This first one is to my take on the backstory to a superhero called The Owl. This particular character is not the Owl who appears in Marvel comics, but one that appeared a generation earlier in the Now defunct Dell comics. Dell published in the ‘50s & ‘60s but has long since gone out of business and the company‘s characters have slipped into the Public Domain. I work with a group of creators who have taken up creating new stories utilizing these characters. We call our publishing venture InDELLible Comics, and our various magazine-sized comics can be found on Amazon. The image of the Owl that appears inside the InDELLible logo at the top of the page was drawn by Carl Morgans.
This is the place where I discuss all things Sacred and Profane. Stop by and check me out. Leave a comment (or not), as this is done for my own amusement. If you too are entertained, all the better, but that is not the motivation here. For I, am a...Writer with attitude! Comics, Sci Fi, movies, TV, Books, the Internet, Pop Culture, you name it. I talk about all of these things and more. These are the things that entertain me. I can only hope that some of them will entertain you as well.
Saturday, December 09, 2023
Look for My Stories on the Web
Friday, December 08, 2023
Look for me on the Web!
While the addition of a mere three years may not seem to mean a great deal, it actually alters our own personal perception of our understanding of our own legacy as a writer. And frankly, that's kind of a very cool thing for us.
Needless to say, while the bulk of our writing has appeared in print (and a small segment was broadcast over the airwaves) over the past couple of years an even smaller (though growing) portion of our writing has appeared exclusively on the web.
Thus, it is with this understanding, we have decided to gather in one place, a series of links where we can post those links so that anyone interested, and see and access them. Hence, in no particular order, here they are:
This first link is for a print publication called Government Technology where I (in my role as Deputy Registrar of Voters in my hometown of Norwalk, CT) wrote about how we utilized technology in our local elections.
Norwalk, Conn., Uses Technology to Better Run Elections
This next piece I wrote while I was living in Richmond, VA, and it was written for RVA Magazine
This first article for Bleeding Cool where I reviewed Sean Howe's book, The Untold Story of Marvel Comics, The second one was a reprinting of an article I had written years earlier, while the third was to promote a then upcoming series.
Alternate Theories Add To The Secret History of Marvel Comics
Chasing Gods With Eddie Nunez And Stephen Lapin
This next article was written with my long-time collaborator, John A. Wilcox for Relix Magazine, and it was when we interviewed Frank Zappa for the 2nd tie (and he called us "The Wacky Guys").
All of these were articles I wrote, a second posting will be about a series of short fiction stories I penned over the past couple of years that are currently being hosted on a number of online sites.
Thursday, August 10, 2023
Welcome to the Bizarrechats of Michael F. Housel, Author of the Abstract, Amazing and Arcane: : ROBERT J. SODARO INTERVIEW: THE DESIGN SPECIALIST/...
Monday, March 20, 2023
Adventures in Babysitting, Brenda & the Frost Giants Style.
Matt has a very straightforward storytelling style that is
ideal for this particular market. His very distinct art is fun, bold, and clean,
as it carries the story through the tale being told. As for the story itself, it
is a fun, entertaining romp swirling around a young Viking girl who already
sees herself as a warrior even though her father, a Viking chief, still sees
her as his little girl. Needless to say (and much to our own delight), Brenda
has a very different view of her place in the Steelhammer clan.
The second, main story, relates how Lord Greyton Steelhammer
(Brenda’s doting father) must conduct some business away from camp and leaves
his precious Brenda in the capable hands of Ruby, her teenaged babysitter.
Well, as previously stated, Brenda doesn’t believe herself to be a child in
need of being watched over, but as a full-fledged warrior woman who has every
right to go off on her own adventures, so what we are treated to is Brenda
doing everything she can to elude her babysitter, and go off to join her father
on the trail in search of some quest.
