Tuesday, October 31, 2023

AN INTERVIEW WITH PETER BERGTING, Artist, Writer, Viking

PETER BERGTING

Artist & Writer
 Interview
by Alex Ness

November 1, 2023




“Peter Bergting (born January 23, 1970) is a Swedish author of fantasy, science fiction, and horror. Bergting has published six young adult novels and three graphic novels as well as numerous short stories and editorials in Swedish and English. In collaboration with others, Peter is the author and/or co-author of more than 50 books including 20 graphic novels. Peter is published in the US, Sweden, Norway, Spain, Finland, France, Germany, Denmark, and Italy.”



I met Peter in 2007 or so, when I’d reviewed his work the Portent, he reached out to say thanks. I had read the work and saw that it wasn’t typical, it was showing a character move from innocent or ignorant, to becoming far more aware, and willing to fulfill his destiny. The art of the book was amazing, but I saw more in the tale being told. It was truly excellent art, and my goal after that was to let the world know how good it was.

He illustrated one of my first book's chapters, A LIFE OF RAVENS and it was brilliant work. And I am forever grateful for his assistance in my first endeavor.

We both lost track of the other, for whatever reasons, time, different lives, my health issues. Finding him on Facebook allowed us to renew our friendship.



What has been your greatest learning experience as a creative artist?


To not expect a desired outcome based on how much work you put into your work. Success is, for the most part, completely arbitrary. You never know what will be a hit and what won’t.

We are both humans with mostly DNA Viking blood, to what extent has that informed your work?


Well, I should say Scandinavian DNA to whatever extent that exists. The Vikings were a group of people but they were also Scandinavian. I think it has influenced me to the extent that it has made me more interested in history and how various cultures have come to shape the world around them. But for sure, I love the designs and still incorporate much of the aesthetic in my art.



Also regarding DNA, I wonder, since I've written Viking poems and did drawings of the same since earliest memories, do you think there is something like DNA memories, that is, we remember our ancestors through the sharing of their blood?


Not really, I would love it if that was true, though. I think you may be right, but more in spirit than in blood.

Do you make day trips to archeological sites? Or are the tales written by the original Vikings enough to inspire and fuel your work?

I do! There are plenty of sites around where I live. One of my best friends is an archaeologist and we talk about these things. 


Do the present world’s many different crisis situations across the globe influence your process, your stories, your outlook? How so?

Not at all I would say, I try to keep my stories separate from whatever is going. But I guess it’s impossible to escape some of it seeping in.

What is your favorite subject to illustrate, and why?


Oooh… Mist covered highways, that bleak world where anything can exist.

To what extent has AI, computer aided illustration, and other non human hands effect the end result of art in comics today, but beyond today, is the future in the hands of non human intelligence?

This is a topic for another day. We still have to see what will happen with this. I am scared and optimistic but mostly scared to be honest. Right now I don’t see it replacing real artist for comic book work but covers and interior art – for sure, and that is already happening. It will force new and upcoming artist to pursue other areas as they are replaced with authors and others who think they can do basically the same work for free.


I am a great fan of your work, and find your success in Europe and the US to be a great victory for the internet and world wide culture. Would you have still been an artist and writer had you been born and lived 50 years before you had?


I would love to think so, but going back that far, precious few people in my family had the means to pursue a career in art, or even do art on the side. I was blessed to have a mother, father and maternal grandfather who were all talented artist but no one before them even touched a brush or pencil as far as my research has taken me.

This question is for me, my readers may think it self indulgent, but, why do you think poetry is so much more accepted in Europe and Asia than in the US? What kind of culture ignores one of the most time honored ways of translating important events?

But is it? I don’t know. I have a hard time finding poetry I like. Yours I like, and some other writers, but they are precious few. I guess it’s viewed as pretentious. You have to be in a certain mood to really appreciate poetry. And yet, poetry is so close to music and what most would love, reading the lyrics of their favorite songs.



Art is a form of expression for the human experience. How do you see your work's place, in particular, in the world's enjoyment, education, and existence?
 
