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Wednesday, 18 August 2021
Gaston Velle's A Little Jules Verne
Wednesday, 4 August 2021
St. Louis in 2010
Wednesday, 21 July 2021
The Grand Canyon's Lost Civilization
EXPLORATIONS IN GRAND CANYONMysteries of Immense High Cavern Being Brought to LightJORDAN IS ENTHUSEDRemarkable Finds Indicate Ancient People Migrated From Orient
Wednesday, 7 July 2021
Im Jahre 2000 mit Stollwerck Chocolade
Retro-futuristic cards were a popular inclusion for chocolates in Europe. The following set was produced by Stollwerck Chocolade, a German chocolatier founded in 1839. Of course, for as popular as retro-futuristic topics were, they were a drop in the bucket of the overall production of these advertising collectables. Stollwerck produced some 5,000 different six-card sets.
Wednesday, 23 June 2021
John Hale's Flying Machine by Anna Leach
Click on each page for a larger version.
Wednesday, 9 June 2021
Walter R. Booth's The Over-Incubated Baby
Wednesday, 26 May 2021
Life Magazine's Glimpses into the Future
Wednesday, 12 May 2021
The Tricycle of the Future by Frank R. Stockton
The following is the complete Tricycle of the Future as it appeared in the May 1885 volume of St. Nicholas Magazine. Click on each page for a larger version.
Wednesday, 28 April 2021
La Folie du Docteur Tube
Saturday, 17 April 2021
Announcing "Science Fiction of the Gay Nineties: An Anthology - 1890-1910"
The latest in my series of Victorian-Edwardian Scientific Romances has been released!
To the generation that came of age during the horrors of the World Wars, the Turn of the Century took on a nostalgic life of its own.
Strolling ladies with bustles, parasols, and feathered hats. Men in dapper suits, straw boaters, and handlebar moustaches. Barbershop quartets singing “Sweet Adeline” and “In the Good Old Summertime.” Penny-farthing bicycles weaving between horse-drawn trolleys and newfangled horseless carriages. Thomas Edison’s latest invention. The town marching band playing in the park bandstand. Colourful Queen Anne homes accented with gingerbread trim. Gibson Girls staring indolently from the pages of Life and Harper’s. Casey at the bat. Ice wagons and ice boxes and ice cream parlours. Dime novels and dime stores. Vaudeville shows. Ragtime music. Silent movies. Party-line telephones. Suffragettes in green and purple sashes. Old fashioned rowboat dates. Gaslit evenings on Main Street. These happy days of youth before The Great War, The Spanish Flu, The Roaring Twenties, and The Great Depression were the “Gay Nineties.”
The real 1890’s and 1900’s were an era of change and a cornucopia of invention, which lead inevitably to fictional tales of scientific discovery and technological progress in the popular magazines of the era. This volume reprints the lost science fiction of Pearson’s, The Century, The Black Cat, and Cosmopolitan, featuring over a dozen tales by such celebrated authors as Mark Twain, Ellis Parker Butler, Herbert Quick, and George Chetwyn Griffith.
To order Science Fiction of the Gay Nineties: An Anthology - 1890-1910, visit Amazon or click on the image above. If you can also share this post or the link on your social networks, leave a review on Amazon, and rate Science Fiction of the Gay Nineties, that would go a long way to helping spread the word!
Thank you very much for you support of this blog for all these years and for your purchase of my new anthology.
Wednesday, 14 April 2021
A Telepathic Wooing by James Buckham
Saturday, 3 April 2021
The Jungle Book on the Silver Screen
Wednesday, 31 March 2021
Segundo de Chomón's Excursion dans la Lune
Copyright law comes and goes in waves. "Information wants to be free" say many as they illegally upload movies to shadowy servers. International trade seeks ever more uniform and pro-corporate regulations, while media companies simultaneously seek ever more restrictive censorship of individuals, together posing what may be the greatest threats to freedom of speech and information since the rise of Communism. A century ago, the rules were much looser, with their attendant benefits and challenges. Georges Méliès was, sadly, one of the ones who lost the most from those challenges.
Like numerous remakes throughout cinema history, Excursion dans la Lune (English: An Excursion to the Moon) is serviceable. All the pieces are in the right place and, in many places, it is even more refined than the original. Knowing where all the pieces go and understanding why they go there are two different things, however. An Excursion to the Moon lacks the fanciful sensibilities of Méliès, the wry blurred line between the astronomer and the astrologer, the joviality of the etheric spheres in a romantic cosmos. Though de Chomón's star rose just as Méliès' declined, posterity has been more kind to the latter than to the former. Méliès has - rightly - been canonized that the true innovator and artiste. It takes de Chomón's own films, original in content, to showcase his own abilities and separate his legacy from that of his competitor.
Wednesday, 17 March 2021
By the Water with James Tissot
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Ball on Shipboard (1874) |
Wednesday, 3 March 2021
John Jacob Astor's A Journey in Other Worlds
Wednesday, 3 February 2021
Scientific Romances of the Seventies
Wednesday, 20 January 2021
Wednesday, 6 January 2021
The Great Unknown by Clement Melville Keys
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The North-West Passage by John Everett Millais (1874) |
Wednesday, 23 December 2020
A Christmas Dinner with the Man in the Moon
A Christmas Dinner with the Man in the Moon was published in the December 1880 edition of St. Nicholas Magazine and is presented here in full, with original illustrations by Victor Nehlig. Gladden, a Congregationalist minister most famous as a pioneer of the Social Gospel movement, a unionization advocate, and anti-segregationist, was also an author of hundreds of poems, stories, and religious tracts. A Christmas Dinner with the Man in the Moon resurfaced in Gladden's 1894 anthology Santa Claus on a Lark: and Other Christmas Stories. Click on each page for a larger version.
Merry Christmas!