Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Thursday, December 11, 2025

FORGOTTEN BOOK: THE JOHNNY MAXWELL TRILOGY

The Johnny Maxwell Trilogy  by Terry Pratchett  (omnibus of three novels published by The Science Fiction Book Club, 1996; contains Only You Can Save Mankind, 1992, Johnny and the Dead, 1993, and Johnny and the Bomb, 1996)


Johnny Maxwell is the hero of three YA books by Pratchett.  We first meet him when he is twelve and going through Troubling Times -- his father has lost his job and his parents are arguing constantly and are about to break up.  He lives in the English town of Blackbury, outside of London.  Johnny is a strange kid; surprisingly normal and thus does not fit into any of the school cliques.  He thinks a lot and is slow to react and often thinks he is stupid, especially compared to his friends, who hang out together because they have no one else to hang out with.

Johnny's best friend is Wobbles, so named because he is fat and wobbles when he walks.  Wobbles is an electrical and computer genius who pirates video games and gives them away.  Bigmac is one of the three young skinheads in the town.  He wants to be tough but is asthmatic.  He dreams of guns and weaponry and wants to join the army, b ut he does not like bullets.  Bigmac is not a criminal, per se, but he does have a habit of taking cars that the owners have left the keys in; he considers he is doing a favor for the car owners by running the vehicles properly, and he almost always returns the cars in one piece.  Bigmac lives in a rundown housing development with his criminal older brother and his brother's vicious dog.  The local police always have they eyes on Bigmac.  Bigmac is a genius at mathematics.  Yo-less is a West Indian who lives with his mother, a nurse.  Yo-less is a straight arrow and wants to be a doctor.  He does not go in for the stereotypical black talk and never greets anyone by saying "Yo," hence his nickname.  He seethes inside at racial discrimination.  And then there's Kirsty, who alternatively calls herself Sigourney, Kimberley, Klytemnestra, and Kasandra (she does not like her given name).  Kirsty is an over-achiever and is very good at it.  She is highly intelligent and has poor people skills.  She looks down at Johnny with pity, while he finds it easy to talk to her because she just doesn't listen.  Kirsty can be highly dangerous to anyone who calls her "Missy" or "Little Lady."  with this motley group what could go wrong?  Almost anything.

It's the mid-90s and Johnny is trying put a pirated copy of a video game that Wobbles has given him.  In Only You Can Save Mankind the alien ScreeWee have destroyed almost all of Earth's defensive fleet.  There is only one starship left and you are piloting it -- you are the only thing that stands in the way of the ScreeWee's total destruction of the Earth.  You are Earth's Last Hope!  It's a tricky game and Johnny gets killed every time he plays.  But because it is a game, he lives again each time he plays the game...until he is killed.  But Johnny is getting better at it.  Then a message flashes across his computer screen:  WE GIVE UP.  What?  Is this some sort of strange twist built into the game?  The messages continue.  WE SURRENDER.  DON'T KILL US.  It turns out the ScreeWee in the game are real, and -- unlike Johnny -- if they are killed in the game, they don't come back; they are just dead.  And the Scree Wee, who are actually not the rampaging killers the game makes them out to be, don't like that.  The ScreeWee, reptilian creatures from a matriarchal society, resemble giant newts, or perhaps large snakes with arms, and now that they have surrender to Johnny, he must provide them safe passage back to their home world, many light years away.  But his is a computer game and there are many other players out there, all determined to kill the ScreeWee and save Earth -- and one of the most determined players is Kirsty...

Now reference is made of this in the second book, Johnny and the Dead, although it is a given that strange things happen whenever Johnny is around.  Johnny, Wobbles, Yo-less, and Bigmac are walking through an old cemetery in town when Johnny spots a strange man outside of a tomb.  The man .is a long-deceased Alderman for the town and he and Johnny begin a conversation.  Johnny's friends cannot see the man and wonder why Johnny is talking to thin air.  The dead Alderman, Thomas Bowler, is surprised he can communicate with the living because that has never happened before.  Bowler is curious about what has happened in the town since he had passed away.  Johnny doesn't know much about current or past events (hey, he's only twelve or thirteen, cut him some slack), but he decides the best thing would be to drop off a local paper at Bowler's tomb the next day so the Alderman could catch up.  It just so happened that a large developer has just gotten approval from the Council to buy the cemetery, with the intention of ripping up the graveyard and putting a large factory.. This does not sit well with the Alderman, nor any of the other denizens of the cemetery.  They insist that Johnny, who is the only person they can communicate with, put a stop to this plan.  Things get complicated.

