Tag Archive: Ray Bradbury


Guest of Honor: PulpFest

I am very excited to be the Guest of Honor at this year’s PulpFest!

PulpFest 2010 will be held July 30 – Aug 1, 2010 in Columbus, OH.

June 14, 2010

PulpFest Programming: Bill Nolan

Filed under: Programming — posted by Ed @ 5:16 pm

With PulpFest less than two months away, the committee is now finalizing the schedule of events and composition of panels. This year’s convention will boast even more programs than last year’s, with many of the pulp community’s most knowledgeable members participating in discussions that will be as informative as they are entertaining.

Guest of Honor William F. Nolan will appear at three separate events. On Friday evening, following the official welcome to PulpFest attendees, Nolan will be interviewed by his friend and agent, Jason Brock. In addition to touching on Max Brand and the Black Mask writers being celebrated at this year’s convention, the author will discuss his relationships with Ray Bradbury, Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, and other well-known writers of genre fiction in the pulp tradition. And, of course, he’ll talk about his own work, including his contributions to the horror field (such as his work for the revived Weird Tales) and the novels for which he is perhaps best known, Logan’s Run and its sequels.

Immediately following the one-on-one session, Mr. Nolan will join moderator Don Hutchison and panelists Robert Randisi, Laurie Powers, and Ed Hulse for what we expect will be a lively discussion on Western pulp fiction, with an emphasis on the amazing Max Brand. Don is familiar to pulp aficionados as the author of The Great Pulp Heroes and editor of several outstanding pulp-fiction anthologies. Affectionately known as “the last of the pulp writers,” Bob Randisi has written hundreds of novels in the genre and will bring to the panel a more contemporary viewpoint. Laurie Powers, in addition to being a talented author and dedicated scholar, is the granddaughter of prolific Wild West Weekly scribe Paul S. Powers, who created some of that magazine’s most popular, long-running series characters. Ed Hulse is editor and publisher of Blood ‘n’ Thunder and author of The Blood ‘n’ Thunder Guide to Collecting Pulps, as well as a lifelong fan of Western fiction.

Finally, Nolan will headline Saturday night’s panel on Black Mask, the legendary crime-fiction pulp whose first issue appeared 90 years ago. He’ll be joined by Walker Martin, one of only two private collectors known to have compiled a complete set of this influential and highly desirable magazine; author, editor, and screenwriter John Wooley, the detective-fiction aficionado largely responsible for the resurgence of interest in pulp private eye Dan Turner; and another as yet unconfirmed scholar. Ed Hulse will moderate.

These all-star panels are only some of the events we have planned for PulpFest.  They’ll cover Westerns and crime pulps, but we’re not neglecting other genres. Fans, scholars and collectors interested in other categories, such as hero pulps and science fiction, can expect presentations targeted to their interests as well. We’ll be announcing those other events over the next few weeks.

Anyone with even a cursory interest in pulp fiction will find plenty to do, see, and buy at PulpFest, where a wide variety of material for sale will be displayed in a spacious hucksters room housing nearly 100 tables.  This year we’ve also arranged for a lunch wagon and tables where hungry attendees can wolf down sandwiches and take the load off their feet without leaving the hotel or missing any of the action.

There’s still time to make your room reservations and qualify for the special PulpFest room rate. Just click on the link for our host hotel, the Ramada Plaza, and use the toll-free number to book your room.

Things are coming together fast now, so be sure and check this page regularly over the next few weeks for additional programming announcements.

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1 Comment »

  1. PulpFest attendees are in for a real treat. Bill Nolan not only is a great writer and a hell of a guy, but also provided tremendous assistance in my efforts to document Matheson’s career. He contributed a wonderful essay on their friendship to THE RICHARD MATHESON COMPANION (and its revised version, THE TWILIGHT AND OTHER ZONES), which I edited with Stanley Wiater and Paul Stuve, and offered much insight into their personal and professional relationship for my forthcoming book RICHARD MATHESON ON SCREEN. Like Matheson, he is legend!Comment by Matthew Bradley — June 15, 2010 @ 3:23 pm

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Copyright 2010 William F. Nolan

American science fiction author William F. Nolan.
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I still have the book, the one good old Boris put together, the one that started is all: Tales of Terror, a 1943 World hardcover, featuring authors I’d never heard of – Algernon Blackwood, William Fryer Harvey, Oliver Onions…
Oh, sure, I’d heard of William Faulkner and O. Henry, but never within the context of “terror”.
Boris Karloff edited the book and selected the stories (his glowering face was on the dust jacket). I was fifteen years old when I plunked down fifty cents (half my weekly allowance) for this landmark anthology.
Things would never be the same.
Horror, terror, and dark fantasy had entered my life. The jig was up.
I discovered Ray Bradbury (in Weird Tales), and was soon devouring the dark words of Poe and Lovecraft and Coppard and Machen and Henry James (never dreaming that decades later I would have the grisly pleasure of adapting his ghost classic “The Turn of the Screw” for television).
I met Mr. Karloff himself over lunch in Hollywood and found him to be anything but “terrible”. Soft-spoken, gentle, with kind eyes (that could turn ruthless on screen), he was a sheer delight.
I’m a self-confessed horror addict when it comes to dark fiction, and my retrospective collection, William F. Nolan’s Dark Universe testifies to this abiding passion. I’ve written in a dozen other genres, from crime to sports racing, but I keep returning to my first true love with such books as Urban Horrors, Blood Sky, Nightshadows, and Dark Dimensions.
I was greatly pleased to be voted a “Living Legend in Dark Fantasy” in 2002 by the International Horror Guild – and now come this “Life Achievement Award”, a singular honor.
I could never have done it alone.
Witches
Ghouls
Goblins
Vampires
Ghosts
Demons
Zombies
Werewolves
Dark companions all.
Where would I be without them?

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