Sunday, December 31, 2023

MAPS OF THE UNKNOWN: The Harmonic Grid Over New Zealand




Our final post of the year is a trio of maps from New Zealand pilot and ufologist Bruce Cathie (1930-2013), detailing his theories of a harmonic energy grid utilized by UFOs. The maps are from Cathie's book The Energy Grid, a revised combination of two of his earlier books: Harmonic 695, the UFO and Anti-gravity and The Pulse of the Universe, Harmonic 288. Cathie's theorizing is reminiscent of a similar older work, Flying Saucers and the Straight Line Mystery by French ufologist Aime Michel.

Courtesy Adventures Unlimited Press, 1997 (original pub 1990).

GOODBYE CHAIRMAN MAO by Christopher New




MI6 faces an unthinkable task: save Chairman Mao! Author Christopher New has written a thriller around the audacious Project 571, a purported coup plot against Mao by supporters of Vice Chairman Lin Biao that also incorporates the mysterious Lin Biao Incident of September 13, 1971 wherein Biao, along with his wife and son, perished when the aircraft carrying them to safety in the USSR crashed in the hinterlands of Mongolia. The events are still shrouded in mystery, so New has plenty of room for cloak and dagger fictionalization. His tack is to focus on a secret code discovered by MI6 that implicates the USSR in an attempt to depose Mao and redirect China's recent moves to detente with the USA. It's a sort of sick correction to the Sino-Soviet split that would see the People's Republic as a junior partner or client state to the USSR, and the only thing more frightening to our British boys than this outcome is if the plot fails and China falls into a new civil war ... the PRC has only just detonated their first nuclear weapons at their test site in Lop Nur, and the implications of a new nuclear power wracked by coup and counter-coup are terrifying.

New writes his geopolitics in intimate, close scenes, whether we're dealing with Mao's inner circle, the odd man on the street, or the boys in the cryptography department. It's an engrossing style that avoids overburdening us with the usual dramatis personae that can weigh down these kinds of thrillers with lists of bureaucrats and war room attendees, and it gives us an immediacy that levels the characters and allows us to see that even at the highest levels of power the men involved are just that: mortal men, sometimes unsure of themselves, sometimes doubting or afraid. New's Chinese characters are all done in Wade-Giles style by the way, so that'll be Mao Tse-tung and Lin Piao throughout, and they'll be operating out of Peking.

The vagueness around Project 571 in English language sources gives New lots of room for suspense despite the ultimate outcome being known, especially when it comes to characters like crank writer and one-time MI6 cryptographer Coomb, now dragged back into the game after decades of anti-nuclear letter campaigns from his self-imposed exile on an island off Hong Kong, where he lives in bitter martyrdom with his Chinese wife and leukemia stricken daughter. 

Maybe it's cheeky of New to saddle MI6 with Mao's salvation, or maybe not, but nothing's a sure thing in his story besides his use of repetition - as our characters jet back and forth from Hong Kong to the UK they fly over the plains of India where New tells up repeatedly that "half a million people look up vacantly and starve." As Coomb is sucked into MI6's plans to uncover more of that secret code, we're taken along into that most heartbreaking part of spy fiction, the places where we see human lives ground up by giant unthinking machines, where lives can end with a flick of a wrist leading to a bullet in the head, or not-so-random accidents that demand innocent bystanders suffer for the sake of a coverup that may be forgotten tomorrow. One conspirator dooms himself through a prideful boast, another through his own weak nerves driving him to run even as he knows the KGB is watching. Meanwhile, Coomb drives on to decipher the code, even as his daughter slips away and he spits venom at the government men who so thoughtlessly manage his contacts.

Spoilers ahead for the secret Russian code, so look away if you like to figure that stuff out on your own:


I'm no good at cryptography myself

As we come to the climax New is more interested in the fallout among his characters than the nitty gritty of Project 571, and his brief, uncertain vignettes in the halls of power serve as a reminder that even in this fictional story, the truth is frustratingly hard to grasp.


New's restrained "what-if" writing and sensitive touch earns Goodbye Chairman Mao a sturdy 3/4 rating.

