of oxygen.
As a creative, he created the modern horror genre. His stories are largely unfilmable. The most lovecraftian movie I have ever seen is John Carpenter’s “the Thing”. The idea of existential, unbeatable evil. Something we can’t beat or triumph over. We can fight it, but it will ultimately consume us and destroy us.
Check this page out. He’s cool.
“Can I Keep Him?!”, by Mike Ploog.
Mike Ploog’s The Lord of the Rings poster art
Damn shame they never released the 2nd part of this movie.
The animated movie from the 1970s cuts off roughly in the latter half of the Two Towers, with a never released conclusion promised.
some Storyboard and Conceptual design artwork for John Carpenter’s “the Thing”, by Mike Ploog.
the Fellowship of the Ring, by Mike Ploog, for the Ralph Bakshi Animated Movie from the ‘70s.
the ‘In the Absence of a Hero for the Seventies’ portfolio, from the March 1972 Issue of Esquire Magazine:
Red-Neck, by Bernie Wrightson. Super-Human, by Jeffrey Catherine Jones. Soldier Hero, by Barry Windsor-Smith. the Raider, by Mike Ploog. Comrade Brother, by Ralph Reese. Phizgink, by Alan Weiss.
Mike Ploog: King Kull (Savage Sword of Conan #34)
Marvel
a plethora of paintings by Ploog.
Marvel Spotlight, Vol. 1 # 05*, by Mike Ploog and Morrie Kuramoto. *this is the first appearance of Johnny Blaze as the Ghost Rider. subsequently, the Western Comics version of the Ghost Rider (Carter Slade) was renamed the Phantom Rider.*
Marvel Spotlight #09 (1973)
Art by Mike Ploog
storyboards for a very memorable scene from John Carpenter's "the Thing", by Mike Ploog.
The Marvel(ous) Covers Of Mike Ploog
Always glad to see some Ploog lovin’ on my dash.
this Werewolf-by-Night licensing PinUp by Mike Ploog was released as a sticker through a joint venture between Marvel and Topps Trading cards.
Marvel Premiere, Vol. 1 # 05 and 07, by Mike Ploog.