Gahan Wilson is probably best known for his macabre Playboy cartoons, filled with charming monsters, goofy mad scientists, and melting victims, and his cutting-edge work in the National Lampoon, but he s also one of the most versatile cartoonists alive whose work has appeared in a wide range of medi[...]
Boldly original and wildly entertaining, "A Night in the Lonesome October" is a darkly sparkling gem, an amalgam of horror, humor, mystery, and fantasy. An epistolary novel from Jack the Ripper's dog Snuff with one diary entry for each night of the month of October, this story features major Gothic [...]
Gahan Wilson is probably best known for his macabre Playboy cartoons filled with charming monsters, goofy mad scientists, and melting victims and his cutting-edge work in the National Lampoon, but in 1964, he brought his brilliantly controlled wiggly-but-sophisticated pen line to The Magazine of Fan[...]
Provides a comprehensive overview of skills and theory required to teach health and physical education in Australian schools.[...]
Ambrose Bierce's 1911 satire is blended with the surreal and macabre art of Gahan Wilson, creating a funny yet poignant comics adaptation. Switching seamlessly from illustration to full comic panels and back again, Wilson brings his signature dark humor to Bierce's work. "The Devil's Dictionary" is [...]
This series presents Clark Ashton Smith's fiction chronologically, based on composition rather than publication. Editors Scott Connors and Ron Hilger have compared original manuscripts, various typescripts, published editions, and Smith's notes and letters, in order to prepare a definitive set of te[...]