Not at all, actually. I’m a small fish in a giant pond. If someone has read my work or put a drawing of mine on their wall, then I’m happy. But the more complex answer would be that I want to create, to use whatever time I have here on earth to do stuff that matters, not just scroll through whatever social media platform is the current fave.

Is the reception to your work enormously different in the EU than the US? I've always thought of you as a secret weapon, any work is made better by your presence. Or, is the reception a response from recognition rather than appreciation, that is, an unfamiliar name presents a barrier to digging into the work?



I don’t know, in some groups perhaps, but I do too many things. In Sweden I do graphic novels and children’s books and I think people have a hard time labeling me. In the US I am now a comic book artist, but for years and years I only did art for roleplaying games like Shadowrun and D&D, and was known primarily as someone who worked in that field.

How hard is it to be able to write well in your native tongue, and illustrate epic tales, but be limited by translation, and needing others to edit you in English? Is it a bit frustrating, or does it lead you to aim more at your art skills?
 
I would love to think that I am fluent in English but for sure, it helps to do comics since it’s only dialogue that needs to be translated. English is a much richer language to write in.

Since Life of Ravens came out in 2008 I have written about 7000 poems, and wrote 34 more books. And my prose is just now improving. In that enormous stretch of time, beyond parenting and life in general, how has your artistic life improved, changed, been affected?

Ha, that’s something I don’t like to think about. I see friends who enjoy enormous success but at the cost of not having a family, not having kids. I wouldn’t trade family for anything. Hopefully there’s a middle ground but for the most part, family life and work are completely separated. I worked a hell of a lot more when I was younger, even when the kids were small. My work days are much shorter now, trying to spend more time with my wife and kids (one has left the nest though). Probably six hours, but 20 years ago I would work 12-14 hour days. Looking back at my output in 1994-1995 I was a machine – so many books.

What are some of the upcoming works you can discuss, and do you have any great scheme of something like a master plan of where you hope your artistic and writing talents will take you?  Would you please give me a brief outlook on such?


Right now I’m working Mortal Terror with Chris Golden and Tim Lebbon and LOVING it.



FIND PETER BERGTING

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Heroes

PLANTING SEEDS
By Alex Ness
October 30, 2023

MY SUPERHERO FAVORITES


Heroes are presented in no particular order.

Planted Seeds and the adult taste and sensibilities

Growing up in the late 1960s and early 1970s had benefits and costs. One was relatively safe, in a small town the biggest issue was bullies, and those weren't as bad as the present. But one big issue was needing to see monster movies or sci fi movies, in the theatre, or, during summer break, watch black and white serials and 3 Stooges shorts on the television. There was no such thing as VCRs, or Tivo, or anything similar.  But of those I was able to find, Flash Gordon, Godzilla and Ultraman exposed me to great stuff.

But along with entertaining me then, I still enjoy them all now, more than fifty years later.

FLASH GORDON IN MANY MEDIA

I was a Flash Gordon fan since the age of 9 years old.  I watched the serials in order, and was amazed at the imagination shown by the people of the era. They understood how to create a story, and keep you coming back.  Flash has appeared in comics, books, newspaper cartoons, and in a fun Sci Fi adventure film.


GODZILLA AND KING KONG

I was 8 or 9 years old when I first saw Godzilla. The film was King Kong vs Godzilla, and I loved it. I'd seen bits from the RKO King Kong before, loving what I saw, and Godzilla was his perfect opponent. Their rivalry as respective kings of their domain was what fired a 9 year old's worldview. My Uncle Leo was so generous with his kids, they had one tv, and he allowed his kids to watch the show, despite having to watch it with us. He could well have said, I can watch football on the other channel, why don't you kids go play outside for 5 hours. But he didn't. And my imagination grew tenfold while watching it.


