Showing posts with label kitschin'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitschin'. Show all posts

Friday, October 16, 2020

fall 2020 antique mall roundup

 We got out of COVID quarantine lockdown in, what, May? And immediately we went out to the antique malls that we'd been denied entrance to since February, some of which we hadn't been to in a year or so. What did we see?




Well, let's see. The Woodstock antique mall was the first one we hit and it's upped its game considerably; it claims to be the largest in Canada and so far it seems like that's indeed the case. Three floors of this former manufacturing/warehouse/I dunno space are now filled up with stuff, and it's worth an afternoon. 

The two in St. Jacobs, on the other hand, are pretty much exactly the same as they were last year, with the weird new wrinkle being that the vendors in both that once had comic books have had all their comic books mysteriously vanish. They're still in the same spaces, still have the old magazines & paperbacks, but the comics are gone. 

The Cambridge mall hasn't changed a bit. In fact it seems to have less stuff, if that's possible. 

Ditto the Tillsonburg mall, it seems like it has the exact same merch from when we were in there last, in 2019? 2018?  I get that the pandemic has made it more difficult for pickers to get out there and bother the retirees and estate salers that are their typical targets, but still, it's weird to see the same exact stuff in the same exact spots in the same exact booths.  The Courtland place down the road seems to have a better refresh rate, however. Not great, just better. 

Haven't been to Waterdown yet this year. 




Beaumont Mill Antiques in Georgetown has been static for a while. We've found better stuff in the Georgetown thrifts.

The Hamilton Antique Mall is reasonably new, in a great building, and seems to be adding vendors at a nice clip. It's worth a visit. 

Freelton Antique Mall is reliable, they keep managing to cycle through interesting merchandise. 

The 401 Roadshow mall in Innisfill has changed things around a little, it has a few more (boring mid-80s super hero) comics, every once in awhile some neat stuff cycles through.

Further north of Barrie the Pickers' End on the side of Hwy 11 has some great architectural stuff and some truly insane crazy grandma comic book prices. Further north, the Antiques On 11 mall is turning up some interesting pieces, it's worth the drive.

The Port Perry mall is, once again, one of those places where the comic book vendor just vanished. There isn't a funnybook in the place. 

The Roadshow mall in Pickering is almost not worth a stop. Overpriced comics and bad furniture. 




The Courtice flea market delivers interesting stuff from time to time. 

Antiques On 48 in Baldwin is ehhhh (makes hand waving motion)

Sydney Claire and Heath Vintage in Colborne - NOT PORT COLBORNE! - had some groovy stuff the last time we were out that way. Might need to visit again. 

The Main Thru Church mall in Orono seems to keep replenishing with just enough interesting merch to keep us coming back. The other antique mall in town is bigger, but the stuff isn't as good. 

Perth has a really great antique mall, one of the best we've been to this year. We hit it years ago coming back from Ottawa and it was great then and it's still great, lots of the mid century kitsch we like. Saw a Robotech Lisa Hayes fashion doll there in August, always a good sign.




The Nostalgic Journey mall in Peterborough on Hwy 7 has been a dry hole for a while now. 

Craftworks & Antiques At The Barn in Selwyn had good stuff last summer. Haven't been back this year. 

The Crossroads mall in Brantford seems to keep delivering small amounts of neat stuff, enough to keep us coming back. 

Prudhomme's Antique Market on the QEW seems to have better stuff, need to get out there when the outdoor vendors are rockin'. 

If we've been to Lakeshore Antiques & Treasures in Niagara-By-The-Lake any time soon, I can't recall. 

Queensville mall closed, Stratford mall closed, and the Barrie mall closed. 







Monday, January 6, 2020

2020 event calendar

As I do every year, here's a list of events for the coming year just so I can have things I might attend all in one space and I can plan. Events will be added as they're announced - no dates for Canzine or Zine Dream yet, for instance - so stay tuned. 


