Saturday, June 29, 2013

The Lost Works of Dr. Spencer Black

  The images alone are haunting enough.  One naturally flips through the pages of illustrations upon picking up "The Resurrectionist" by E.B. Hudspeth.  The fine details, just a bit reminiscent of Maurice Sendak's style, bring a realism to each image that can't be ignored.  It begs to be believed. Macabre though they may be, it cannot be denied that they seem quite plausible.  From the skeletal plate of the harpy that graces the front cover...




To the slightly unsettling images of the developing harpy...




To the fantastical beauty of the mermaids...




  The entire volume is filled with an unnatural sort of wonder.  As I said, the images alone are haunting enough, but there is more.  Oh, yes.  There is more.

  Dr. Spencer Black did not have the traditional upbringing.  Born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1851 and raised by a father who was a respected professor of anatomy surely had its merits.  However, it also came with certain...costs.  Spencer and his elder brother, Bernard, began assisting their father with collecting cadavers (i.e. grave robbing) as young boys.  Their mother had not survived giving birth to Spencer and one can only imagine this made a great difference in the way they were brought up.  Bernard, after all, had three years with his loving mother.  Perhaps, that is what made the difference.  Nature versus nurture.  Who knows?

  Both boys studied at the Medical Arts College of Boston before the passing of their father.  Both enrolled in Philadelphia Academy of Medicine upon moving in with their aunt and uncle after.  This seems to be where the similarities end.  Bernard's interests centered on the natural sciences, history, fossils, etc., while Spencer appeared to take after their father.  His excellence gained him fame as "one of the most promising prodigies in the country".   He developed an obsession with the human body and formed a theory that perhaps things that were seen as deformities were actually the body trying to rebirth certain features lost by evolution in an attempt to return to its perfect form.  Talented as he was, this theory was not met with the enthusiasm Black hoped for.  

  His career and personal life endured many ups and downs.  Marriage, birth, loss, criticism.  Eventually, Dr. Black was ostracized from the respectable medical community.   Following a visit to a local carnival and the discovery therein of a specimen he believed confirmed his theory, Black became part of a traveling side show, showcasing his "works" and theories of anatomy.  and devoted himself to bringing his theory to life.  Literally.  Much like Dr. Frankenstein, Black took what he needed from the sources available to him to create the visions he so much believed in.  Things that should never have been wrought were shaped in a secluded laboratory in the woods.  Where no one would hear the screams.  In a letter to his brother Bernard, Spencer's wife Elise wrote this:  "...dead animals, bloody animals, living in cages, dying or soon to be dead, or worse."  When even Bernard could not convince Spencer to cease his experiments, Elise set fire to the laboratory and nearly lost her life.  It may have been better for her if she had.

  No one was off limits where Dr. Spencer Black's experiments were concerned.  The family beagle, his wife, even his own son.  He bent and twisted the laws of nature in ways most would shudder to even consider.  Where he was once respected, he was now feared and hated.  A life that had seemed so full of promise was spiraling out of control.  In 1908, Black entered into negotiations with a New York publishing firm for the publication of his masterpiece, The Codex Extinct Animalia, which appears at the end of the book.  Only six copies were printed before Black inexplicably withdrew the project and disappeared.  

  Fascinating, disturbing, beautiful, unsettling, macabre.  Whatever you wish to call it, this is a work you won't soon forget.  I'll leave you with a few more images and trust your curiosity will do the rest.




Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Forgotten

  I swear, I haven't. Forgotten, that is. I actually have a few posts started and saved as drafts that I just need to fill in some details for. No, REALLY! I've been reading some pretty praise-worthy books and it's difficult to stop reading long enough to write about them. Well... that and my "real life". My favorite publisher, Quirk (you guys are awesome, by the way), just keeps providing me with such fabulous reading material that I hardly know what to do with myself. I don't just say that because they send me free ARCs. Although, I admit that IS rather nice. My most recent treasure being "The Resurrectionist" by E.B. Hudspeth. My first leaf through it was intriguing to say the least. I plan to review it soon. Just as soon as I find where my children stole away with it.

  Another coming attraction, "William Shakespeare's Star Wars" is on the way. Literally. I was notified today that it's shipping. (Thank you, Eric Smith! I maintain that you ARE the man.) I can hardly wait! Could quite possibly be the best pairing since peanut butter and chocolate. Or mac and cheese. PB&J. Whichever. It's ON. ITS. WAY. I think the only thing that could make it better (and this is pure speculation) is if it came with a fluffy cow. A real one.