{By the way, the dead are not ghosts.  They are emphatic they are not ghosts -- which seems to be a dirty term to them.  They are just the dead.  Johnny's friends come up with other words to describe them:  "post-senior citizens," "breathily challenged,"  and "vertically disadvantaged."  there is one actually ghost in the cemetery, however, the grumpy Mr. Grimm.)

Johnny and the Bomb is a time travel extravaganza, taking place a year of so later.  The local bag lady, Mrs. Tachyon wheels a shopping trolley (cart) filled with black bags  and her very nasty cat, Guilty, throughout the town, as well as through various past times.  Mrs. Tachyon has always been very old, very disheveled, and not quite right in the head.  She makes no sense when she talks.  Johnny and the gang come across a bunch of upset trolleys and bundles in a parking lot; one of the bundles is wearing trainers --it's Mrs. Tachyon and she has had an accident.  An ambulance comes and takes her away, leaving Johnny with Mrs. Tachyon's trolley and all of her bundles.  Johnny takes the trolley (complete with Guilty) to his house to hold it until Mrs. Tachyon gets better.  The bags in the trolley move.  It turns out that the bags are filled with time.  The Johnny reached into a bag...

Now Johnny and his friends are in the past -- in 1941, on the very day when a German bomb hits the town (the Germans were aiming for a different town, but they got lost), killing nineteen people because for some reason the air raid signal didn't work.  Johnny cannot stop the bomb, but perhaps he can save the people doomed to die.  The problem is that the police do not like the look of Bigmac and he has all of these late 20th century devices that look like they might be spy thingabobs.  And Yo-less is black and people keep calling him Sambo.  And everybody dismisses Kirsty because she's a girl.  And Wobbles is wobbling and looking for someplace safe.  Johnny and the gang make it back to their present but Wobbles isn't with them, because Wobbles stayed in 1941 and eventually became the richest man on Earth.  Johnny and his friends have to back for Wobbles (and to try to save people from the bomb blast).  This time they decide to go back dressed in clothing appropriate for the time,  but somehow Bigmac ends up wearing a German military outfit and Kirsty is wearing and outfit that is totally inappropriate for her fourteen-year-old age.  As usual with Johnny's adventures, things get complicated.

The books are funny.  The books are exciting  And there are important messages buried close to the surface in Pratchett's satire.   All three books are winners and highly recommended.   They should not read as Discworld-lite, but as Discworld-different.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO: CHRISTMAS SHOPPING (DECEMBER 14, 1944)

 'Tis the season...for laughter...and Christmas shopping.

Let's see how Bud and Lou are handling things...


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEjbcauy1Ac

SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: LOST KEEP

 "Lost Keep" by L. A. Lewis  (first published in the collection Tales of the Grotesque:  A collection of Uneasy Tales, 1934; reprinted in an expanded edition of that collection, 1994)


For many years little was known about the author.  Leslie Allin Lewis (1899-1961) published just one book, a collection of ten stories in "The Creeps Library" published in London by Philip Allen in 1934; an eleventh story appeared in Christine Campbell Thomson's anthology Terror by Night that same year.  Copies of Tales of the Grotesque, while being a highly collectable book, were rare and remained out of print for sixty years until editor Richard Dalby began a friendship with Lewis's widow, who on her death bequeathed the literary copyright of Lewis's work to him.  Dalby finally was able to re-issue the collection, with the addition of the eleventh story, from small publisher Ghost Story Press in 1994.

Despite his friendship with Elizabeth Lewis, she remained guarded about her husband's personal details.  He writes, "I quickly realized he had suffered much tragedy and mental anguish (with brief references to padded cells and suicide attempts) throughout his life."  He had been a Squadron Leader in the Royal Flying Corps during World War I and came out with the belief that aeroplanes had souls.  He also believed in demonic creatures and elements, evil creatures trying to break through to our world; Lewis also claimed to have personally witnessed such creatures..  He was invalided out of the RAF in the early 1940s and destroyed all of his remaining work during a fit of manic depression.  Facing permanent unemployment and deteriorating physical and mental health, Lewis eventually became blind and suffered from myocardial disease.  He was 62 when he eventually died from a heart attack.  his eleven stories that have survived are masterpieces of the fantastic imagination.