January

February

Ancaster Nostalgia Show Feb. 2 Ancaster Fairgrounds

Toronto Comic Book Show Feb. 16 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

Anime Hell: 70s Night Feb. 22, Eyesore Cinema

Oshawa Record Show Feb. 23 
https://www.vibrations.ca/en/record-shows/month.calendar/2020/02/06/-

March

Toronto Toy & Nostalgia Show Sunday March 1 Montecassino

Guelph Record Swap & Sale March 29, 
Unifor Local 1917 Hall
611 Silvercreek Pkwy N
Guelph Ont
N1H 6J2

Ancaster Collectibles Extravaganza March 1 Ancaster Fairgrounds

April

Vintage Marketplace 2020, April 18, Westinghouse HQ Hamilton 

Aberfoyle Antique Market Show April 26 Aberfoyle

Toronto Comic Book Show April 26 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

Toronto East Vinyl Record & Collectibles Show April 26 
Heron Park Recreation Centre
292 Manse Road
Toronto

May

Toronto Mississauga Redord Show May 3 Capitol Banquet Centre 

TCAF May 8 & 9

Anime North May 22-24 https://www.animenorth.com/event/

June

Toronto Comic Book Show June 28 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

July

August

Toronto Comic Book Show August 16 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

Guelph Record & Music Collectibles Show Sun Sept. 20 
Royal Canadian Legion
57 WATSON PARKWAY SOUTH
GUELPH

September

Toronto East Vinyl Record & Collectibles Show  August 13 
Heron Park Recreation Centre
292 Manse Road
Toronto

Toronto Comic Book Show September 27 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

October

Anime Weekend Atlanta Oct. 29-Nov. 1 https://awa-con.com

November

Toronto Comic Book Show November 22 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

December 

Toronto Comic Book Show December 27 Montecassino http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com/show-dates/

Saturday, January 5, 2019

2019 event calendar

Here's what's going on in and around Toronto for my own reference and the reference of anyone who might find it helpful. Comic shows, record shows, antique shows, anime cons, it's a mixed bag of distraction! 

Anime North Staff Meeting
Sunday Jan 20

Ancaster Nostalgia Antique Show
Sunday Feb 3, 2019
Ancaster Fairgrounds
collectorshows.ca

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday Feb 17, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

St. Catherines Record Show
Sunday Feb 17, 2019
Holiday Inn Parkway Convention Centre
www.vibrations.ca

Kitcheners Collectibles Expo
Sunday Feb. 24, 2019
Bingemans Conference Centre Marshall Hall
collectorshows.ca

Anime North Staff Meeting
Sunday Feb 24

Oshawa Record Show
Sunday Feb. 24
Lviv Hall Oshawa
vibrations.ca

Toronto Antique & Vintage Market
March 2-3
Queen Elizabeth Building, Exhibition Place
torontoantiqueandvintagemarket.ca

Ancaster Toy And Collectibles Extravaganza
Sunday March 3
Ancaster Fairgrounds
collectorshows.ca

Ottawa Nostagia And Collectibles Show
Sunday March 17
Nepean Sportsplex
antique-shows.ca

Anime North Staff Meeting
Sunday March 17

Newmarket Vinyl Show
Sunday March 24
Newmarket Community Centre
vibrations.ca

Guelph Record Swap & Sale
Sunday March 31
vibrations.ca

Ancaster Nostalgia Antique Show
Sunday April 7
Ancaster Fairgrounds
collectorshows.ca

Elora Vintage and Antique Show
Saturday April 13 - Sunday April 14
Elora Community Centre
antiqueshowscanada.com

Kitcheners Collectibles Expo
Sunday April 14
Bingemans Conference Centre Marshall Hall
collectorshows.ca

Anime North Staff Meeting
Saturday April 20

antique, vintage & retro show and sale
April 27-28
Belleville Armouries
mercatusevents.com

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday April 28th, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Toronto East Vinyl Record Show
Sunday April 28
Heron Park Rec Centre
vibrations.ca

Toronto Mississauga Musical Collectibles Show
Sunday May 5
Capitol Banquet Centre
vibrations.ca

TCAF
May 11-12
http://www2.torontocomics.com

Anime North Staff Meeting
Monday May 20

Anime North
May 24-26
Toronto Congress Centre & Delta Hotel Airport
www.animenorth.com

35th annual Beaverton Antiques & Collectables show
June 1 & 2
Beaverton Thorah Community Centre

St. Catherines Record Show
Sunday June 2
Holiday Inn Parkway Convention Centre
www.vibrations.ca