ULTRAMAN, GIANT ROBOTS, & SMALL HUMANS

I love Ultraman, and that love has only bloomed since the Netflix Ultraman series came out. I have nothing but love towards the character and his story.  Giant robots, from Mazinger Z to the Iron Giant are awestriking, and Jet Jaguar from the Godzilla world of Godzilla vs Megalon, looks an awful lot like Ultraman... so I had an immediate appreciation of him, his theme song, and ideas of where he went after the movie. I thought he should have had a movie, for him against Kaiju, but that was not to happen. Micronauts began in Japan, but they took flight with the US adaptation by Mego and Marvel Comics. I  was thrilled when the characters came back to comics, with DDP and Image, followed by IDW. Greatly talented artists and numerous writers created solid tales of the team. And, even if imperfect, they became comfort food comics for me. I hope some day to see a movie with the Micronauts.

COMFORT FOOD COMICS

I've told the story numerous times, but in 1998 I was in the middle of my gallbladder no longer working, and giving me a variety of attacks. In fact, not just attacks, but the gallbladder had turned white being calcified. I had many attacks, and had 4 different times where my wife was gone for a week. I was alone, in grotesque pain and I was in some ways worried that I was having heart attacks. I went through sleepless nights due to constant gallbladder attacks. What kept me alive and aiming towards not freaking out, was the world of comics, reading awesome works by Jack Kirby, Mike Grell, Timothy Truman, and Godzilla movies, World War 2 comics, and Alan Dean Foster novels. They had become my comfort food.

Why didn't I go to the doctor? No health insurance or health plan. We were getting it, but it would kick in when my wife's employer began the new plan, September 1. Even then, when I went to the doctor he looked at me and said, you don't have anything wrong, you are just fat and need to diet. And I did, I cheated just two times in 3 months which that led the doctor to find the problem.

COMICS FEATURING ROME

A reader wrote and asked me why Roman Legions, and the Roman Empire aren't a subject of great comics. They thought I'd agree due to my interest in ancient Rome. They were correct. I'd love to read a few great pure history of the Roman Empire comics. But what we have is a number of alternate history, and imagined worlds with the Roman Empire in the background, rather than the subject itself. Those shown below are really good, but they aren't purely Roman history. It might be that a solid comic featuring ancient Rome might be considered educational, rather than entertainment oriented, and that is fine. I am not saying I agree or not, but I think we shouldn't limit our comics by perceived audience. We deserve a good comic about an important time in our human experience. 

WAR COMICS TO CONSIDER

I offer these as good examples of the genre of war in the medium of comic books. There were many war comics in the past, but as we grew tired of Vietnam, the popularity of such comics fell, as did the reader's interest in the American hero winning every battle. The ideal of America was broken by failure in Vietnam, and the spillover effect was generational awareness of the inaccuracy of the previous outlook. But, as time went on, new works, exploring all facets of the world during war.


NOSTALGIA 

I'm fond of the world I had lived in, as well as in this, the present. In my past, anyone could walk alone to the grocery store, without fear of predators. I could breathe the cleanest air, even living in the region with many paper mills.  Craft mill smell is similar to poop. But it didn't feel like an industrial black cloud. I could live without fear, despite the world being a moment in time where a cold war player decides to launch its nuclear weapons. The toys were amazing, you could entertain your wildest adventures, with plastic soldiers or space men, some were reality based, others more fantasy oriented.  Commander Comet could kick Matt Mason's ass, but Matt had many friends, including aliens, so he might not get a one on one fight.

CONTACTING ME FOR REVIEWS OR OTHERWISE

I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
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All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Thursday, October 26, 2023

WORDS FROM ALAN DEAN FOSTER

“If you're crazy, there's two things you can do to make yourself
feel better: One is to get yourself cured. The other is to make
everyone you have to deal with crazy.”
Alan Dean Foster


“The trouble with computers, she thought, was that they had no intuitive senses.
Only deductive ones. You had to ask the right question.” Alan Dean Foster



“I've never known a storyteller who was unhappy when telling stories.” Alan Dean Foster


 “The universe is full of dead people who lived by assumption.”
Alan Dean Foster         Star Wars: Splinter of the Mind's Eye


“Freedom is just chaos with better lighting” Alan Dean Foster "To the Vanishing Point

My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
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Facebook

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Media suggestions for a dark Halloween

HALLOWEEN SUGGESTIONS
By Alex Ness
October 20, 2023


A brief entry today...

