by Blogcritics | Sep 20, 2016 | art, books, media, paranormal |
By Barbara Barnett The coloring craze continues, and what better a time to launch a coloring book featuring the words of Edgar Allan Poe than just before Halloween? Clever, huh? Edgar Allan Poe: An Adult Coloring Book by Odessa Begay is a perfect companion for those...
by Clarissa Cole | Jul 27, 2016 | art, culture, media, religion and belief, weird/science |
In 2011, Norway faced a mass murder event that was unparalleled in recent history. One man – Anders Breivik – traveled to Utoya Island (just off Norway’s coast), gunned down 77 people and wounded 200 others. The worst part of the tragedy is that the victims were...
by Blogcritics | Jul 18, 2016 | art, books, comics, conventions and events, culture, extraterrestrials, media, monsters, movies, paranormal, television |
By Shawn Bourdo and Gordon S. Miller San Diego Comic-Con 2016: Thursday Shawn Bourdo The first day of Comic-Con is such a roller coaster. It’s usually the sweetest day of the whole Con. You are still full of energy, you’ve forgotten how the Convention smells and the...
by Blogcritics | Jun 8, 2016 | art, books, comics, media, monsters, paranormal |
By JEFF PROVINE Blood in Four Colours: A Graphic History of Horror Comics by Pedro Cabezuelo is the sixth edition in the Rue Morgue Library. Rue Morgue is a Toronto-based media house, launched in 1997 by Rodrigo Gudino that has become a leading world horror brand in...
by Eric Olsen | Feb 26, 2016 | art, conventions and events, culture, media, radio |
On tonight’s elegant yet trashy edition of After Hours AM/America’s Most Haunted Radio with hosts Joel Sturgis and Eric Olsen, 9-11pE, we dig into the whimsical yet macabre world of artist/illustrator Edward Gorey, talking with founder of the...
by Eric Olsen | Jan 28, 2016 | art, culture, frankenstein, media, monsters, movies |
The Bride of Frankenstein, as all classic horror and monster fans know, is the 1935 sequel to Frankenstein, directed by James Whale and starring an ethereal Elsa Lanchester in dual roles as the Bride and Mary Shelley, and Boris Karloff as the Monster. Why? Because the...