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Tuesday, 30 June 2020

Halcon Lord of the Craterland No. 1 July 2020 -OUT NOW!


A4
24pp
B&W
£5.00
https://www.lulu.com/en/en/shop/terry-hooper/halcon-lord-of-the-craterland-no-1-july-2020/paperback/product-7jy675.html

Halcon Lord of the lost craterland. Created by Nat Brand (Len Fullerton) in 1940 for Swan Comics and seen occasionally in various Black tower titles now gets his own one off books thanks to Ben Dilworth. 

Action and fun all the way with stories such as - 

"Alligator", "Lake Monster", "Monkey", "Pteranodon", "Into the Moon" and "Alien". 

The twist ending to "Werewolf" even had the old bearded one surprised!

What's Coming Next?


If only there was a clue to the next Black Tower book.....

NOT the toy...that's mine!!

Sunday, 28 June 2020

"Like an old British weekly comic -but with more pages!"

The quote in the title comes from an old time comics pro who was working at Fleetway in the 1960s-1980s. I sent him a copy of Black Tower Super Heroes and he liked it.

Comics from Fleetway at one time had 30+ pages and were full of humour, action and adventure strips. After the comment I took a look at my old Lion and Thunder comics (been a while!) and I can see what he means.

That comment alone tells me I must be doing something right.

Thursday, 25 June 2020

The Final Bucket of Blood -A Little Midnight Horror No. 6 out now!


The final gut-wrenching issue of the magazine that will whiten your hair! 
They dared us not to publish -so we did! 
Stories include: 
"Watch Your Step" 
"Lady Silana" 
"You Pay For What You Use" 
"Death Is Just The Beginning" 
"Asimov's Horror" 
"Death In The City" 
and more!

Wednesday, 24 June 2020

A Little Midnight Horrot No. 5 (of 6)


A4B&W24pp£5.00https://www.lulu.com/en/en/shop/terry-hooper/a-little-midnight-horror-no-5-july-2020/paperback/product-98y9v6.html

The 5th in the 6 issue series of hair-whitening short stories from Stransky and Labbat is here -edited by the Big Man from Osaka Ben R. Dilworth. 

Stories include "Vampire"; "Tree", "The Wicked", "Scream"m "The Ghost Dance", "The Rule of Wolves" and more. 

Illustrated text stories for bedtime, on the bus or during lunch"!

Monday, 22 June 2020

Two Questions Asked

There is a question that I used to get asked a lot. In fact two questions.

the first was: "How detailed are your scripts?" 

My hysterical laughter usually followed in response. I do not use scripts. Never have. For my own work that is. I may have a character in mind to use and by the end of a story 10 characters may be involved and how a story ends I generally have no idea. I sit in front of a blank piece of paper and start drawing and adding in dialogue as I go along. It ios not unknown for me to think "I'll end this by--" (brilliant idea) but then there is a twist in the story and that idea is gone.

Even big epics such as Return of the Gods had no script. I'm told (several pro editors in the past and a few publishers) that my scripts "Are well plotted. Good pacing of action and twists in the plot" but they were going by already drawn work -luckily, to save embarrassment, they saiod the same about actual scripts.

For Fleetway, Fantagraphics, Marvel UK and so on as a scripter I had to write the scripts becausesomeone else was drawing the strip. Those I tended to keep tight. When I worked with Art Wetherell and David Gordon I was far more loose script-wise. I had the story and I had any twists and plot-devices needed but if it came to any action that was left up to them. Both were competent enough to not have me tell them how to draw certain scenes.

Butthen you get the other type of "artist"! I once wrote for an American artist and the script described a tower block that could be seen from all points of the city and there was a large clock on each face of the building. "I don't understand what you mean" he told me. "It's a four-sided building and on each side is a clock face". Still did not get it until I drew the building with the huge clock on it and wrote "Each side of the building looks like this".  Him: "Do I need to show all sides in the panel?" W...T...actual f???