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday June 23rd, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday August 18th, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Toronto East Vinyl Record Show
Sunday Sept. 8
Heron Park Rec Centre
vibrations.ca

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday September 29th, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Newmarket Vinyl Show
Sunday Oct. 20
Newmarket Community Centre
vibrations.ca

Anime Weekend Atlanta
Oct. 31- Nov. 3
Cobb Galleria Convention Center/Renaissance Waverly
www.awa-con.com

St. Catherines Record Show
Sunday Nov. 10
Holiday Inn Parkway Convention Centre
www.vibrations.ca

Toronto Comic Book Show
Sunday November 24th, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Toronto West Vinyl Show
Sunday Dec. 8 2019
Ken Cox Community Centre
vibrations.ca

Toronto Comic Book Show
Friday December 27th, 2019
http://www.torontocomicbookshow.com

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

calendar of 2018 events of interest to me

Every year I try to take a minute and go through various websites and figure out what's happening in and around my area that I might be interested in visiting, and this usually means comic book shows and record shows and antique/collectible type shows. Here's for 2018!

This list is by no means comprehensive or complete, and inclusion on this list should not be considered to be an endorsement of any kind. 

Jan 28 Ontario Collectors Con 2018 Hilton Mississauga/Meadowvale – 6750 Mississauga Road, Mississauga

Feb 4 Ancaster Nostalgia And Antique Show And Sale

Feb 10 Saturday Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

Feb 18 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 

Feb 18 Canadian ToyCon Holiday Inn Burlington Hotel & Conference Centre, 3063 South Service Road Hours: 10 AM – 3 PM 

Feb 18 ST. CATHARINES RECORD SHOW - Holiday Inn Parkway Convention Centre, St. Catharines, On $4.00 

Feb 25 Oshawa Record Show - Lviv Hall, Oshawa, On $3.00 

March 4 Ancaster Toy And Collectibles Extravaganza 

March 10 Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

March 25 Guelph Record Swap and Sale - Record Sale & Swap Meet, Guelph, Ont 

March 25 Toronto Downtown Record Show - Toronto Downtown Record Show, Toronto, ON - $5.00

April 15 The Toronto/Mississauga Record Show & Sale - Capitol Banquet Centre, Mississauga, Ont $5 

April 15 Ancaster Nostalgia And Antique Show And Sale April 21 Newmarket Card & Comics Show

April 22 Newmarket Vinyl Records & Collectibles Show - The Record Vault, Newmarket, On $4.00

April 22 Canadian ToyCon Holiday Inn Burlington Hotel & Conference Centre, 3063 South Service Road 

April 29 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 
May 6 Ancaster Collectorfest 

May 25-27 Anime North 

June 3 Ancaster Toy And Collectibles Extravaganza 

June 8-10 Anime Next Atlantic City NJ 

June 23 Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

June 24 Ancaster Nostalgia And Antique Show And Sale 

June 24 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 

July 28 Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

August 18 Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

August 19 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 

August 19 Ancaster Toy And Collectibles Extravaganza 

Sept. 9 Toronto East (Scarborough) Vinyl Record & Collectibles Show - Heron Park Recreation Centre, Toronto, On $5.00 

Sept 20-23 Anime Weekend Atlanta 

Sept 30 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 

October 13 Newmarket Card & Comics Show 

October 21 Newmarket Vinyl Record & Collectibles Show - The Record Vault, Newmarket, On $4.00 

Nov. 4 Toronto Downtown Record Show - Toronto Downtown Record Show, Toronto, ON - $5.00

Nov. 13 Newmarket Card & Comics Show Nov. 25 Toronto Comic Book Show Toronto Plaza Hotel 1677 Wilson 

Dec. 9 Toronto West (Etobicoke) Vinyl Record & Collectibles Show - Ken Cox Community Centre, Toronto, $5.00 

Dec. 15 Newmarket Card & Comics Show

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Mister Kitty's Etsy Shop

If you're a fan of mid-century kitsch - and who isn't? - then you owe it to yourself to visit Mister Kitty's Etsy Shop, the Etsy shop where the people behind the popular "Mister Kitty" site pass along their pop-culture artifacts to lucky consumers.  Here's just a few of the items available:

"Calling All Girls" from 1965 starring Patty Duke

A selection of Intellivision game guides, overlays, and catalogs

An autographed 8x10 of Larry Storch

a Woody Woodpecker puzzle!

