GNS2 off to the Printer

 Well, work on the second Guy N. Smith zine has been completed and has been sent to the publisher - a couple of weeks ahead of schedule. 😎

Here a is the first look at it full cover, back front and spine - featuring design work by yours truly and art by Al Richardson:

Tightly Packed Toes & Flow Time


Last week left off work to recouperate. I have been a little lazy creatively these past few days. But I managed to get a lot of work done today -on both GNS2 and Avalon2. I even entered that lovely flow state, where you lose your sense of self, as you carry out your activity.

Whilst it's lovely to be free of anxiety during that flow time, you can find that time flies. For example, when I looked up at the time after this morning's writing and design work, thinking only an hour had passed, over 3 hours had registered on the clock!

The Seeing Tree

Nazi Leprechauns!

I spent yesterday evening alone and occupied my time watching youtube videos of pulp horror fiction reviews, personal book collections and paperback fair visits.

These days, you can't look up pulp horror fiction without a ton-load of Paperbacks from Hell dominating the links offered for your perusal. One of these led me to a vlogger who had the interesting idea of presenting a couple of shows evidencing how that much-loved tome has raised the market prices of the books it explored and clearly cherished.

After turning off the TV, I was in the mood to do a little investigation of my own and started searching for that collector's dream of a paperback - the Arrow edition of John Christopher's The Little People.


 I soon discovered that the number one holy grail paperback on everybody's Want list, was selling in the region of the £200 - £380 mark. That was, except for one American seller who just seemed to be selling the contents of their home in a mass clearing. Whilst this particular seller was still asking for a price well over what I am willing to pay for even the rarest of titles, he was open to offers. ðŸĪ” And so I sent off my offer, which took me below my forbidden zone, even taking into account the postage fees from the currently troubled U.S. of A. It was then a waiting game. ðŸŦĢ

My offer was a fair one, and came in under what  I paid to source my most expensive book thus far - Guy N Smith's even rarer Crabs' Sacrifice a few years back.

My most expensive
book purchase ever

It was a bit of a troubled sleep for me as I waited for the seller's decision on my offer.
Even though it's my 59th birthday next weekend, and I am in possession of a long-idle Paypal credit card to spread the costs, I knew I would not be able to match any higher offer he demanded. And so my sleep was disturbed for a couple hours before I finally received the seller's decision.

😎ðŸŦĢðŸĪŠðŸ˜ƒðŸŽ‰

By the time I awoke this morning, this email was already waiting for me:

I'll write another post on this real gem of a paperback when it crosses the Atlantic and finds a home on my bookshelves. Until then I will be 🕰👀 as I await the arrival of the nazi leprechauns...

Flow


Watched a great animated film tonight on my son's Sony 4k UHD OLED TV - Flow. All I need to review this movie accurately is one word, capitaled with an exclamation mark :

WOW!

The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlos Collodi

Sadly, my original copy of this book, already degraded by time, was ruined after last year's house fire.

To readers interested in the darkness inherent within the tale, I highly recommend having a read of my original blog post about the book. Comparing the images in that post with those in this post also highlights how a book will deteriorate over time without care!


Regular readers of Pixie-Led will already be aware of how scary I find this particular book. As such, it will definitely feature in the the first issue of my Pixie-Led zine, which I plan on writing, producing and publish some time in 2026...

The Super-Scary Silhouette



Creepy First Steps

What Strange Sights & Adventure Await in this Wood?

Look at Those Razor-Sharp Teeth

Scary Finally

I'll keep any further chat on Pinocchio for the future zine. But I will leave you with a question. Am I alone in finding this particular edition of Pinocchio to be the best version of the tale?

Avalon 2 ~ Day 9/100 | Eyelid Op - Day 6

I managed to add all the images I wanted onto the zine today. I even put them in order. I still have to decide upon the size each image will appear and their position on each page. I also need to do all the writing. I am pleased with where I am now in relation to it publishing date.

In other news. Check out the progress on my poorly eyelid. As the swelling goes down, the bruising is slipping down my chops lol.