The comic itself not only comes with a number of variant covers,
each one promoting and supporting a different part of Matt’s business model (a
move we found quite engaging), but with a mini Food Fight Value Stamp . The
version we purchased is targeted towards Cliff’s Cons which are held nearly
monthly in Plainsville, CT at the VFW Hall on 7 Northwest Dr. We’ve attended a
few of Cliff’s cons, and have always found them friendly, and full of wicked
cool comic-related Tchachakas. Matt has his own studio (Fee Lunch Comics) in Granby,
CT which offers classes and workshops in comicbook art and design.
Monday, February 20, 2023
ShieldMaster to the Rescue
Throughout the intervening years, comics have morphed into various changes, altering size, price point, format, delivery methodology, and even ultimately jumping from the static page to TV, Film, and currently living on the internet. Still, for those of us who were first introduced to comics in their “All in color for a dime”, 32-page, episodic original incarnation; even those of us (your humble narrator included) who came of age during the second (third?) great age of comics; The Silver age which ran from 1956 through 1970[i].
Now some 80+ years later, Jesse Simon, the Grandson of Joe, along
with his father Jim (Jo’s son) have brought a new set of heroes into the fold, all
reminiscent of his grandfather’s greatest hero. ShieldMaster is a comicbook about
four teenagers from Montauk, NY just off the eastern end of Long Island. The
teens wander onto a decommissioned military base and come across a set of extra-dimensional
shields that imbue them with supra-normal powers and abilities, transforming
them into the incarnations of powerful warriors that once protected another
world in another dimension. The first two issues of ShieldMaster initially
appeared as an Illustrated graphic album entitled ShieldMaster Comics Phoenix
Project and was then continued as ShieldMaster Comics in
an anthology comic, packaged with The Fly in a new story by Jim Simon as well
as a Blue Bolt reprint by his grandfather, Joe.
One of the aspects of ShieldMaster (as well as
Golden Age) comics is the shear simplicity of the storytelling; heroes are good
guys because they do the right things, while villains are bad because they do
bad things. There was little if any subtility to the storytelling during that
era, some of which spilled over into the early days of the Silver Age with the appearance
of the original Brotherhood of Evil Mutants in X-Men #4 (March
1964), because truthfully, no real world organization would actually use the word
“evil” as part of their name. As the medium evolved, subtilty and layers of
storytelling were added to what was once believed to be solely a child’s
medium. Needless to say, this simpler, straightforward style of storytelling is
not entirely without its charm. Plus, for all of its layered subtility, a
simpler, more to-the-point style of telling a story is probably more effective
for a small publisher without a clear, regular publishing schedule.
In conclusion, we wish Jason and Jim all the best in their
noble endeavor to keep Joe’s legacy alive in the field that he help found.
For more information about ShieldMaster, check them out on Facebook, or Twitter.
[i] Stan Lee once stated that “comicbooks” should be written as one word because they are neither either “comical” or “books” but by combining them into a single word, they actually become an entirely new genre. Hence we have since referred to our medium of choice by the nomenclature that Stan laid on it.
[ii]
The accepted eras for comics are as follows:
1 Platinum Age (1842-1938)
2 Golden Age (1938- c. 1951)
3 Silver Age (1956 -c. 1970)
4 Bronze Age (c. 1970 – c. 1985)
5 Iron/Modern Age (c. 1985 -
present)
Friday, January 06, 2023
Avatar, the endless path
Still, to do that, I’m-a gonna have to give you my quickie
review of the first film.
Avatar
A group of nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials travel across the galaxy to new planet to seize a power source from the sacred ground of the indigenous peoples. Only the hi-tech, highly militarized, Colonials get their collective asses kicked by the lo-tech (bow-and-arrow) indigenous peoples and are sent packing.
Fifteen years later, those same nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials (pissed that they got their collective asses kicked) travel back across the galaxy in order to seize a brand-new power source from sacred creatures of the indigenous peoples. Once again, they get their collective asses kicked, only this time in water.
For my next trick, as Cameron has announced several more Avatar
films (one every two years from now to eternity and beyond, just like James
Bond). So I’m going to (precognitively) deliver my reviews of the next six projected
Avatar films.
The nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials (who are still
living on Pandora) attempt to seize another brand-new power source from the indigenous
peoples of Pandora. Once again, they get their collective asses kicked, only
this time more severely, and with fire.
Avatar 4: The Way
of Wind
Here it is another several years later and those same nasty,
self-entitled, White Colonials (still pissed that they keep getting their
collective asses kicked) travel across Pandora in order to seize another new power
source, this time from the very planet of the indigenous peoples. But, once
again — that’s right — get their collective asses kicked.
A whole bunch of new nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials (pissed
that their friends got their collective asses kicked) arrive on Pandora so as
to seize spice from the giant sandworms that are ridden by the indigenous Na'vi Dessert Dwellers, and are surprised when they get their collective asses kicked.
Avatar 6: The Way to
Tipperary
Those very bad nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials (once
again surprisingly pissed that they got their collective asses kicked) travel back
across Pandora to seize a new and improved power source from a sacred place of
the indigenous peoples. Only to (surprise), get their collective asses kicked.
You will get to see even more nasty, self-entitled, White Colonials
(once again, eternally pissed that they keep getting their collective asses kicked)
travel to yet another sacred place on Pandora so as to seize a spanking-brand-new
power source from the indigenous peoples. And here’s a new twist to the story,
they get their collective asses seriously kicked.
This time the Na'vi are fed up with the constant waring on
their planet, and travel to Earth in order to confront the nasty, self-entitled,
White Colonials on their homeworld to once again, majorly kick their collective
asses, this time on TV by repeatedly not voting Kevin McCarthy as House
Speaker. (Yeah, I totally went there,.)
Yeah, I realize that I got seriously flip with my extended mini reviews, but here’s the rub. When thew first Avatar film came out Cameron was fairly-well roasted over the fact that his plot for that film read suspiciously like the plot to the Disneyfied version of Pocahontas. Now, having seen both films, we now feel that the film he will be retelling for the next 3,000 years of longing will, in fact, be Zulu (a 1964 film that recounted a 1879 battle where the Zulu nation hands the invading Colonial British armed forces a resounding defeat in battle; a defeat that will be echoed throughout history by the American Colonists, and virtually ever British protectorate for all times).
Tuesday, January 03, 2023
Turning Book Pages into Art
I personally discovered them at the 2022 New York Comicbook
Convention, where they occupied a booth opposite the booth where I was working
(Heroes in Action).
During our down times during NYCC (which weren’t many) I was drawn to their
booth in order to check out their very cool product.
What Jen and Kristy have done is take pages from books that are old, torn, tattered, and/or getting thrown away, and give them new life by creating original art on weathered old book pages. According to Book Page Art’s web page, they work at matching their page artwork and quotes to the books that correlate with them. “We take special care that artwork represents the book that the pages are from.” Needless to say, the specific book page on which the art appears (either a quote from the book, or some art relevant to the book itself) will often vary from the pages shown in photos on the site.
The art page that I discovered which best suited my state of mind was a page from The Alchemist (a book, I admittedly (sadly) never actually read, but I did acquire a copy soon afterwards and it is now sitting by my bedside). I immediately fell in love with this page and the quote as it most assuredly described the current state of my life, as I find myself in a relationship with a woman I’ve known and have been friends with for several years. After a number of failed relationships (for each of us) we have found a cojoined life for both of us with each other. Hence the quote seemed spot on as far as we were both concerned.
The art is now on display in our Livingroom, just above the
fireplace. Because while the gift was from me to my love, it accurately
describes how we each feel about each other.
Write what you know: Joe Martino’s The Mighty Titan
Here is yet another older article of mine that appeared some years back on another web page with which I am no longer associated. It has b...
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Back in 2006 is when I first met Matt C. Ryan ( Bigger ). Then in 2006 he illustrated the first chapter of my Wűlf Girlz storyline. We went ...
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I’d like to talk a bit about a friend of mine, named Rusty Haller. Rusty is a damn-fine cartoonist with quite an impressive history. His fir...