All these items - and more!- are available at bargain prices for select consumers, so don't delay, help us clean out our closets today!

Monday, December 3, 2012

What time is ULTRAMAN on?

giant Archie daily

Mad Magazine's Paul Coker had a daily strip at one point.


All images from the first edition of the TORONTO SUN, Nov. 1, 1971.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

thrift store LP records for the vinyl seeker

So you heard vinyl is the hot new fad and you bought a turntable and now you want some records to play on it. But what's a fair price for an old LP that isn't particularly collectible? Whatever Goodwill sells it for. $2, $3 maybe, if it's one of those upscale stores that thinks everything's a collector's item. Hell, the record store in Peterborough we were at recently (open 24 hours, METALLIC K.O. on the store system) has a ton of LPs for fifty cents each or as many as you can carry for five dollars. But seriously, here are some artists whose entire catalog you can find for less than two bucks each.

Billy Joel - From "Record Where He's Throwing Stone At Greenhouse" to "Record where he's standing on sidewalk", his entire catalog is in every thrift store in the world. Tell her about it!!

Genesis. Duke, Lamb Lies Down, Abadabacaba, their self-titled LP, it's all there in the thrift. Also Phil Collins solo albums. Can you feel it in the air tonight?

Supertramp, "Breakfast In America". I've seen crazy grandmas trying to sell this for ten, twenty bucks, but your local Salvation Army has it for one dollar.

Styx - Pieces Of Eight, Crystal Ball, Paradise Theater, even Kilroy Was Here, it's all in the thrift. Keep your eyes open for their early pre-Tommy Shaw Wooden Nickel releases STYX and STYX II.

I know Elton John has a wide catalog, but much of it is right there in your local thrift store including Captain Fantastic, the record whose sleeve disturbed me as a child, don't ask me why.

It goes without saying that Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass will have a representative sampling of LPs in any collection of cast off records, including "Whipped Cream And Other Delights". If you need fifty thousand copies of that record, just go to any thrift store.

I know what you're saying, who the hell is Nana Mouskouri? Well, I don't know either, but somebody up here bought the hell out of her records because there is not one thrift store in Canada without a freakin' Nana Mouskouri record in it. Usually two or three.

Same deal with James Last. Holy cow could this guy make records that people would want to get rid of in a big way. In fact when I see the James Last LP in the thrift store, that's my signal to quit and go look at electronics.

Fleetwood Mac's "Rumors". NEVER PAY MORE THAN A DOLLAR FOR THIS RECORD. It's everywhere. I hardly ever see "Tusk", though.

If you ever need any kind of Christmas music for any reason whatsoever, your local thrift store has lots and lots and lots and lots of Christmas music.

Chicago. They made a lot of records, and I know this because they all got donated to Goodwill.

Bee Gees - the "Saturday Night Fever" LPs have largely disappeared thanks to kitschy 70s nostalgia, but their "Main Course" record always shows up. If you look closely it has a naked woman on the cover!

Toronto. Not the city, but the band, who apparently gave a copy of one of their LPs to every citizen of Toronto, who said "thanks!" and then gave them to the Salvation Army.

Max Bygreaves - singalongamax - this British fellow is something like Mitch Miller, a genial host who encourages people to sing along with him. He made fifty or sixty million different LPs and I've seen all of them in thrifts here in Ontario and in the States.

My Fair Lady - the Rex Harrision/Julie Andrews cast recording with the Hirschfeld cover. Everybody loves the Hirschfeld, apparently, I see this record everywhere.

Eagles - this popular country-rock combo was so hate-filled at the end of their "The Long Run" tour that they weren't speaking to each other except in curses. And you can buy all their albums at the thrift store now for pennies on the dollar! Take it easy, desperado! Christ, I hate the Eagles.

Bing Crosby's Christmas Albums. Apparently he quit hitting his kids long enough to cut this Christmas LP of which one awaits you at the Goodwill.

AC/DC - If you need "Back In Black" or "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap" then you can't get much cheaper than your local thrift. Because they are there.

Loggins & Messina - if you wanted to hear what Kenny Loggins sounded like before he took that highway to the danger zone, look no further than Goodwill.