It got better. The villain, I explained is normal looking human on his left side but the right is entirely robotic looking.  So half human/half robot. I had to explain this three times and in the end drew the character and then he understood.  This fella was a nightmare and the project died quickly.

Artists tend to have creative, imaginative minds. Most have read comics or watched TV and movies so they know how to draw a fight between two characters on a ship's rigging or on a roof or even a church tower.

The scripts are easy to write. I once sat down with three people and asked them to just throw a word or two at me and I'd need to work out a story based on what they had said on the spot. No problem. One person then said, thinking he would stump me: "Two blades of grass moving gently in a breeze" and I came up, without really thinking of a great story idea (still not used after 30 years!) as to WHY the blades of grass were moving.  "I need an idea" or "I need a script fast" were not unusual things to hear and I generally threw 3-4 ideas at the person and always kept the best for last!

My short scripts, 6 issue and 12 issue scripts once stood over 3 feet (90 cms) high and that was a lot of paper to burn last year! I woreked at the typewriter (yes, the typewriter back then) from 09:00 hrs until (given a toilet break and time for food) 01:00/02:00 hrs next day. Everything I typed into scripts were vivid images in my head. I wrote for a lot of people.

The other question was: "Do you do thumb-nails or roughs of strips you draw?

No. Again, I sit down with a blank sheet of paper and that is it. If I get to a scene that has action seen from above or an odd angle I will draw it out very roughly in the panel -it could takea few attempts. Butthen I ink and tend to use what I decided on as a rough guide. Both Ben Dilworth and Andrew (Fantomax) Hope described my pencil work as "non-existent". The vastly under rated John Erasmus uses no pencils but draws straight to ink (any errors -Tippex).

Every creator uses their own method of work. Paul Ashley Brown does pencil work, inks and even colours (as with the graphic novel he is currently working on) and those are his "roughs"!  Seriously, I have gotten use to seeing this but it is how he works -even if there is nothing wrong with those 'roughs'.

I don't go out "on the booze" or spend my time trolling others on the internet which means my whole day is work. Writing, drawing, editing, publishing. That is why, I am told, that I am good at what I do (that sounded so bloody egotistical!) and why some in the 'community' are not keen on me. My advice to budding comic creators is have nothing to do with comic forums and avoid getting involved with little "cliques"  -it will hold you back and delay your development.

Always remember that no one knows your character like you do. No one knows or can write the stories involving your character like you can. No one can draw your character like you do. There is no secret to all of this -all my characters are living, breathing entities living in places I know.

HAVE FUN because if you do not get fun out of your comics the fact that you'll likely be poor the rest of your life is a misery :-)

Friday, 19 June 2020

Support Independent Comics


It's Out NOW -Johnny Neg!


Writer/Artist:Ben R Dilworth
Characters created by Terry Hooper-Scharf
A4
B&W
40pp
£6.00
https://www.lulu.com/en/en/shop/terry-hooper/johnny-neg-no-1-july-2020/paperback/product-vmv2ev.html


Ben Dilworth gives his own spin on the character Johnny Neg: a hard-boiled detective in a unique universe. 

What does a detective sound like in a place where everything can -and has- happened? A decadent place where the end of the world is assured to occur? 

1984 meets the Apocalypse on steroids! 

Text stories include: "Let's Talk It Over", "BrainDrainer", "Stamp" and "StokeHeadDead" 

Strips include: "Mutoids", "Home", "Mob Rools", "Love Robot", "Suicide Balls" and "The Ghost Bar" 

And for added delectation --there is a GoBo insert (you DO know who GoBo is, right?

Thursday, 18 June 2020

Projects, Projects and Johnny Neg

Having lettered and cleaned up 120+ pages in just over a week there was bound to be one mistake. One mistake is not bad you know.

At 0135 hours on Tuesday I was checking through some UK Golden Age work and suddenly realised that I had not given a character his correct name.  It was no panic because you take these things in your stride, or should.

