RDSP December Update

 Dr. Identity receives Wonderland Award

D. Harlan Wilson's novel Dr. Identity has received the Wonderland Award for Best Bizarro Novel of 2007. This is the first year that the award has been given. If you somehow missed this great release now's a great time to check it out!

"This book's better'n the bushelfull of Benzedrine-spiked donut holes with which Dr. Identity tries to bribe his students into civilized demeanor! Pomo cybertheory never tasted so good or made you fly this high! Buy this book before the BEM's attack!"
—American Book Review

 Now Available Sheep and Wolves

Order
the paperback (13.95)
with the 'Egg' DVD (15)
for a $ 5 discount!

These stories bewitch and transport the reader. Though you may not know where Shipp will travel next, each one is an unforgettable thrill-ride. You’ll be glad you took the trip.

 Coming in 2009

Avant Garde for the New Millennium
edited by Forrest Armstrong

Words are slippery things and though we have bridled them with grammar, feel at ease in the presence of a common turn of phrase, they have not been completely tamed. And there are still writers who are both brave and foolhardy enough to let words out of their cages, feed them despite the signs that clearly state not to and prod them with sticks to see what they might do.

Editor Forrest Armstrong has gone in search of these experimenters, alchemists of verbiage, who wrestle with words in dark places and return with something newly minted, transmogrified and fresh for us to puzzle over.

 Warner's Script a Finalist

The official announcement has been made that the script adaptation of Matthew Warner's Eyes Everywhere was indeed a finalist in the Virginia Governor's Screenplay Competition. See all the results.

Congrats again to Matthew Warner!

 Steve Aylett helps revive Caterer Comic

30 years after the spectacular collapse of Pearl Comics, a celebration of the cause of that collapse - Jeff Lint's ‘THE CATERER’.

Floating World Comics has teamed with Lint biographer, Steve Aylett to present a reprint of Issue 3: this stand-out issue includes the beginning of Marsden's goat obsession, a fierce appearance by the ghostly Hoston Pete, a great example of the Marsden 'stillness' and no less than four classic Marsden hallucinations. The leaning Chief Bayard's preoccupation with our hero results in the violent deaths of six people, and Jack delivers his infamous 'lipstick for dogs' diatribe.

For more info on Jeff Lint's work check out the RDSP release And Your Point Is? edited by Steve Aylett.



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