Popular Library, 1980 (original pub 1979)

Saturday, December 23, 2023

BRAK VS. THE MARK OF THE DEMONS by John Jakes




Pain dazzled behind his eyes. Once more he retreated, seeking firm ground. The shale betrayed him again. He broke his fall with one elbow at the last instant. The bird-thing swiped at him with its talon. Brak hitched out of the way. The talon tore a hole in the earth where he'd been. 
Lying on his side, Brak struck the bird-thing's leg, struck again. Gristle parted. Ichor glistened between stringy fibers. The monster's weight collapsed its leg. 
Brak scrambled up, panting. The beak probed for his eyes. He jumped in the air. The beak shot between his legs. He came down astride it, the gray world tilting, whirling -
Conan, Kyrik, Tark, and now ... Brak the barbarian, a rangy blond warrior down from the north, locked in an endless trek for far Khurdisan. The foul wizard Septegundus has cursed him that he'll never reach his destination, and at the moment it seems the curse may prevail, for Brak is trapped in the trackless Logol wastes, an endless realm of shifting sands and the skin scouring Skulwind. Things get even worse when he rescues the weird twins Ky and Kya from a skeletal bird beast. They claim to be exiled nobility, but something about them puts Brak on edge. Soon enough they've joined with a ragged caravan ran by the trader Hadrios and his daughter Helane, and it should be smooth sailing to the city of Samarind, and then on to Khurdisan ...

And then the killing starts.

Alive with pleasure ... and terror!

Author John Jakes was a prolific writer, active in SF and fantasy while also finding mainstream success with his historical epic series The Kent Family Chronicles


This entry in Brak's ongoing adventures shows Jakes as a sure hand, ably mixing elements of horror with a solid swords and sorcery foundation. Brak is a tough customer, a tall blond fighter who wears a lion skin and a ponytail. He brooks no guff, but he's also polite enough when not tussling with assassins and brigands, and doesn't seem interested in courtly intrigue or lost treasures. He and Helane hit it off fast, and Brak proves a gentleman in his conduct with her. The supporting cast are well crafted, a good example being the "Nestorian" priest Pol who struggles with his faith even as he searches for answers to the demonic threat. Nestorianism is of course Jakes' fantasy interpretation of Christianity, just as the raiders of Quran belong to some kind of pre-Islamic Arabic city-state. Those fearsome Quran fighters all wear a red jewel in place of their left eyes, and Jakes excels at fantasy details like these. He gives us some creepy river critters too, some kind of catfish with little bug legs that take chunks out of our cast. I love this kind of swords and sorcery writing, with a fairly grounded world that is nevertheless beset by dark forces and filled with weird corners. The demon blood-eaters are a great portrayal of vampiric evil in a dark fantasy setting, and meanwhile our barbarian hero's nemesis Septegundus worships the dark entity Yob-Haggoth in an easy but effective Lovecraft pastiche that adds a cosmic dimension to Brak's struggle. When the unknown strikes, you can feel Brak and co's fear.

Jakes keeps the story moving fast, and before we know it Brak's battling the blood-eaters in the Red City of Quran, and things are looking grim indeed. The climax comes as a blend of classic peplum disaster and the apocalyptic butchery of the sci-fi/horror flick Lifeforce, as the city falls down around us and the blood-eaters are revealed in their truest horrific form. It's a nail biter down to the final page, and even then Jakes leaves us on a melancholy note.





Brak must have conquered the market, because this title has quite a few reprints with varying cover art. The Paperback Library original from 1969 (just above) is a pretty straightforward representation of elements from the story, while the 1977 edition from Pocket Books that tops this entry is in a strange, delicate style that adds generic fantasy imagery such as the alien beast that Brak's astride - in the story, everyone rides regular camels through the desert! The Sphere edition is pretty generic, while the Tower Books version at least gives us the killer bird beast (with friends!). The Sphere says this is Brak's third adventure, while the OG Paperback Library calls it number two. Oh those wacky Brits ...

Brak earns a full 4/4 in his high tension struggle against the demon blood-eaters! Get Brak'd!

Pocket Books, 1977 (original pub. 1969)

Thursday, December 7, 2023

KYRIK FIGHTS THE DEMON WORLD by Gardner F. Fox



The tiger-men were many in number, but those very numbers appeared to hamper them. They could not throw their combined weight against the six, for the alleyway was narrow; they could only come in twos and threes, and Bluefang and Lalery's long dagger and Porthis' horn-handled battle-axe flew to meet them.