Carole King - "Tapestry". I think thrift stores find these LPs lying on the ground when they open for business.

Star Castle. Who were they? What did they sound like? I have no idea. But their LPs are everywhere.

The Knack "Get The Knack". You'd think hipsters would have snapped all these up, but you'd be wrong.

Beatles - they sold a hundred zillion records but people kept most of them. In fact people buy them over and over again in different formats. The only Beatles LPs I see in thrifts are the "1962-1966" and "1967-1970" compilations. And every record Wings ever made, they're all in the thrift.

Kingston Trio - they're still trapped on the MTA, and in the thrift. You'd think these early 60s folk LPs would be worth something, but you'd be wrong.

Monkees - you can still pick up their first two LPs in the thrifts for very little cash. Their later, less scripted records are harder to find, but occasionally turn up. I never see solo Mike Nesmith LPs, though I did find the "Dolez, Jones, Boyce & Hart" LP, which is an oddity, let me tell you.

Moody Blues - whichever one has "Nights In White Satin" on it, the sleeve looks like a classical LP. Never pay more than a dollar for it. In fact I will pay you a dollar to not have to ever hear "Nights In White Satin" again. Apparently the "mono" version of this LP is worth big bucks, though.

Classical LPs - they're all there. Everything. Take them, just take 'em.

Carpenters - if you never need a Carpenters LP, Goodwill has 'em.

Boz Scaggs - that record where he's sitting on the bench! They have lots.

still clogging up the bins - Frampton Comes Alive! Can you feel like I do?

Cheap Trick - I see "Live At Budokan" with the occasional "Dream Police". Both are worth having especially for a buck each.

Bobby Sherman - he's still got it! "It" being "lots of records people didn't keep."

Rolling Stones - apart from the occasional 80s release like "Tattoo You" which everybody agrees isn't really worth having, not a lot of Stones in the thrifts.

Heart. Usually two or three Heart LPs in the pile.

Children's records. Of all kinds and shapes and sizes. Disney, Peter Pan, Sesame Street, Smurfs, Strawberry Shortcake, whatever label had children's records, they wind up in the thrift store. The Smurfs made a lot of records. Sometimes this intersects with...

Religious records. Jimmy Swaggart sermons, Tammy Faye sings, gospel quartets, gospel bluegrass quartets, hymns, children's religious songs, it can all be yours for pennies on the dollar.

Jim Nabors. Gomer cut a lot of albums of his operatic baritone style singing. I mean a LOT of records. You will see the first one and think it's kinda funny, and then you'll see the second one and the third one and so on, and then you realize that somebody out there was buying these things.

Bins full of the same 12" rap single. Local talent got together with local producer and cut a rap record! And it went straight to Goodwill, who got boxes and boxes and boxes of "Boomp (Street wit 2 EZ)" by DJ Zipadeh Doodah and Professor Murder, or whoever.

I see Michael Jackson's OFF THE WALL sometimes, but people held on to THRILLER. I hardly ever see Jackson 5 LPs.

All of the Osmonds' work is at the thrift. Donny, Marie, and the rest, they're all there. If you've been itching to hear Marie sing "Paper Roses", get to the Sally.

Melanie. Apparently there was a singer named Melanie and she cut some records, and they are disproportionately represented in our thrift stores.

Sing Along With Mrs. Mills! Let's Have A Party With Mrs. Mills! Somebody Tell Mrs. Mills To Go Home! Before Susan Boyle, the UK's middle-aged housefrau crooning needs were represented by Mrs. Mills and her hearty anthems. Who would buy this record? And why?

Jackson Browne. The Pretender. All over the thrifts.

Seals & Crofts. Who are they? What did they do? Did they croft seals? Who knows? Lots of albums from these kings of Yacht Rock in the thrifts. SUMMER BREEZE MAKES YOU FEEL FINE BLOWIN' IN THE JASMINE IN THE BACK OF THE GOODWILL.

Grand Funk Railroad. Was it THESE guys who had the cover where they're all cavemen? That's the guys I'm thinking of. All you want for a dollar each.