Sneakin' Smiler

Caught Smiler, one of our neighbour's cats, sneaking into our garden again: 


Like an Anthony Gormley

Settled to bed a little earlier last night as I wanted to play some mental images of my next ghost story to work out the full plot and story details. Turns out its a tight, 3 scene tale, called 'Like an Anthony Gormly'.

Crash - J G Ballard

 Settled for the evening, reading J G Ballard's Crash.

Recouperating Day 3


Recouperating - Day 2

 The bruising is now starting to show:

The Dead of Summer


The above arrived at my home this morning, a very well packed treasure of a book, signed and sent my way the the editor himself - Mr Johnny Mains.


Surgery Day (Part Two)

Well, my poor old eyelid has finally been sorted - courtesy of a 45-minute x2 surgeon operation, plus a supporting cast of brilliant medical folk. 

It turned out to be a longer, trickier procedure than either I or my consultant had expected. And honestly, I really wish they’d knocked me out entirely instead of giving me six of the most excruciating injections I’ve ever had the displeasure of experiencing. 


I arrived at the ophthalmic surgery at 12:30 and was quickly moved from the general waiting area to a larger room that eventually filled with 8 patients. As we settled in, we began swapping stories. It turned out we were all there for either cataracts or, like me, eyelid-related issues. Thanks to the room’s open-plan design, we had the pleasure of hearing every detail of each other's conditions. I won’t go into specifics here, but let’s just say I winced more than once at how personal some of those consultant-patient chats got. One story in particular stayed with me and still tugs at me days later. 

I was the last of us to face the surgeon’s knife and, lucky me, got to hear the post-op groans of those who came back before me. Plenty of grimaces, muttered “never again”s, and the sort of haunted looks that don't exactly calm the nerves. At around 4:30 p.m., when our merry group had dwindled to just yours truly, it was finally my turn. 

Oddly enough, the scalpel, cauterising, and stitching didn’t hurt at all. But the six local anaesthetic injections straight into my eye? The most definitely did. That was, hands down, the most painful experience of my nearly 59 years of life. Because I couldn't afford private treatment, the wait for NHS treatment meant the tissues below my eye had toughened up and blocked my tear duct. This was briskly resolved with a saline syringe flushed through until it reached my nasal passage - at which point I got a delightful cocktail of salty tears and slightly sweet blood trickling into my mouth. That, too, hurt. Not quite injection-level pain, but still grimly memorable. At one point, the surgeon's asked if I could cope with the pain. Desperate to avoid more needles, I just grunted “Yes” and lay as still as possible, trying to ignore the glimpses of scalpels and ominous-looking tools being aimed under my poor old eyeball. 

To add to the drama, it became apparent one surgeon was training the other. So, naturally, I had the privilege of hearing a play-by-play commentary of everything about to happen to my face. “Snip there. Lateral slice there. Diamond-cut this. Cauterise here. Thread the suture through the tendon - no, firmer than that, jiggle the needle - it’s tough tissue... no, that’s too superficial... here, let me show you...”

Honestly, it was like being trapped in an on-the-surgeon's-operating-table nightmare. Eventually, it was all over. Everyone seemed very pleased with how everything had gone. Grateful, I thanked every single person in the theatre at least a dozen times as they wheeled me back to the now-empty waiting room. I sat alone, clutching a black coffee (no vegan milk options, of course), texting my wonderful partner to come pick me up, conscious that Day-Surgery was about to close for the day. 

Back home at last, I sank onto the sofa, dosed myself up on co-codamol, and waited for the swelling to kick in...

Surgery Day

 After what seems like forever, the day of my eyelid surgery has arrived. My excitement to have the procedure performed has rapidly turned to anxiety. But It has to be done. Time to put my big boy trousers on.

Crabs's Moon by Guy N Smith

 Found this stuffed in my letter box when I got home tonight:

Robin Ince

Beautiful evening spent listening to the lovely Robin Ince @robinince.bluesky.social. He was kind enough to sign a Guy N Smith book he recently wrote an introduction for 🙂


Happy World Dracula Day

My favorite Dracula book covers #WorldDraculaDay :