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Books and Magazines • HAPPY 100th BIRTHDAY, ED WOOD from Bear Manor Media!

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HAPPY 100th BIRTHDAY, ED WOOD!
Drown the Devil: A Spiritual Biography of Ed Wood
$29.00
Drown the Devil: A Spiritual Biography of Ed Wood
by Angel Scott
 
234 pages
6x9 size
 
Angel Scott is a graduate of Luther Seminary in St Paul. She is currently serving as Chaplain to those at end of life. Researching the religious and spiritual lives of Hollywood’s B-movie and finest stars and collecting memorabilia serve as her selfcare.
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Kathy Wood and I: How I Fell Down the Ed Wood, Jr. Angora Rabbit Hole (paperback)
$32.00
Kathy Wood and I: How I Fell Down the Ed Wood, Jr. Angora Rabbit Hole
by Bob Blackburn
 
302 pages
6x9 size
ISBN 9798887715582 
 
When Bob Blackburn, the son of Pacific N.W. sportscasting legend Bob Blackburn, moved to Hollywood, CA. in March of 1989, little did he know how his life would change. Renting a small studio apartment in the heart of Hollywood to be near his radio job, he attended an Ed Wood, Jr. Film Festival in 1992 and saw a documentary on Ed that changed his life. A petite woman, “Kathy Wood-Ed Wood’s widow” was interviewed for this, and Bob recognized her as a neighbor in his building. A few months later he was told about a movie titled Ed Wood, starring Johnny Depp and directed by Tim Burton. His contact with, and help, brought a new friendship with Kathleen O’Hara Wood, “Ed Wood’s Widow”. That continued to her passing in 2006 and to this day. A story of friendship, cult movies and a cross-dressing anti-hero.
This is Bob’s story of discovering the world of the “Worst Director of All Time”, and an unlikely friendship.
 
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Criswell Predicts an Accurate Glimpse of the Future (paperback)
$24.00
Criswell Predicts an Accurate Glimpse of the Future
by Edwin Lee Canfield
 
159 pages
6x9 size
ISBN 9798887712581 
 
“America’s Criswell foresees the future clearly.” H.G. Wells
“He predicts Nostradamus.” Mae West
“Criswell’s relative fame in the early stages of the mass-media era was an innocent, harmless symptom of the beginning and continuation of the blurring the razor-thin line between factual News and Entertainment fiction in late 20th century America.” Charles Phillip Wireman, Ass’t Editor
“Criswell is always a welcome guest on the ‘Tonight Show’ for his predictions are provocative and accurate time after time.” Johnny Carson
 
Startling Prophecies of the 1970s including: Carnage, Chaos, Crisis, Civil Rights, Climate Change! Rock & Roll, Robbery, Riot, Rape, Revelry, Drugs! Sexxx, Nudism, UFOs! Ghosts of Hollywood! Criswell Returns from the Grave!
 
LIGHTS, CAMERA, AUTHOR INTERVIEW:
 Video:  iframe
Audio Podcast:  https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show ... ld-e2b607e



 
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A FULLER LIFE: HOLLYWOOD, ED WOOD AND ME (paperback)
$24.95
For people familiar with Dolores Fuller only through her work and professional association with notorious '50s film director Edward D. Wood, Jr., Hollywood, Ed Wood and Me (A Fuller Life) will provide readers with a surprising revelation. Throughout her career, Miss Fuller has proven her talent and versatility in numerous facets of the entertainment industry. From fashion model, dancer and actress to renowned songwriter and talent manager, Dolores Fuller has done it all.
In her autobiography, Miss Fuller speaks honestly and with candor about her many triumphs and the professional disappointments and personal tragedies she has endured, such as her virtual partnership with Ed Wood during the making of his early films, to her painful discovery of Wood's transvestism, and their eventual break-up. Her songwriting for Elvis Presley and discovery and nurturing of such talent as Johnny Rivers, to her heart-breaking experience with Tanya Tucker. Finally, Miss Fuller reveals her true feelings towards Sarah Jessica Parker's unflattering performance of her in Tim Burton's Ed Wood.
Filled with fascinating and humorous anecdotes about the many famous people she has known throughout her long career, Dolores Fuller's autobiography is both informative and a highly entertaining read.
ISBN 9781593933043
Review: A Fuller Life: Hollywood, Ed Wood and Me by John T. Soister
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0115/ ... 1622490034
https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0115/ ... 1622490034
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Ed Wood's Bride of the Monster (paperback)
$29.95
Best Book of the Year (2017) - Classic Images
The Merrill T. McCord Research Award 2017 - from Classic Images
and
Best Cover of the Year 2017 - Classic Images
 
Shovel in hand, the redoubtable Gary D. Rhodes returns to the Graveyard of Forgotten Facts, unearthing a treasure trove of terrific illustrations and a casket-full of new information and insights on Bela Lugosi, Ed Wood and Bride of the Monster (1956). Also exhumed are Bride’s shooting script and a vault full of decaying extras. Accompanying him in this 60th anniversary “Bela-bration” of the film’s release is partner-in-crime Tom Weaver, as well as contributors Sam Sherman, Robert J. Kiss and Michael Lee.
 