I realised that the character's name was only used in two panels so that was easily corrected without having to re-text a whole page.  That was something to be happy about at least. Then I gotto the final page and the "end of project" depression kicked in. That was countered by the need for a front and back cover for the book.  All swings and roundabouts really.

I have The Ultimate Game: Cross Earths book 1 to edit and letter. Book 2 is partly redrawn. Then I have Ben Dilworth's take on a character -Johnny Neg to make into a release...I will not say this week as I'm unsure what day it is...but for release next week at the latest.

By the end of next week, for certain, the number of books at the online store should stand at around 130 and if things go as scheduled the number should reach 140 by mid-July.

Something for Mr Dilworth to add to https://blacktowercomics.wixsite.com/blacktowercomics

Please, if you have a few minutes, check out the Black Tower Comic Shop News  blog
https://comicsshopsnews.blogspot.com/

 or the online  store: https://www.lulu.com/spotlight/hoopercomicsuk

Thank You

Saturday, 13 June 2020

Getting Nearer....

Just finished cleaning and lettering page 77 of The Green Skies so not that far to go til p. 120!

Friday, 12 June 2020

A Green Skies Update

It's 20:18 hrs and I have JUST finished lettering and saving to the Green Skies document page 67.

Took a while to get into the swing of things since I've not lettered a comic in a couple years!

Can't wait to get to page 120!

Wednesday, 10 June 2020

Final Green Skies Part 1 page count

Yesterday, despite the laptop problems, I managed to scan and clean 60pp and made a couple art corrections. All to be added to The Green Skies Volume III Part 1.
Lettering I will start later this week as my poor vision needs to recuperate.
But, considering this book (now "books") should have been out in June 2014 it is a relief to see it get to this stage!

Part 1 will have 120pp

Monday, 8 June 2020

A Little Update

I have been breaking up The Green Skies pages and the first volume (I gave up on including it as parts in Black Tower Super Heroes) has 120pp of art

That is 120pp of story. Whether I'll add extras I'm not sure as I want to keep the costs down. That page count means the book will be Perfect Bound as a paperback and A4 in format.

Lunar Death-Strike! Genocide on Mars! oooh

The Trap.

IT's Coming!

A Death Has Occurred. 

A Death in Time. 

Betrayal! 

Genocide on Mars! 

Lunar Death-Strike!

Just a few of the preliminary chapter headings for The Green Skies which starts in Black Tower Super Heroes No. 9, December, 2020 (so expect it to be out around October).

Friday, 5 June 2020

Editorial -A Few Words

One reason I believe that people simply do not read comics as much as they used to is because -and it is being recognised by official bodies- we are at the dawn of a new age of illiteracy. That is sad in the extreme.

Anyway, I mentioned using social media to promote Black Tower Comics and Books but info on the books can be found on many international sites (where if you buy a copy of a book it will cost you more than from the online store because my books are ONLY available from my store). I just checked and here are some of those sites (and blogs):

Jacketflap
Bokus
Amazon -world wide
Good Reads
Abe Books
Barnes & Noble
Booktopia
Adlibris
Better World Books
Libri Inglese
Inventaire
Down The Tubes
Tales From the Kryptonian
blah blah blah blah blah ad infinitum

In fact you can find Return of the Gods alone on over 35 top international book sites. You might expect one or two sales 😁😁

The one thing I noticed has not changed is that anyone buying from these sources would be paying a great deal more -ignore the "free post" because the high price covers postage.  If I sold through these people I would make, on the sale of a £20 book, £1.00...see why I do not use them?  Also, if you order via the Lulu Black Tower storefront the book you order is printed in your region and there are consumer safeguards that cannot be offered by secondary sellers.

One person ordered a copy of a book and complained to me that he had not received it after two weeks. The book had cost him £30 and even with postage it should not have cost him that much (Ultimate Gold Collection). I checked.  No sale. Was this a con of some type? I asked if he could send a copy of the purchase note. No. Then he tells me he purchased the copy from a secondary seller so that seller had to wait for the book to arrive before sending it to him. Why did he buy from this seller? "It was post free so I thought I'd get it cheaper"....d'uh!