  More to come soon!

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Dawn of the Dreadfuls (PPZ Prequel)

I have thoroughly enjoyed every book in the PPZ series. I feel much better prepared for the inevitable zombie apocalypse having their knowledge and wisdom under my belt. As we all know, with the recent outbreak, this is quite likely to make a vital difference.

Wuthering Hyders: Dawn of the Delightful: The fog lies heavy upon the ground as I gaze out my windows. Through the darkness, it gives the streetlights the appearance of spectres in t...

Android Karenina

I'm hoping I can manage to link these without forcing anyone to read the disturbing saga of my everyday life. (I have a love/hate relationship with that blog.) I fully intend to update my "Android Karenina" review soon, but for now, I'm just linking. Or attempting to...

Wuthering Hyders: I Need an Android, Too!: I have to come clean about something... I haven't actually FINISHED the book I'm going to share with you. I do apologize, but between th...

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Taft 2012

  Let's be honest.  Politicians suck.  I trust them about as far as I can throw them, which (given my smallish stature) isn't even humanly possible.  I have rather pleasant feeling towards Ronald Reagan, but then, I was a mere child when he was in office and most everything was pretty great.  As I've grown, I've come to believe that the only good politician is a dead one. Perhaps, this is why Jason Heller's novel, "Taft 2012" was so intriguing. After all, William Howard Taft has been dead for years, right?  Or HAS he...

  We've all been led to believe that President Taft died in 1930, Heller's novel speculates about what might have happened if history happened a little differently.  What if William H. Taft did not die, but was mysteriously "frozen" in a secret chamber beneath Washington, D.C.?


  Many of us only know Taft as one of the slew of former presidents we had to memorize in junior high. Our history teachers may have called him "Tubby Taft" in a sad attempt to help us remember his name. Thus, we grew up thinking of him as simply a rather rotund man issuing presidential orders from a bathtub in the White House. Their motives may have been genuine, but there was, IS, much more to William Howard Taft than meets the eye.

  Reawakened to a world that has changed in so many ways, President Taft assesses the situation and handles the ensuing attention with aplomb. As a man who did not desire the presidency in the first place, he is now faced with the possibility that his views and values could be exactly what the now faltering nation needs. With his great-granddaughter, Rachel Taft, by his side, he embarks on a journey he never would have expected.  We, the readers, get to see a side of Taft we'd likely never have considered. In more than ONE way! (This blogger is not responsible for any mental images that may inspire, but the author of this novel may be.)

  For a girl who has no interest in politics, I found this novel a fascinating read. I would never have imagined I'd be eager to climb into bed with William Howard Taft, but (at least in the figurative sense) I found myself looking forward to it each evening. Several late nights with this novel have given me a new respect for this underrated former president. Take a chance. Dare to embrace TRUE change and see a new side of a man you always thought you knew. Once you've finished the novel, you'll likely want to find Bill on Facebook or follow him on Twitter. I trust you'll find him as enlightening as I have.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Overdue

I really should have done this a long time ago. I suppose I figured the first couple of book reviews were just a fluke thing. However, it has come to my attention (thanks to myself) that I read quite a bit and I also have several opinions. Thus, I have decided to toss this baby bird out the window and see if it flies. Figuratively speaking, of course. I would never actually toss a baby ANYTHING. Well...maybe a baby carrot...

I can't promise that I'll be all that prompt in my reviewing process or that I will actually review every book I read. Some of them just aren't worth it. Like "Moby Dick". I tried. I really did. Two hundred pages and no sign of the giant white whale. I guess he must have swum out of my copy into a different one.

I will, hopefully, find a way to link my previous book reviews from my personal blog to this one. Please, don't hold your breath. Seriously. Don't. I can't have that on my conscience. I have enough to feel guilty about with my piles of laundry and shameful overdue fines at the library that is constantly glaring at me from the picture window in my living room. It KNOWS I have those piles of books that are accruing fees and that it is merely my laziness that holds them hostage. If there is a Most Wanted list for the library, I have no doubt I'm on it.

I'm off to read myself a bedtime chapter or two from "The Meowmorphosis". Quite interesting so far. Especially living in a house with four cats.