“Brings back a lot of good memories... That's what I live for. This is history, and I'm living it all over again.”
– Conrad Brooks, Ed Wood’s friend and actor in Bride of the Monster
 
“Ed Wood’s Bride of the Monster isn’t the director’s most famous film, or the most beloved, either, but it is the best work the obsessive and resourceful Wood ever did. Loopy and retro even in its own day, Bride gets fabulous treatment in this engrossing volume, with Gary D. Rhodes’s carefully researched account of the picture’s development, shoot, and exhibition. I enjoyed exploring details of the film’s tangled chronology, Bela Lugosi’s casting and performance, and differences between script and finished film. Plus, images and extras I never imagined I’d see. I love Ed, I love Bela and I love Bride of the Monster.”
—David J. Hogan, author of Dark Romance: Sexuality in the Horror Film and Film Noir FAQ.
 
“When it comes to throwing the spotlight on American cinema’s dark corners that have been forgotten or ignored by critics, few people possess the breadth of knowledge, archival research expertise and ability to construct fascinating histories as Gary D. Rhodes. In this volume, and continuing his long-standing work on Bela Lugosi, Rhodes unearths and contextualizes with his usual, meticulous scholarship a wealth of material related to the final film in which Lugosi starred. A real treat not just for Lugosi fans, but also for those with an interest in the way American filmmaking was practiced in the periphery of Hollywood.”
– Yannis Tzioumakis, Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool and author of Hollywood’s Indies: Classics Divisions, Specialty Labels, and the American Film Market
(You will be automatically emailed a zip file containing your ebook in epub and mobi files)
 
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I Watched Football Early the Day I Died: The Lost Ed Wood Frank Leahy Screenplay (paperback)
$28.00
I Watched Football Early the Day I Died: The Lost Ed Wood Frank Leahy Screenplay
by W. Paul Apel

316 pages
6x9 size  
ISBN 9798887712116

What does Frank Leahy, the legendary win-at-all-costs hall of fame Notre Dame football coach have in common with infamous cross-dressing, counterculture B-movie filmmaker Ed Wood, once voted “worst director of all time”?  
Ed Wood wrote a screenplay about him. And it’s possibly the most confounding entry on the cult director’s otherwise sci-fi, horror and pornography-filled resumé. 
For years, there have only been two known connections between Ed Wood and football: the fact that he hated it, and the fact that he was watching it on the last day of his life. So how did an underdog who wore his quirks on his (angora) sleeve end up writing about Knute Rockne’s macho protégé? And does Wood’s irrepressible personality and unique style make it into Leahy’s life story?  
Find out the answers to these questions and more as Ed Wood expert W. Paul Apel takes you on a personally guided tour of the never-produced, lost-and-now-found screenplay by Edward D. Wood, Jr.: The Frank Leahy Legend.

"SIN & SCI-FI IN THE SIXTIES" INTERVIEW with PAUL APEL:
iframe
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Angora Fever: The Collected Short Stories of Edward D. Wood, Jr. (paperback)
$28.00
ISBN  9781629334462
Edward D. Wood, Jr. was a name forgotten in the history of Hollywood until the release of the 1994 Tim Burton biopic, Ed Wood, starring Johnny Depp as Ed, and Martin Landau as the horror icon Bela Lugosi, a role for which Landau received the Academy Award.
Following service with the U.S. Marines during World War II, Ed followed his dream to Hollywood, hoping to achieve success as a movie director. Ed did realize his goal but his talents did not match his ambitions. Working with practically nonexistent budgets, he directed movies ignored in their day but have since become recognized as cult classics: Glen or Glenda, Bride of The Monster, Orgy of The Dead, and his most “infamous” production: Plan 9 From Outer Space.
Barely skimping by on his movie earnings, Ed turned to writing a series of lurid paperbacks with such titles as “Black Lace Drag”, “Let Me Die In Drag” and “Devil Girls”. His professional decline continued when he worked for a skin magazine publisher in the late 60’s, churning out copy and short fiction in prodigious amounts, an amazing accomplishment considering that by this point Ed Wood had become a serious alcoholic.
Edited and with a foreword by Bob Blackburn, a close friend of Ed’s widow Kathy, these later stories penned by Ed Wood have finally been collected in this exclusive volume.
Review by Cinepunx
Review by Plan Nine Crunch
Review by Kendra Steiner Editions
Review by Dead2Rights
Interview with Bob Blackburn
Ed Wood I
 