I pointed out to him that he paid more (£35!!) for the £20 book because he WAS paying postage and a "little extra" for the seller. As the seller in question got the book as a freebie (something the print on demand company do for big outlets and I do not get a penny from this which is why I do not go for "global distribution" deals) it never registered on my sales and as I made clear to the buyer "You buy second dealers do not expect the publisher to help you out. Nothing to do with them at all".

The guy then tells me that the book is great.

And yet I remain calm. My secret? Well, my secret is that I am ALWAYS angry 😇

Black Tower is a business BUT it is not a money grabbing business. I price books as low as I can and I try to make them good reads and good value.  You order from the online store then you have all the consumer safeguards and any big problems (none since 2009) I can step in and ask wtf is going on. The books, as I wrote, are all printed in the region you order from (I cannot do anything about any postage rates and I get hit by them,too) so there is no international postage rates -just local. The reason why I dropped "UK" from the Black Tower banner was because people thought they had to order from the UK, No. Local.

If you have any questions then ask them here or on the Black Tower Face Book page.
Cheers

The Fate of The Green Skies!

The final page count on The Green Skies book was just under 500pp after editing. The original intention was the publish thefinal part of the trilogy in one stand alone volume -like The Return of the Gods: Twilight of the Super Heroes and The Cross Earths Caper but certain factors have come into play that changes the original plan.

I had toyed with the idea of breaking the final part of the trilogy up and publishing as short parts in Black Tower Super Heroes but that might stretch out to 20 plus installments. That would mean anyone interesrted spending a good chunk of cash -far more than if they purchased the stand alone book.

Return is 331pp and the absolute minimum cost it has been on sale at -£20 UK- has not resulted in any sales even though ioty got great write ups from reviewers inb Germany, France, Finland and other countries. Which is disappointing but that is publishing for you. It does mean that I had to seriously think about the possibility of another big book sitting on the virtual store shelf.

What finally decided the fate of the book were the scans.  I am currently working ion what we might call a "clapped out" old PC since the laptop I had was far too hit-and-miss when it came to doing what it was supposed to do. Like starting.  However, I scanned all 500 A3 pages and stored them on USB devices so if the laptop died at least I had the work saved (I mean, I have all the hand drawn pages but I need the computer for lettering since my hands are fairly useless when it comes to that).

When I opened the files on the larger monitor I saw the problem straight away.  On a laptop screen it was not noticeable but on the bigger screen I could see that the scans wwere far, far from clean. I tried cleaning up a few of the pages but it made no difference. Five days of scanning were wasted. Not a lot I can do about it but take a deep breath and start again.

This caused problems since the next step should have been lettering the pages in Microsoft Publisher but I was now faced with days of scanning work before I could get on to lettering -another week's work.

I did contemplate just not bothering but since this story was supposed to appear in 2014 before a health crisis and I wanted the story to finally be completed (in 2014 the idea of a mysterious virus ravaging mankind seemed novel idea as a side plot!!).

What I have decided to do is split the final story into 5(?) separate volumes of just over 100pp each and that makes the lettering easier.  Comic Bits magazine is 80pp per issue and retails at £6.00 a copy which is cheap. Therefore the price for each Green Skies volume will be low.

I want to see the first volume out by August 2020 so that may mean things going quiet here. Green Skies, I hope, might see some extras in each volume such as how others put their take on characters or simply extra splash art pages.

Wonder whether I can force Mr Dilworth into some cover art? :-) :-)

But decision made.  More info to follow.

Stay healthy!

Thursday, 4 June 2020

Frank Barrell talks to Terry Hooper-Scharf about The Ultimate Game, The Cosmic Fulcrum and The Return Of The Gods!



Nb:An old (2013?) interview but it should answer some questions.