I am amidst a great deal of pain, but wanted to offer some suggestions for scary, disturbing, fear inducing works that might appeal to you, especially if you haven't watched, viewed or read them.

First up is the art of Zdzisław Beksiński, a Polish artist who had numerous tragedies in life, and expressed pure fear and horror in art form, but was overall a very kind and good natured in person.

View his work and buy it perhaps at this LINK

All images in this article as all of my articles is copyright the estate or creator, no infringement is implied or assumed.

Different kinds of movies to choose for a Halloween scare. Click each image to enlarge them.


Good films made for not a lot of money, resulting in a good scare and one that sticks around in memory. Joe Monks Bunker is dark and brutal but it has a lovely spirit about it, it has an ending worth the wait.  Shock Waves has Peter Cushing in it, and some level of fear inducing Nazi Zombies.  Night of the Living Dead needs no intro, but it is the best Zombie movie and ending of all. Duel was relentless and had the benefit of fear from the fact it could happen to you too. Frankenstein meets the Space Monster is not a million dollar budget work, but it has a charm about it.


Next up are science fiction movies from the 50s-70s that have a scare in their purpose and result. The works here are all films that work, despite whatever flaws in special effects that make the suspension of disbelief somewhat impossible.  Aliens and UFOs are the boogie men here, and these formed the influences upon modern film maker minds and audiences.


Get these older horror films in the finest quality available, each film works hard creating a work of horror, without doing what had been done a million times before their creation. Yes, the Mummy moves slow, BUT, it uses the development time, to its advantage. Give it patience and you will be rewarded. I love the Karloff Mummy, it deserves to linger in memory.

HALLOWEEN READINGS

Clive Barker is a brilliant writer and artist. He has created numerous art pieces and has written many powerful stories, using cosmic themes and darkness. I would have loved to have interviewed him, over the years, but I am not currently prepared for the research and labor to find the questions he might not have been asked over the years.  Find his work at this Link

There are many excellent works found in comics, novels and illustrated novels. My selections here are found into different kinds of monsters, and true crime. Frankenstein, Dracula/Vampires, King Kong, Godzilla, Werewolves and The Cleveland Torso Slayings and M, about a child killing serial killer in Dusseldorf (and influenced heavily by the killings of murderous Peter Kurten), all make for dark but interesting tales. The various books do depend largely upon excellent art, and interpret various stories, legends and film lore to get their points across. If you aren't moved to fear, you've likely seen more horror than most.


FOR REVIEWING

I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.

My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
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Facebook

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Thursday, October 19, 2023

To Like or Not To Like

DIFFERENT, NOT BETTER, NOT WORSE
By Alex Ness
October 20, 2023

WHEN THE CRUSHER DEFEATED HIGH CULTURE


I've spent years writing about the world of popular culture, and about what I like in it. I don't deal with as many emailing haters or direct message stalkers, but it does seem most people like only the food they are familiar with, country they live in, and ideas they have heard before. I've been called a non-Christian for interviewing non Christians, a fascist for not canceling a variety of people who don't follow a certain agenda, a socialist for not hating certain past or current US presidents and much more. But, whatever I am attacked for, I am me. Whatever I do, is my right and I am open about what I like, who I like and what I don't like. The idea that most people seem to misunderstand, is that I don't like or love everything, but I try to share what is positive. So if I read 200 comics, and love 10 in that stack, but hate 50, you won't hear about the 50 from me. I want to use my time to promote, share, speak about the good things in life and popular culture.