If you look at the cassettes you'll notice that the selection of music moves from 60s-70s to late 70s'-80s-90s. I hardly ever look at cassettes, which is stupid of me because a lot of really weird stuff shows up on cassette in thrift stores. But I don't know if there are any acts that show up everywhere the way Herb Alpert does on LP. CDs are usually empty cases, free AOL discs, computer software from 1996, or record company compilation giveaways.

Ethnic music. Hungarian folk songs, Russian folk songs, Ukrainian folk songs, Polish folk songs, German drinking songs. Electronic European dance tunes. Chinese traditional songs. Voodoo drums from Haiti. The ethnic makeup of the neighborhood matters, sometimes. Sometimes it doesn't. But every thrift has a good selection of weird foreign tunes from 'the old country.'

CANADA ONLY: Up here the thrifts are full of LPs that you don't find in the States. Mostly albums by Prism, whose anthem "Spaceship Superstar" is a classic of cheesy space rock. Also Canada's number-one good time party band Trooper, I see a lot of their albums in the thrift bins. Never seen a Prism record south of the border, though. I have seen Rush LPs in both nations, but the percentage here is higher.

I'll be honest, the chances of finding anything 'really good' in the thrift stores get smaller every day; professionals are out there culling the herd daily to try and sell to hipsters in Queen West stores at two thousand percent markups. The days of finding entire Ramones catalogs for $1 each in the Salvation Army are long gone. But if you do kill some time flipping through their albums hoping for a score, remember that you'll be spending a lot of time with Mr. Herb Alpert.

more crazy grandma price guide action

Crazy Grandma Price Guide report, Jan. '10

Tread lightly, pilgrims... watch your head... LOOK OUT!! IT'S THE CRAZY GRANDMA COMIC BOOK PRICE GUIDE IN ACTION!!!

How much are you willing to pay for that copy of TUFF GHOSTS STARRING SPOOKY? Five dollars? Ten dollars? TWENTY DOLLARS? Think again, my pretty! Heh heh eh heh heh cough COUGH HACK COUGH OH JESUS PANT PANT pant.





Not ten or twenty or thirty or thirty-five - but forty whole dollars! Captured by the digital camera of intrepid explorers Shaindle Minuk and Dave Merrill as they delve deep, thrusting uncomfortably to penetrate the mysteries lurking within the caves - the CREEPY FREUDIAN CAVES starring HOT STUFF - of the World 'O Crazy Grandma Price Guide. You should probably go wash your hands now.

This was shot on Day One of this year's Xmas Odyssey at, obviously, the "L&K Antiques Mall" which is located on the 401 east of Windsor Ontario, north of Leamington (the Tomato Capital of Ontario) and somewhere within about a half-hour drive of Colasanti's Tropical Gardens, a farmer's market/roast chicken buffet/lawn and patio decor/petting zoo/tourist trap sort of place that's worth a stop if the weather's nice and you don't have anywhere in particular you need to be.

Other highlights of Day One of our trip include, um, getting gas, the US Customs guy being all attitudinal because the passports were not offered to him together in one simple motion, and being stopped by the Olympic Torch as it passed us in Windsor. And dinner at Bob Evans in Dayton and stopping for the night somewhere north of Louisville KY. Where Dave and Shain go, excitement follows!11!1!!! Can you feel it?

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Star Quest... To Avoid Copyright Infringment

Out of the depths of outer space and beyond the furthest galaxies comes STAR QUEST, the fantastic series of novels released in 1978 that only slightly resembles a popular film of the day! 



The cover of this, the first book, only hints of the Star Warsy goodness inside, but check out the back cover copy for juicy details of the reptiloid Lord Blog, servant of the evil Dark Emperor Ylang-Ylang, as their forces threaten the entire galaxy! And when the second book came out, I wanna say sometime the following month, they ditched the noncommittal SF cover theme and went straight for the Star Wars.




I've flipped through the books and they seem to be boilerplate pulp full of scanner-techs, quadrant formations, murderous reptiloids, hydro-gliders, felinoids of the planet Yahwoo, and the boy genius Ween Leever and his robot techno-companion O-V-1. "Ween Leever"! Oh yeah.

The third book in the series, "Star Force", brought this entire cosmos-shattering saga to a universe rattling conclusion.  Robert E. Mills retreated from outer space, never to write another science fiction novel again... or is there a three-book prequel out there waiting to inflict itself upon an unsuspecting public?