"Cat beings from Ulxnar," Myrnis whispered once, and was silent, though Kyrik's bellowings might well have drowned other words. For the warlock-warrior was in his element here, fighting flesh and blood enemies into whose meat he could bury Bluefang, tear its blade free to swing and cleave again. No reptilian horror from Moforgon's realms, these tiger-men, but semi-human beings that could die writhing and screeching on a sword-point.
Once more into the breach, once more, you merry mother grabbers! It's time for another bout of swords and sorcery with the mighty Kyrik, and thankfully our warlock-warrior fares much better here than in his last adventure against the Wizard's Sword. Those skinflints at Leisure Books keep things tight enough on their end - I only caught one typo, misspelling poor Kyrik's name at one point, and no blatant continuity problems like last time. Indeed, Kyrik Fights the Demon World is a slick little narrative, structured almost like a classic DnD game! Our hero and his Gypsy love Myrnis (she's truly Romany in this fantasy world, for what it's worth) fall in with a band of thieves who were tasked to retrieve five magical artifacts for the demon lord Moforgon, only to find that, of course, his dark majesty has even darker designs on our realm, and the artifacts are his key to total dominion over Terra! Moforgon is locked in a rivalry with fellow demon Eldrak, and our mortal heroes will have to navigate these demonic power politics if they're to survive ... Kyrik's love Myrnis has a secret ally though, in the love goddess Illis, who's temporarily possessed her!

More smokes!

Author Fox delivers some classic sword and sorcery action right from the start in this one, with Kyrik gifted a treasure map from a dying thief in an alleyway. Before you know it he's fighting a giant snake to retrieve the Bells of Salmalinda from the bowels of a ruined temple in the Doomday Swamps - and if that kind of cheerful nonsense perks you up, this is the story for you. Fox's worldbuilding is a mite goofier than Robert E. Howard's classic Hyperborea, but he succeeds in transporting us to his dark fantasy world with strong, professional prose, even if we can see the story guardrails guiding our heroes through to their epic showdown with Moforgon. It all culminates in a hellish fight through a demonic fortress projecting into our realm, with skeletal wraiths tearing through the walls and floors, bedevilments to resist, and evil priests to slay. The thieve's band is whittled down, with the gorgeous platinum haired (and purple eyed!) Lalery the obvious survivor - and rival to Myrnis for Kyrik's love-lust! Fox handles his characters with some subtlety despite their circumstances, which is appreciated. True to his title as warlock-warrior, Kyrik is more comfortable with dark magics than your average barbarian, so wizards had better beware.

The atmospheric cover art is by Ken Barr, and it does well enough for not having much to do with the story. Kyrik Fights the Demon World is available to read for free and to purchase as an ebook at the Gardner Francis Fox Library. This Kyrik adventure earns a muscular 3/4 rating for good, strong barbarian thrills!

Leisure Books, 1975

Saturday, December 2, 2023

THE BERMUDA TRIANGLE CALENDAR: December 1975



December greets the Triangle Legend with two heavy hitters: the discovery of the abandoned Mary Celeste in 1872 and the disappearance of the legendary Flight 19, a group of five Navy trainers who were lost with all hands in the Triangle in 1945, along with a search and rescue plane that followed them into oblivion. Kusche's The Bermuda Triangle Mystery - Solved demystifies some of the legend around Lt. Charles C. Taylor and his crew, including the full flight transcript which lacks the famous line "they look like they're from outer space!" which populated more sensational midcentury retellings, implying the fliers had been kidnapped by flying saucers.

Grumman TBF-1 Avengers, identical to Flight 19

The doomed Lt. Taylor

A Martin PBM-5 Mariner, the same type lost in search of Flight 19

Kusche's book included his best estimates of Flight 19's doomed path, with Lt. Taylor becoming disoriented and believing his flight had gotten turned around and was over the Florida Keys, leading him to fly the team out into the empty North Atlantic until their fuel ran out in an attempt to reach land that was actually far south behind them:




This modern reconstruction from wikipedia matches Kusche's work:


The photo star of the month, however, is a DC-3 that disappeared on a flight from Puerto Rico to Miami in 1948, with the loss of 29 passengers and 3 crew.

Lawrence David Kusche, 1974