Frank Barrel:I’ve interviewed Terry a couple times before –the last time about his resurrection of an old UK Golden Age character in The Bat Triumphant.  Not easy to interview someone who doesn’t like interviews and has rarely taken part in one in 30 years but here goes nothing!

Frank: Now I know you are a major fan of the obscure UK Golden Age heroes and you’ve incorporated many into your “Black Tower Universe” since 1984 and you have also published a book -400 plus pages?- of many of these old obscure strips, both humour and action. So, Return, is the biggest all original work book you’ve published to date?

Terry: Yes, biggest comic book or “graphic novel” if you prefer. I’ve published about five (?) bulky prose books –Some Things Strange & Sinister, Some More Things Strange & Sinister, Pursuing The Strange & Weird, The Red Paper and, of course, the best of 25 plus years of interviews in…The Hooper Interviews.

Normally, I’ve published A4 comic albums of between 15-120 pages.  Return, however, is the first graphic novel.

Frank: How many pages?

Terry: It’s 318 pages.

Frank: I may have gotten ahead of myself a bit here –I was reading Paul H. Birch’s Q&A with you on SpeechBalloon and got diverted –

http://blogs.birminghammail.co.uk/speechballoon/2013/02/return-of-the-gods-and-a-chat.html

Now, I know you’ve read comics since you were about six or seven years old and your influences were outlined in a full interview by Phil Latter (yeah, give a Canadian the opportunity to interview you but not your mates!)

http://www.comicbitsonline.com/2011/06/27/the-terry-hooper-interview-by-phil-latter/

and you’ve expanded on this background with postings on Manhwa, Manhua and Manga as well as European (particularly German) comics on CBO….

Terry: This is going to be a very long interview, isn’t it?

Frank: I’ll get there in a minute just hang about.

Terry: Then hurry up!!!!


below:art from the original The Ultimate Game. Pencils T. Hooper/Inks B. R. Dilworth.

Frank: Okay, we’ll get back to Golden Age stuff in a while. As you are so impatient maybe you can tell us just how Return started?

Terry: In a way I think it goes back to when I was a nipper, drawing comic strips in old receipt books my gran, Rose, used to get me from work (she worked at Pople’s Popular Pies in Mina Road, St. Werburgh’s, and old blank receipt books were thrown away but she found it a very “economic” way to stem my need for paper to draw on)—

Frank: And you don’t have any of those books any more, do you?

Terry: Sadly, no. My parents kept moving about and I lost so much stuff but only managed to keep the odd cherished comic.

Any old way, I used to draw UK characters such as Billy The Cat, Billy The Whizz and The Spider –even The Phantom Viking—alongside US comic characters like Thor, Hulk, Captain America, Batman and so on. Actually, as I’m saying this I suddenly realise that Return is a sort of expansion of those old books. That is weird. I never really thought about it until now.


below: More of the original UG -credits as before!

Frank: To save any legal threats we need to make sure that its clear you have not used any of those characters in Return!

Terry: Absolutely not. I’m not insane!

Frank: So you started drawing these strips in old receipt books and so on and you never lost interest in comics as you grew up?


Below: a colour “swatch” page for the colourist.


Terry: No. Not at all. I never had a terrible childhood –my grandparents, Rose and Bill, mainly raised me and though we were poor Bill did try to keep me supplied with a weekly comic or a shilling (5p today!) pocket money so comics and plasticine were always with me.  And when I eventually went to Greenway Secondary Modern Boys School in Southmead, Bristol, I found a few people interested in comics and later on taught a few younger lads to draw comics. School was not a good time for me so drawing and comics were a distraction.


Frank: Your original plan was to get into publishing and publish comics as a business or work as a comic editor, right?

Terry: Yes. All my contact was mainly with editors or publishers and I soon learned that it was a real closed shop. But that’s a very, very long story!!

Frank: Alright, zooming ahead. You were going to various comic companies in the mid 1980s and trying to sell comic title or strip series ideas.  It was at this point that the germ of what was going to become Return started: can you tell us about that?