I'm aware that not everyone agrees one what is good. Which is why I try to share what I experienced as being good. I want to give reasons for people to try something I found to be good. And when I find something new that is good, you will hear about it. I dealt once with a person I liked, and anytime I referred to something I enjoyed, he'd say, oh that sucked. Or that was a shit show. Or something similar.  And that was his taste. But sometimes people don't like something because the people they know saying they liked it, were their cultural opposites. I don't care if you don't like what I like, but I think there are better ways to express one's self than to say something they didn't like automatically was awful or a shit show. Sometimes something is simply different, and outside one's taste. My mother hated professional wrestling. My grandfather on her side loved it. Her hatred of it came from the only TV in the house throughout the fifties and sixties being tuned to Pro Wrestling. She was horrified that I liked the wrestling from the 60s and early 70s. But hey, the Crusher and Baron Von Raschke were awesome.

If you don't like what I write about, I am fine with that. I'd just suggest you like or dislike what you like or dislike, for the right reasons. If you say whatever someone likes sucks, you might instead think that about the person liking those things, rather than the things they like.

American Comic Books Adapting/Using Japanese Characters and Reverse

I have read that there is a name for Americans who love Japanese culture, but I don't think it is accurate regarding what it presumes to say. The term is for Americans loving Godzilla or Utraman, Micro Men, and giant robots, i.e. popular culture products and ISP's from Japan. I love all those things, but I also love Samurai and Ninja, Zen Gardens, Mount Fuji, Japanese food, Japanese art, Yukio Mishima and so much more. Other fans might enjoy that too, so the phrase used to describe them is even more falsely aimed. In the image below, note that Spawn is an American/Canadian character and a Japanese creative told a story with him as the subject, and used the format of Manga storytelling, page arrangement and all things Japanese. I loved it, I know others didn't. The rest of the images, show Japanese toy licensed intellectual properties, as done for the American and overall Western audience. Some people are or definitely were disgusted at the thought of sushi, but those people are fewer and fewer, as the negative aspects of sushi are far outweighed by its success, now worldwide.


India's Legends, Myths and Religions in American Comic books

I bought an enjoyed all of the releases of Indian legend, myth and religions for an American audience, but I know many who gave them a try didn't want to have to know more than what they already knew. So, instead of seeing superheroes, they were reading powerful characters, doing epic and dangerous things, but with a background of creation, apocalypse and good gods versus the evil gods. I found the works to have worth, if not fitting easily into Western culture, at least working in the translations into American comics. That such a valiant effort didn't succeed is not a good thing, but it shows that not everything that is good or honorably done has a market in a foreign country.

VIRGIN

LIQUID


REVIEWS AND STUFF

FINALLY...  I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.

My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
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Facebook

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Welcome to the Asylum, here is a report on crazy stuff in my mind

POST HORROR CONVENTION THOUGHTS
By Alex Ness
October 16, 2023


11 YEARS NOW GONE

I write this remembering my mom died in October 2012. Alzheimer's stole her memories and cancer finally came in and killed her. But it was a hollow victory for it. She'd beaten it 4+ times before the end. Including 2 terminal diagnoses. She would have been a patron Saint of People who are stubborn and those People who can't be convinced against her will. When I had cancer, and throughout the last 4 years of hell, for my health, I've often thought of the scenario if she had had such troubles. It wouldn't have slowed her down, not even for a moment.

I LIKE MONSTERS AND BLACK AND WHITE WEIRD SCI FI BUT...

I was asked by a person who thinks Horror is a vulgar expression, violent, ugly, and foul. Well I don't like slasher films, or most Zombie films and I don't like many color horror films except for Hammer Films, and they are more monsters than horror. I don't care about the killer or victims of crude evil angry guy using claws, ropes, ice picks, lawnmowers, hammer, tire irons films.

I've said before, and it remains true, actual events in human history bother me way more than horror movies evoke. The crimes of and famous serial killer Jack the Ripper and the resulting wave over the century since and beyond of popularity of such a person, genocide in WWII Germany, the 1990s Ethnic Cleansing in the former Yugoslavia, Rwandan Massacre, Armenian Genocide by the Ottoman Empire are all far worse in scale, imagery and actual horror happening live on the news, than any movie maker can possible reach.

I would suggest that horror is something that is so different for each of us, that I am not suggesting anyone else shouldn't enjoy the genre. In fact I think horror in fiction, poetry, prose or plays, that it can be used to expose human flaws, by exposing the fact that most monsters in a horror film are innocent, while the humans are evil, and violence loving.


