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Sunday, 29 September 2024

Malvern on the Rosie

We returned to Malvern today for their Autumn veg show.  It's a long drive (just over 2 hours) but I spent it reading about Malvern's connection with the authors J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewsis and their drinking haunt there, The Unicorn. We did plan to visit there after the show but ran out of time. Hopefully, we will get a chance for a literary pint on our next visit. Did you know, btw, that there is more than a rumour that it was the gas-lit street lamps, which still operate to this day, gave the inspiration C.S. Lewis needed for his book The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The gossip goes that the author watched the snow falling as he and Dickens left The Unicorn late one evening.  "Wouldn't it make a beautiful opening scene for a story," he remarked seeing how wonderous the snow looked in the gaslight. And so it did.

Old Rosie had a hand in limiting for pic-taking at the show. The particularly strong cider lightened our moods even when the gales and rain eventually arrived.

And so there a not many photos to share of the event. And, as my, daughter remarked when seeing them, they are more than a little on the creepy side, loll













Don't ask!

Sunday, 22 September 2024

Plans Update

I am not really enjoying working on my Gower Beaches. It has been a bit of a grind, to be honest. I think the reason is because I haven't needed to go out and take photographs for it as I already had the imagery needed for the book in my portfolio. I do need one trip out in Gower though as  I lost a lot of my stored files in the housefire earlier in the year and havent got photograpgs of the caves down Fall Bay. We are holding out on heading down for the moment as Mrs E is hoping that there will be another northern lights display in the next couple of weeks so we might be able to put two projects to bed in one outing.  Whatever happens, the Explore Gower Guide to Gower Beaches will be available from Amazon on November 1, 2024.

After that, I will be spending November working on my next horror novel, Familiar. I hope to get a full first draft of the book completed by Christmas.


My research on familiar folklore continues...

2025 should be a quieter year for my writing. Famiar should be out sometime in the first half of the year, and my only other blook planned for next year is Issue 2 of my Avalon guidebook series exploring the town of Glastonbury. 

Other than that, the only other publication I have planned for next year is another Guy N Smith zine. This one will see me more in the role of editor, designer and publisher, however, as this issue will feature the creative work of  varied creatives who fans of GNS. At the time of writing this, this new GNS zine has the promise of being something very special...
 

Saturday, 21 September 2024

Sunset

Another cracking sunset tonight:


Gower Beaches Progressing

Continuing work (just) on my Gower Beaches guide.

Tuesday, 17 September 2024

Jonathon Chilling

Chilled seagull sat atop the office roof, chilling as he takes in the view.



Postscript. I later found out he, along with his mother, were waiting to be thrown biscuits from a nearby window. A regular occurance apparently lol.

Monday, 16 September 2024

Street Sunset

Summer has made a brief return today. And whilst I missed most of it as I earned my crust of breath at the office, the sun kept a final delight for me this evening :)

Sunday, 15 September 2024

Pop Funkos 2024

I have added just three new Pops to my collection this year. These will feature in this year's usual Haloween foto project, which is now entering its sixth year.

I posted a picture of the first two Pops I bought in 2024 here, and this one, fresh from the shelves of Funko Europe, arrived at my door yesterday:


Being a big fan of the classic Twilight Zone, it was a no-brainer that I would bring this little character into my home. He really is the perfect Pop!

Three Twilight Zone figures were recently released, but I only purchased The Narrator. The other two relate to a single TZ episode called Nightmare at 20000 Feet and feature a cut-away section of a plane seat, with a poor likeness of William Shatner sitting watching a gremlin sabotaging the wing engine. The third Pop is of the gremin itself, which, again, I'm not overly fond of.


Anyway, the Tall Man from Phantasm, the new re-moulding of Nosferatu and Rod Serling will be the three Halloween Pops I'll be photographing next month.

Looking back at my previous Pop pics, I've decided to take another shot of the Wendigo Pop from the TV series Hannibal. This more than creepy character deserves a better photo than the one I captured last year. 

Saturday, 14 September 2024

Gower Beaches | Day 61/100

Day 61/100. I'm cutting this project fine. Listening to #seashanties whilst working on my guide to the #Gower shoreline

Look at those whisers!

Thursday, 12 September 2024

Heading Home

I do enjoy my down time to catch up on things before heading home.


Sunday, 8 September 2024

Saturday, 7 September 2024

Stormy Reading

Whilst the  South Wales thunder raged in the skies overhead and the rain belted down, I read this grim short story by Guy N Smith.

Friday, 6 September 2024

Back on the Island

I am determined not to finish this game until I am 100% happy with my island.

Thursday, 5 September 2024

Reading

Catching up on some reading before heading home.

Monday, 2 September 2024

Guy N Smith - The Knighton Vampires

I really should have read this book before this past weekend. But its fascinating to read a story set in a place you have literally just read... I've just got to persuade little fudjcake to let me get back into reading again.