Terry: Well, in a way it began (excluding those old receipt book cross-overs) with Fleetway in the 1980s. I had met Steve McManus and Dave Hunt and others at the editorial level but my real insight into things came through Managing Editor Gil Page –when he later retired (around 2000) he had been with the company since 1957 and had been there from Amalgamated Press, IPC, Fleetway, Maxwell PP and then Egmont.

I learnt things such as the fact that, as Gil put it in a letter: “everyone was excited about this big American comic writer who had created the Spider for us” –yes, Jerry Siegel created The Spider. And talk of the old characters they still had and never used led to me “kinda” talking Gil into letting me put together a 10 page preview titled “The Ultimate Game”.  I say “kinda” because no one could persuade him to do what he did not want to –he was affectionately known as “the UK Stan Lee” and I still hold him in great respect.

However, though the end result –The Ultimate Game– was liked and copies made and passed around all over Fleetway –I went to see Steve McManus about a 2000 AD related idea and he took the pages out of a drawer and said “You’re the guy behind this, aren’t you?”  Ah, the recognition at last!  Anyway, “someone” put a spoke in the works. Sheer malice but they bi-passed the editors and contacted upper management. From then on the old characters were really “a thing of the past” and later incarnations never treated them properly –though I love Shane Oakley and George Freeman’s work on Albion.

By total accident, I met a fella who was in management at Maxwell Pergamon Publishing and he blurted out -by accident?- that Robert Maxwell was buying out Fleetway and that Maxwell really wanted to publish successful comics in the UK. I have no idea what was going on behind the scenes but apparently Rupert Murdoch had a newspaper empire and had said at some point his company was going to publish comics -red flag to Maxwell!  I met the man once, very enthusiastic. I counted my fingers afterwards.


It took a while but then his people decided The Ultimate Game was going to be a full colour, 32 pager,  old style weekly –a bit like Battle or the new Eagle but full colour. At this point I was very excited but a warning voice always tells me to not get carried away.  Everything was ready…then Maxwell died and I have no idea what was going on.

Eventually, I was writing for Egmont, mainly on Revolver and then someone found the old Ultimate Game project. I think they were trying to impress their bosses with ideas which should have warned me!  I spent a lot of time up-dating it. Then the editor involved left, apparently on not very good terms with Egmont, and the project died again.

Marvel UK had shown an interest but wanted all rights so I said no. It would have been nice money but giving up rights to all the characters? No.

I ought to point out that after Fleetway and Egmont and Maxwell I had incorporated my own characters, some that I had created in the 1970s, into the story as I could not use the old Fleetway characters.
When I re-launched Black Tower Adventure in…2009  I needed a meaty main feature. The Ultimate Game had been adapted and the title changed to The Cosmic Fulcrum for Marvel UK and that title was used when it finally appeared in a Small Press version.

So, what I had in 2009 was a strip that had been reworked and re-titled as The Return Of The Gods: Twilight Of The Super Heroes. I had thought Adventure would only go for six issues so the strip was perfect and I would finally see it in print in some form!


Frank: And Adventure is at issue 10 now!  But you combined the strip into Black Tower’s first graphic novel in 2012 and it did quite well –glowing reviews— so why a new version and how is it different (I know I’ve read my copy and its brilliant but for the readers)?

Terry: Well, the original book was a trade version of the six part series from Black Tower Adventure and came to a total of 196 pages. I talked to reviewers who are also comic artists/writers and we had a round robin discussion of the book. Most said that it was far better and certainly more enjoyable than DC Comics “52″ series and…fun!

But as we talked I realised that I had missed an opportunity because, since 1984, Black Tower has incorporated a lot of very obscure old UK Golden Age characters and some of these just appeared in a strip -no origin or anything.

Frank: But not included in the original six part story?

Terry: No, and as far as I was then concerned,  it was too late to sort that out and include some of them –though the Golden Agers are represented. However,  I had to re-think seriously re-think this later on.