Being at a horror convention that had many cosplayers, I saw maybe two costumes that moved me... A MechaKing Kong, and an attempt at a human size Godzilla. I say I liked them because I don't love horror, but because people tend to focus on unpleasant bloody story-less, plot-less films that require no imagination over Monsters. If one studies or considers them seriously, they tend to be more human than humanity is, and more innocent in their heart than humans as well. Frankenstein's Monster wasn't about how an evil monster rampaged through 1800s or early 1900s Bavaria, it was about how a man thought he might create life, and in the attempt, transgressed against God and universal laws. It was idolatry, thinking one might become better than or more powerful than a God.

You might rightly wonder if I am nuts. It wouldn't be the first time someone thought such. Well, for me, being able to feel sympathy for a "villain" such as the unnamed monster of Dr. Frankenstein or King Kong or whoever, allows a more emotional connection to the work. I guarantee that no one of a moral or even a-moral heart and mind would feel sympathy or a connection to a Nazi Death Camp Officer, or praise the acts of other murderous humans. It is just in our nature to find certain things, rightfully abhorrent.

No one pities Jason, or Michael Myers or a serial killer who uses a special tool to kill his victims. Having said all that, I do hold out an exception for one really well made, even bloody horror film. The original Texas Chainsaw Massacre. With just enough gore that the story requires, rather than much more, there was actual horror, the film maker emphasized the sound, the shadows, the senses in such an event, and never made the chainsaw using villain into an anti hero, with some noble reason for killing people in such gruesome ways.

In fact, those figurative unknowns have an impact upon the resulting story. I'll call them shadows were used in the fashion that great artists and writers use, in comics and stage plays to emphasize the events described. Certain comic artists David Mazzucchelli, Mike Oeming, Alex Toth and others realized that it is better to show the important things, rather than aiming at the small details, which aren't what the viewer/reader should be focused upon. Aiming that focus is the point. There is more to horror when not all the facts are known, or the scene is chaotic with no path, no obvious signs to guide you through them. It is an organic way of telling a story, as if the viewer (or reader) can feel all the movement, the frenzied brain, the sound of your impending death, fear is impossible to avoid. And there are other movies that spooked me a bit, but it was always events about my life at the time that made the movies more frightening.

Still, I did enjoy many of cosplayers presentations, it took work and creative minds to get the costuming right. And there were many nice people I met there. A new audience for my work? Perhaps, but there weren't people complaining I also wrote poetry, which happens every comic book show. So, getting a different audience, may not help THAT much, but I remember well, HP Lovecraft, Lord Dunsany, Brian Lumley, Clark Ashton Smith, Robert Bloch and Robert E. Howard all wrote poetry along with their prose and other works, with no pretense about borders between genres, format or worth. They wrote poetry because it moved them, and wrote about things in the fantasy realm of writing, in poetic form.

Instead of people thinking of Horror as a lesser form of genre or form, they seemed to me to be very capable of appreciating many things, and didn't automatically assume something sucked because they'd not considered it before.

Am I saying no more comic shows? Hell no. I love comics. Am I saying horror cons bring out the best in people? I doubt it. What I am saying is that I am grateful for the people who bought my work, grateful for the good interactions, and happy for the cosplayers who authentically came to the show as Elvira. (That is a joke, btw, I didn't see any Elvira costumed women.)

FAREWELLS

When I went to send some emails to professors of importance in my journey, I learned that three of my favorite as well as most influential professors had passed away. Ron Marchese, Professor of Ancient History and Classics in the Humanities at UM-Duluth,  Joseph Maiolo, Professor of English, Author English Department UM-Duluth, and John Helgeland, Professor of Religion and History, NDSU all passed recently, or since I last made contact. Each played a role in my intellectual development, and I will miss them, and I herein thank them for their role in my life.  

REVIEWS AND STUFF

FINALLY...  I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.

My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter
Facebook

All images are copyright © their respective owners, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.