"Lost Keep" features Peter Hunt, a seventeen-year-old orphan living in abject poverty in a shabby rooming house.  His only relative, an aunt as poor as Peter, has just died and Peter could expect nothing from her estate.  It turns out that she did have one thing to leave him.  Shortly before her death, she asked the hospital matron to retrieve a small locked box from her safety deposit.  There was note from her telling Peter to "make use what Fate wills of its contents."  Inside the box were three items:  a samll scale model of a stone fortress, a folded sheet of paper, and a dark lens that was almost impervious to light.  The note, it turns out, was from his deceased father..  The scale model of the fortress, it seems, had been handed down for generations from parent to child over many, many years.  It was not known how old it was or its exact origins, but legend had it that the model held a secret that could be rediscovered by any with "the wit or fortune to combine glass and facsimile with understanding." but (the note continued) none has been able to solve the riddle.  And, by the way, there is also a supposed curse on the model for whoever does discover its secret.  The lens, being completely black, opened no secrets when Peter used it to examine the model.  But the little facsimile was cleverly made and may get a decent price from a dealer of  curios...

As Peter looked closer at the model further using the lens, he felt a great heat , and then the lens cracked -- but only the outer portion of the lens, which, it turned out was made of several layers of glass.  He removed the outer shell of dark glass, and the model began to appear larger and larger, then blackness... And he woke within the keep, which had now become greatly enlarged and sat on a high cliff overlooking an endless sea,  He wandered through the castle, scaling its turrets, looking for a way to get back to his rooming house.  After a while he began to get hungry and thirsty, but there was no food or water available...

We shift to the rooming house, where his landlady is talking to two policemen.  Peter had gone to his room with a package some forty-two hour before.  when he did not appear for breakfast and di not show up at his work, she began to get concerned.  There was no answer at the door and the door was locked from the inside.  She and another boarder broke in, but Peter had vanished with no means of leaving the room.  The landlady and the police were baffled.  then there was a groan from the bed, and Peter was suddenly there, wan and demanding food and water...

Flash forward fifteen or twenty years.  Peter is now very rich.  He has a large house, a country seat, three cars, a large staff of servants, and a charming (but neglected) wife, and a young son.  It turned out that, when he visited the Lost Keep the very first time, he still had the magical lens in his pocket and eventually used that to return to the real world.  He had the ability to visit the Lost Keep and return anytime he wanted as long as he had the lens on him.  He also was able to bring others with him to the deserted fortress and cold leave them there as his prisoners until they did what he wished or starved, and what he most wanted for for them to sig over property and wealth to him; and, of course, he then let them starve.  For years, there were mysterious unexplained disappearances but no provable suspicions fell on Peter.

And it was almost as if Peter forget there was a curse on the fortress and whoever solved its riddle...


A disturbingly creepy story that could have become very trite if left where his landlady and the policemen were puzzling over Peters impossible disappearance, but Lewis carries it an eerier conclusion.  In the end we know that Peter is going to get his but we have no idea how fitting Fate could be.

This is the first story I've read by Lewis.  I'm looking forward to read the remaining ten.

Monday, December 8, 2025

OVERLOOKED TELEVISION: THE REBEL: JOHNNY YUMA (THE FIRST EPISODE, OCTOBER 4, 1959)

 Nick Adams played Johnny Yuma. a young Confederate soldier and aspiring writer who wandered the West following the Civil War, fighting injustice with his revolver and his dead father's sawed-off shotgun.  The show ran for two seasons on ABC, ending on June 18, 1961, for a total of 76 episodes.  The title song was sung by Johnny Cash, although series star Nick Adams released a single of the show's theme in 1960.  Despite being a ratings success, the show was cancelled after two seasons because of the network's new "counter-programming" format; it was replaced by a variety show starring Steve Allen, which died after only four months.

In the pilot episode, Yuma returns to his hometown in 1867, two years after the war, only to find that his father, the local sheriff, had been killed by a gang led by Dan Blocker, which had taken over the town.  The episode was directed by Irvin Kershner and written by series producer and co-creator (along with star Nick Adams) Andrew Fenady.  Also featured in the cast are John Carradine, Jeanette Nolan, Strother Martin, and Harry Bartell.

One of my favorite television shows from way back when.

Enjoy.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4SJ3J-V5To&t=112s

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, JEAN RITCHIE

American folk singer Jean Ritchie (1922-2015) was often referred to as "The Mother of Folk."  The youngest of fourteen children who grew up in Viper, an unincorporated area in Kentucky's Cumberland Mountains, she came from a family dedicated to performing and preserving Appalachian music and tradition.  Her family provided many songs for noted musical collector Cecil Sharp, and Jean herself recoirded for Alan Loman  and, later, for The Library of Congress.  As a young child, she had already learned hundreds of traditional songs orally and later travelled extensively to research and add to her repertoire.  She performed on stage with the Weavers, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Oscar Brand.  She had a significant influence on Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell, Emmylou Harris, and Judy Collins among others.  Responsible for the re-emergence of the Appalachian dulcimer in folk music, she was also the person who popularized the song "Amazing Grace."  Although most associated with traditional music, she also wrote and performed topical songs.  Her clear, unvarnished voice has echoed over the decades to please fans young and old.  She was given the folk Alliance's Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998, and was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship -- the highest honor given for folk and traditional arts in the United States -- from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2002.