Frank: You notoriously do not use scripts for your own work so how did you go about this series?

Terry: As you say, I never ever work with a script on things I am working on myself. I always start with a blank sheet of paper, pencil, pens and then see what develops. It gives a lot of spontaneity -I really have no idea what is going to happen on a page or even the next panel!

As far as the story is concerned I found that I was incorporating bits of The Ultimate Game and The Cosmic Fulcrum –another multi-character series.

After Return was published I was rummaging through an old box looking for an old reference image and found a thick wad of A3 pages –about 45 pages in total that were the build-up to the original strip -I thought those pages had been lost years ago. I read through it and realised the pages actually explained a few things and was paced for the big event. That put me in a rather odd position.

I had a week or so to decide whether or not I wanted to leave Return as it was or to tidy up the old pages and make it more complete. I also realised that there would have to be new  pages drawn to bridge the various story links. Then I thought that this was a chance to once and for all explain everything that had been going on in Black Tower strips since 1984 and explain the incorporation of the old Golden Age characters and their origins. It also helps to set up The Green Skies book in late 2013.

I figured the final book would total 250-260 pages so when I finished it and found over 300 I was a little taken aback.

A few people who got the advanced rough book just started raving about it so I thought “Okay. Job done. Move on!”

Frank: And it is a real cracker. But for those who know nothing about the book could you summarise it?

Terry: AGH! Well, it begins slowly enough with Earth’s heroes going about their daily tasks –such as fighting a giant robot controlled by a mad scientist’s brain, some villains,  both “regular” and mystical not to mention even vampire alien high priests of some mysterious cult and their zombie followers attacking various heroes to put them temporarily out of the way. Oh, of course there is a ghost and a young genius lost in time.

Pretty mundane super hero stuff really. “Just another day”.

But there is a huge alien Mother-ship near the Moon and psychics around the world have been getting vivid images of this for months –even non-precogs. Earth’s mystical heroes are stumped.

Then strange orange spheres chase some of Earth’s heroes in the UK, France, Czech Republic, Mexico, Russia and other parts of the world. Once touched by the globes that deliberately seek them out the heroes vanish into thin air –are they dead? Is some super villain exacting revenge?

Black, impenetrable domes suddenly appear and cover cities world-wide. Those outside are puzzled while those within face a terrifying reality…

…Alien invasion of Earth!

And then there is a war brewing between the Dark Old (Lovecraftian type) Gods and the pantheons that followed –Greek, Babylonian, etc.. After millennia of waiting the new gods will either triumph and return to Earth or be defeated…and whichever side wins it won’t be good for humanity.

There are warriors from various conflicts in the Earth’s past that are having to battle each day on some mysterious endless plain and whether they die in battle or not they are back the next day!

No one suspects the driving force, the evil twisted schemer,  behind the events that could cause destruction and chaos throughout the multi-verse.  Assaulted on all fronts can Earth’s defenders succeed or will they fail…is this truly the end?

The final words of the character Jack Flash on the last page apparently gave readers goose-bumps!

Frank: Those are chilling final words!!  But, as no shops or distributors wanted to touch what I, in my honest opinion, consider the really be one of the greatest British super hero sagas I’ve ever read –better than my old favourite Zenith- how can people buy a copy?

Terry: I thought you would never ask! It’s only available online at the moment so people will need to check out:

http://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper-scharf/the-return-of-the-godstwilight-of-the-super-heroes/paperback/product-20659931.html

Frank: Terry, good luck with the book and I cannot wait for Green Skies!!

Maybe a  low res glimpse will pull you all in?
NROTG 003
NROTG 004
NROTG 005
NROTG 006
NROTG 007
NROTG 009
NROTG 010
NROTG 011
NROTG 012 (2)
NROTG 013
NROTG 014
NROTG 015

A Few Thoughts While I wait For Food...oh, I Have to Cook it...