Sunday, 1 September 2024

A Gathering for Guy (part 3)

Up bright and early as we had to be out of the airbnb by 10am. With two ours to kill before the GNS fancon began, we had a quick stop-off in Knighton town to collect some seeds from a beautiful Honestly plant we'd seen growing wild there the day before.


That done, we took a little drive to Kinsley Woods to pass some time. The place was very quiet and was a lovely way to while away an hour or so. 


I even happened upon a small pond, which appeared exactly like I expected Guy N Smith's Sucking Pit to appear in real life.



I will admit to it being a nerve-wracking experience walking into a building of people I hardly knew in real life, or didn't know at all in many instances. It had been made easier by having bumped into a few people I knew from the GNS fb Group both the day before and that morning whilst collecting the wild seeds though. 🙂


The Raffle Table

The Auction Table

Before the event had even got started, I swapped a couple of items with Shane Agnew, receiving in exchange for a copy of my GNS zine and the model I used for its cover shot, these two signed Polish editions of Guy's book:

 


He was also kind enough to sign my copy of his GNS Bible:


It was great to finally meet Paul Evans, the man resposible for kick-starting my GNS collecting habit with his sale of hand-written manuscripts of Guy's short stories. I didn't know whether to thank him or admonish him lol. He proved to be the professional gentleman I expected him to be.

Paul

Except for a group of 5 or so regular forum faces I'd engaged with online over the last couple of years, I was swamped in a sea of unfamiliar visages. My, and maybe their introvert characters, keeping me from spotting online folk I admired even their were sat just a few metres from me!

Tara, Guy N Smith's daughter, kicked off proceeding with some readings from the newly republished Crabs books that brought her father fame in the 1970s. Long out of print, its's great to see these titles back in print and with modern cover art work.

Tara




The authors Paul Lewis & Steve Lockley (far right in the above pic) were sat next to and kindly signed a couple of my books :)



Fresh, off-theprint copies, signed by both Tara and Guy's wife, were up for sale at a ludicrously cheap price and sold like hot-cakes once the merchandise tables opened for business. Mark Morris wrote the new introduction to Origin of the Crabs and, being a later speaker at the event, was happy to add a personalised autograph to my copy of the book :)
 
 



I chilled with the friendly Nick Caton during lunch, discussing, amongst other things, the heart-breaking loss of poor Soosh-cat ealier this year.




Lunch ended with a fascinating film of Guy showing us his prized book collection. It was fascinating to see his signed Enid Blyton and Rupert the Bear books - works that have had a greater influence on my wanting to be a horror writer than might be imagined.

Mark Morris

After Mark Morris' reading from his new novel, the event closed the raffle drawer (I won nowt) and the eagerly awaited GNS auction.
Shane Agnew with his raffle prize

Nick Caton with his raffle prize

There were a few items I wanted from the auction table - the first being Guy's crab tie. Bids started low and I got a few bids in before it reached £30. Now I was in a quandry. I really wanted the tie but I had a limited budget and if I overspent on this item, then I might not be able to afford the Graveyard Rendezvous titles I wanted for my collection. And so I stopped bidding and the prized crab tie went into someone else's hands. The winner, who I spoke to later, was chuffed with his purchase and said he would be framing the prized tie. And, honestly, seeing the delight at his acquisition, I was pleased he had won. The tie would be better served framed on a wall in someone's home than pushed into my attic chest with my other GNS stash.

I hadn't intended to bid for anything else on the auction table until the last two GR zines came under the hammer, but with a signed London Mystery Selection book stalling at £10, I stuck in a bid for £15 and was genuinely surprised when I won!


I won 3 other auctions following that first win.

The transcript of the new Night of the Crabs reprint - complete with the editor's markings, some of which were ignored from the published book. Mine for £30:


A signed GR - mine for a tenner:


And a grail penultimate  GR, signed by Guy and also kindly signed by Tara at the event. Mine for £35:


I missed out on the last auction of the day - the very last issue of Graveyard Rendezvous. Like the issue I had previously won, this issue was fought over by both myself and Nick Caton. We had discussed over lunch that we would be bidding on the last two GR items and our bids on this last issue rose from £5 to £40 rapidly. I really wanted this issue but Nick wanted it more, and acquired the rarity for £45. I did mull over adding one extra bid, but I already had one of the two issues I was after, I'd kept my planned spending to under £100 to please Mrs E and Nicks GR collection was closer to completion than mine so his need was greater. So, reluctantly, I let the item slip from my fingers. Hopefully, another will come my way one day - fingers rossed.

And with that the event came to a clsoe. I said my goodbyes, signed Nick's copy of my Guy N Smith zine (I was shocked how many people came up to me during the Con for me to sign theirs too) and, just as I was about to vacate the Community Centre hired for the event, I bumped into someone I recognisedinstantly from his Youtube channel. He had a proposition, one that I could hardly refuse. More of which soon...

More merch purchased at the fancon:




We got back home a little after six in the evening, where I found a magazine waiting for - the new edition of The Dark Side magazine, featuring 6 pages of Guy N Smith material :)


And with that, my Gathering for Guy weekend came to a close.