"Barbara Allen"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ihit0mpmz7o

"Come All You Fair and Tender Ladies"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1JhPX2M6nY

"Amazing Grace"  (with Doc Watson)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBBCDpYKV1g

"With Kitty I'll Go"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch1EPCIKTuU

"Hangman"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnfNGmDiYt0

"One I Love"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-hSXKhrmSHw

The L and N Don't Here Anymore"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1CNua_KWRM

"Nottamun Town"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UGU1yR3wPlw

"Cherry Tree Carol"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AB0ItQFsZlQ

"Let the Sun Shine Down on Me"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdVH9eUL3HY

"Go Dig My Grave"  (with Doc Watson)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGrcOqcbzYk

"Cedar Swamp"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qP4WiPlHL6A

"Careless Love"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBJJZ96epbg

"Old Virginny"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjj6CzxBRY8

"One More Mile"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9b78HHhYm8

Saturday, December 6, 2025

HYMN TIME

Because December 7 is the Day That Will Go Down in Infamy, here's Kay Kyser & His Orchestra with a Frank Loesser song from 1942.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUOPvtVZwo8

Friday, December 5, 2025

THE MONSTER OF FRANKENSTEIN #32 (AUG.-SEPT. 1954)

This one has an interesting past.  Comic historian Don Markstein considers this to be "America's first on-going comic book series to fall squarely within the horror genre."  In this case, Frankenstein refers to the monster itself rather than its creator.  Created by Dick Briefer, he first appeared in Prize Comics #7 (December 1940); and continued as a feature in Prize Comics until 1948, when the title switched to a western format.  In the beginning, the character was a rampaging monster, but turned into a Nazi-hater in 1943.  By 1945, Briefer changed focus and Frankenstein was written and drawn just for laughs, becoming the "Merry Monster," cavorting with Dracula, the Wolf Man, and other monsters in a small town.  Also in 1945, he achieved his own title, Frankenstein, which included a humorous version of the creature's origins.  The title continued until February 1949, the last few issues retitled The Monster of Frankenstein.  Again, there was a switch in focus halfway through the run; according to Markstein, "A total of 33 issues were published, 17 containing  1940s hilarity and 16 with 1950s gore.

In this issue:

  • "The Battle of the Monsters"  Frankenstein is washed shore on a tropical island following a shipwreck.  The evil natives attempt to kill him by pitting him against first a giant crocodile. then a man-eating lion, booth of which he easily defeats.  They then lead him to an active volcano where two stranded white persons have been chained as a sacrifice to the gods.  He free them, the volcano explodes, raining lave and death upon the natives, and Frankenstein and the two survivors head out to sea in a boat, where the two are rescued.
  • "The Beautiful Dead"  Frankenstein is on the run from angry townsfolks.  He dashes into a building for safety.  It is a storage building for mannikins with sheet-covered bodies lying on tables.  He climbs on a table and pulls a sheet over himself.  While waiting for the mob to disperse, he examines the other bodies and discover one of a beautiful woman.  Something compels him.  He must have this body to keep.  He takes the mannikin and hides in an abandoned house deep in the woods.  There, while Frankenstein is out doing something, dunno what), two bums break in, looking for shelter.  They are surprised to see the beautiful woman and even more surprised to see that she is a wax figure.  They light a fire and the figure melts.  when Frankenstein discovers this, he goes on a rampage.  Later he goes out foraging for food but all the animals manage to avoid him.  He spies a large bird resting atop some electrical wires.  He reaches for the bird and is electrocuted.  When his body is found, he is dead (or so they thin).  Now his body rest on a table in a different room, covered by a sheet, among many others of the dead.  He awakens and checks out the other bodies in the morgue and, lo and behold!, there is a body of another beautiful woman!  He steals that corpse and hides her in another abandoned house, coming back one day to find to his horror that this beautiful woman's body has started to rot!
Also in this issue is the story of man who, using information found in rare and occult books, managed to find and resurrect the body of the Greek god Zeus, who for some reason had been  buried in Zion National Park.  Zeus, BTW, a a blond giant who speaks English.  Go figure.

There's also a couple of text stories, one of which gives a nod to the television show I've Got a Secret.  And a nifty advertisement for those socially inept on how to find romance, specifically books titled How to Get Along with Girls, How to Get Along with Boys, and How to Write Love Letters, all for the low price of 98 cents each!   Alas, I was not the target audience for these in 1954; at that time all I knew about girls was that they had cooties.

Anyway, enjoy this odd little trip to the past:

https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=97271