The problem that we have at this moment, as Independent publishers, is the total and utter lack of interest from the "comics buying public". I use Twitter, Pinterest and other social media as well as the blogs and Face Book pages to promote books.

Even my Twitter account has seen a sudden upsurge of views again but no one is buying.

When it was announced that Marvel and DC comics had stopped publishing bevcause of Covid19 and the mess Diamond was in, people started shouting out that NOW was the time the Independent comics would come into their own. I urged Small Press/Indie publishers to share links to one anothers sites and told as many as possible that if we all combined (it would take a few minutes at the keyboards) we could really get the attention of comic buyers.

I got two "Likes" and no comments. No reactions. No "Okay what do we do?" Simple silence and since then we have seen publishers quit. For years I heard these people bleat on about the fact that no blogs would fairly review their books or even mention them and yto each one of those bleaters I said "Comic Bits Online".  "Oh I'll post something to you" resulted in 90% of those never sending review books. Even now they and their successors are bleating the same old tune.

You need to promote. You NEED to get people to understand you are out there publishing and what you are publishing. Marvel Comics would never have been the success it was had it not been for the fact that Stan Lee understood this -DC could never catch up with Marvel because it never had a Lee just suits who tried to avoid fans.

The problem is that no one wants to do the work. You don't publicise you are at an event then who knows you will be there? Events tend to have lots of tables with comics and you know a few of them will have promoted their appearance!  Standing back, silently looking on as someone approaches your table...no good. You need to engage. Talk. Get them while their attention is caught.

I am not in the least surprised at the state of British comics because almost every 'professional' is back-stabbing or causing arguments and trouble.  It is why you find them on almost all the forums or trying to spy on what others are doing.  This is why they come up with very little comic work. My day starts in the morning checking emails and responding to messages and then I go straight into editing, scanning and publishing and promoting books -often until 02:00 hours or beyond. That is leaving out the writing and drawing etc....or the research I constantly carry out for books or on comics (UK and German) history.

When I get asked by someone what publishing involves I tell them: "A lot of work. Sorting pout technical problems, sorting out problems with printers -just a lot of work for very little reward" I then add: "Unless you have the mentality for that: do not get into publishing" I also invariably point out that unless they have a paying full time job or wealthy parents to support them then they need to get used to eating poorly and struggling with bills!  Hey -if they still want to be in comics after that...bless 'em!

But never, ever ever depend on others because if you do you are for a lot of sorrow or/and trouble. You need to make surethat you can do what you intend to and NEVER publish a series unless you have all the parts in front of you, I am still waiting for 3rd, 4th and even 5th issues to Indie comic series I purchased in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s into the 2000s!

Now....buy my books -advice costs money you know!
😂😂😂

Tales of Wonder No. 16



A4
B&W
20pp
£5.00
https://www.lulu.com/en/en/shop/terry-hooper/tales-of-wonder-no-16/paperback/product-zrg8ek.html

This is what all the sci fi readers have waited for -issue no. 16 of a one issue run...that may sound odd but we promise you it is all explained in the book. 

No time warps or fancy alien interference just some creator having fun! 

D. H. Wilberton contributes "Dawn Light" and "War" while Ben R. Dilworth gets his pen hand in there (that is a turn of phrase..come on -it does NOT mean he has a hand that is a pen for goodness sakes!) with "Conquest" while Stransky & Labbat contribute "They Bite" and "The Menace" 

With some illustrations this is a must for anyone wanting quick sci fi reads and look at that cover!

Wednesday, 3 June 2020

It's....The Thinker!


A4
B&W
28pp
£5.50
https://www.lulu.com/en/en/shop/terry-hooper/the-thinker-no-1/paperback/product-vmd62d.html

From within the Plain of Absoluteness where Actuality crosses with Counter Actuality and interstitial space is the highway comes The Thinker. Surveying the world -our own?- and looking for a glimmer of light in the eternal darkness of existence.

 Sit back and prepare for some mind warping!