ANGORA FEVER: THE COLLECTED SHORT STORIES OF EDWARD D. WOOD, JR. Edited by
Bob Blackburn, with Kathy Wood. Bear Manor Media. Casebound hardcover, 451 pp. $38.
                 EDWARD D. WOOD, JR. DEALT IN FANTASY, and to a sad degree, he lived a fantasy, as well. He had a powerful urge to create, and an equally strong desire to succeed. During the 30 years in Hollywood that marked his most fevered activity, he wrote a play, novels, and short stories. He shot TV commercials and directed loops both blatantly sexual and ostensibly "educatonal." He delivered nearly two dozen exploitation screenplays to be directed by others. Most famously, Wood wrote, produced, and directed a half dozen "legitimate" features. The most celebrated of these, Plan 9 from Outer Space (1958), is lively and entertaining. A 1956 feature, Bride of the Monster, is similarly enjoyable. And his 1952 cross-dressing roman a' clef, Glen or Glenda?, has a startling confessional nature. But these and other Ed Wood films were exploitation, designed for quick play-offs and ill-suited to bring him real money. So Wood pounded the typewriter and he pounded the pavement too. He was a hustler-not in the predatory sense but as a person who must hustle in order to have a place to live and food to eat.
                Creative people, even those with real talent, rarely achieve significant material reward. If they're focused and lucky, they manage a professional toehold in one of the bigger cities, but even then, few can pursue their passion full time. In order to survive, many will teach or proofread or tend bar. Given these realities, two things about Ed Wood stand out: he seldom, if ever, held "day jobs" unconnected to his passions; and achieved posthumous worldwide fame for a fringe career hobbled by his alcoholism and his very modest (if uniquely bizarre) gifts as a writer. Tim Burton's 1994 biopic Ed Wood suggests a sunny, eternally optimistic man-but it's hard to be sunny when your life crumbles into pornography, cheap apartments you're unable to pay for, and the need for that next drink. Filmstar handsome as a young man, Wood grew puffy and unkempt in middle age. His second wife, Kathy, remained by his side, but when Wood's body finally gave out in 1978, Ed was only 54 years old.
                The 60 short stories collected by Bob Blackburn in Angora Fever were written for bottom-feeding, LA-based girlie magazines such as Switch Hitters, Young Beavers, triffid Willow, and Horror Sex Tales. Off and on during the last decade of his life, Wood commuted to Pico Blvd. to labor as a staff writer for Pendulum Publications, where he cranked out still more short stories and other copy at a madman's pace. Many of his tales appeared under pseudonyms ("Ann Gora" and "Dick Trent" were favorites)-not because of embarrassment but because of his prolific nature: it just wouldn't do to credit every story to "Edward D. Wood, Jr."
                 Succinct and one-dimensional, the stories were intended to fill just two or three magazine pages augmented with art or a photo. Whatever the theme or setting, Wood was obliged to pack the tales with sex, most of it calculated to titillate straight male readers. Many plots are in the EC Comics vein, propelled by self-centered or hateful behavior that culminates in amusingly obvious ironies. See, for instance, the intimate amputations in "Blood Drains Easily," "Filth is the Name for a Tramp," and "Gore in the Alley."
                Protagonists range from wealthy (horny) businessmen to weathered (horny) cowpokes; from "luscious" (and horny) lesbians to amateur (and horny) drag queens. Some are, like Wood, ex-servicemen, fed up with the world and oblivious to risk. Wood's women are invariably insatiable, often greedy, and sometimes murderous. There is potent misogyny here, likely not a reflection of Wood's own feelings but a prerequisite for the magazine's publishers and readers. Male characters are highly sexed as well, which clouds their judgment and encourages them to fall in with the dangerous females.
                A significant number of stories reflects the male fear of lesbians, but once in a while a male character develops a broader view, like the space ship commander of "Time, Space and the Ship" who schemes to replace his crew with "butch LESBIANS!" (capital letters and exclamation point in original). Well, that's very egalitarian.
                The stories do not, however, place personal responsibility at the fore. Rather, plot twists are predicated on Fate, one of Wood's preoccupations, a device that simply lets awful things unfold, as if destined. This is the motivation of "So Soon to Be an Angel," which ends with these words: "She closed her eyes and it was all over." You can't fight it, just accept it. But did Wood believe this? No. Contrary to his own nature, Ed was telling readers not to struggle. But because he never capitulated, he saw his visions in print and on screens.
                If the 60 stories collected here did not have the Wood pedigree, no one would be reading them today. Awkwardly worded and at the lowest level of the professional scale, they are what they were meant to be: space fillers. But because we "know" Wood, the stories, in toto, achieve a kind of poignancy. All the violence and meanness aside, you can discern a world view here, at once exuberant and tragic, determined and exhausted. Although Wood did not fashion the stories to be overtly autobiographical, they are.
--David J. ...
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