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Ashino Tsume roshi
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Posts: 9191
Joined: Thu Jul 02, 2009 8:18 pm
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14
You are...: a master
Male/Female: Male
Number of Spirits: 1000
Spelled Number: 200
Your favorite spirit to work with: Human
If I could be anything, I would be...: A Galactic Executive
My super power would be...: X-Ray Vision
My magical/paranormal name...: Durga Suta Putra
Zodiac:

I suggest all the works (a few novels, and many short stories) of Henry Kuttner He & His Wife influenced Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith, and many mnay other people. I never had the chance to meet Kuttner before his death in 1958, but I did meet his wife C>L. Moore, in the fall of 1960, and besides being brilliant, she was friendly and loved to talk about all these (seemingly unrelated aspects of the world that go far beyond reason"). And she and obviously Kuttner, were well versed in the Occult and the science of the day.

Kutner who had such a giant influence on everybody from Lovecraft to Marvel Comics, should not only be remembered, but read for his amazing ideas and that of his wife as well. To first read Kuttner to understand him, his short story - Jabberwocky - is beyond amazing. Sorry for the long length, but I feel it was necessary.
Caiyros

Short stories[edit]
Tony Quade stories[edit]
"I. Hollywood on the Moon" (1938)
"II. Doom World" (1938)
"III. The Star Parade" (1938)
"IV. Trouble on Titan" (1941)
Elak of Atlantis stories[edit]
"Thunder in the Dawn" (1938)
"Spawn of Dagon" (1938)
"Beyond the Phoenix" (1939)
"Dragon Moon" (1940)
Thunder Jim Wade series (as by Charles Stoddard)[edit]
"Thunder Jim Wade" (1941)
"The Hills of Gold" (1941)
"The Poison People" (1941)
"The Devil's Glacier" (1941)
"Waters of Death" (1941)
"Baldy" Stories[edit]
"The Piper's Son" (1945)
"Three Blind Mice" (1945)
"The Lion And The Unicorn" (1945)
"Beggars in Velvet" (1945)
"Humpty Dumpty" (1953)
Other[edit]
"The Graveyard Rats" (1936) adapted for television movie Trilogy of Terror II (1996)[1]
"The Secret of Kralitz" (1936)
"The Eater of Souls" (1937)
"The Salem Horror" (1937)
"The Invaders" (1939)
"Bells of Horror" (1939)
"The Hunt" (1939)
"Beauty and the Beast" (1940)
"Masquerade" (1942), adapted for episode of television series Thriller (1961) [2]
"Mimsy Were the Borogoves" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943) used as the basis for the 2007 movie The Last Mimzy[3], and for the French TV adaptation "Tout spliques étaient les Borogoves" (1970)[4]
"Clash by Night" (with C. L. Moore) (1943)
"The Proud Robot" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"The Time Locker" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"Gallegher Plus" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"Nothing but Gingerbread Left" (1943)
"The Twonky" (as Lewis Padgett, 1940s?), adapted for film of the same name in 1953 [5]
"The World Is Mine" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"What You Need" (as Lewis Padgett, 1945) adapted for "What You Need" episodes of Tales of Tomorrow (1952)[6] and The Twilight Zone (1959) television shows [7]
"The Cure" (1946)
"The Dark Angel" (with C. L. Moore, 1946), later published as "Dark Angel" (as Lewis Padgett, 1975), adapted for episode of same name of television series Tales of Tomorrow [8]
"Call Him Demon" (1946)
"Vintage Season" (with C. L. Moore; 1946), filmed in 1992 as Timescape [9]
"Ex Machina" (as Lewis Padgett, 1948)
"Happy Ending" (1949)
"Satan Sends Flowers" (1953)
"Or Else" (??), published in the anthology The War Book (edited by James Sallis, 1969).
The Best of Henry Kuttner anthologizes 17 stories. (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1975).
The Eyes of Thar
Atomic!
Fixups[edit]
Mutant (the Baldie stories) (1953)
Robots Have No Tails (the Gallegher stories, as Lewis Padgett) (1952)
Novels[edit]
A Million Years to Conquer (1940), published in book form as The Creature from Beyond Infinity (1968)
Earth's Last Citadel (with C. L. Moore) (1943, first book publication 1964)
The Fairy Chessmen (1946, as Lewis Padgett, also retitled as Chessboard Planet and The Far Reality)
Valley of the Flame (1946, first book publication 1964)
The Dark World (with C. L. Moore (assumed)) (1946, first book publication 1965)
The Brass Ring (with C. L. Moore) (1946, nongenre, also published as Murder in Brass)
Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1947, as Lewis Padgett)
Fury (1947, first book publication 1950, later published under the title Destination: Infinity (1958))
The Day He Died (with C. L. Moore) (1947, nongenre)
The Mask of Circe (1948, first book publication 1971)
The Time Axis (1949, first book publication 1965)
The Portal in the Picture (with C. L. Moore) (1949, also known as Beyond Earth's Gates)
The Well of the Worlds (1952, first book publication 1953)
Man Drowning (1952, nongenre)
The Murder of Eleanor Pope (1956, nongenre)
The Murder of Ann Avery (1956, nongenre)
Murder of a Mistress (1957, nongenre)
Murder of a Wife (1958, nongenre)
Collections[edit]
Ahead of Time
The Best of Henry Kuttner (split in paperback into two volumes, The Best of Kuttner 1 and *The Best of Kuttner 2)
The Book of Iod
Bypass to Otherness
Chessboard Planet and Other Stories (with C.L. Moore)
Clash by Night and Other Stories (with C.L. Moore)
Detour to Otherness (with C.L. Moore)
Elak of Atlantis
A Gnome There Was
Hollywood on the Moon / Man About Time: The Pete Manx Adventures (with Arthur K. Barnes) (announced for 2011)
Kuttner Times Three
Line to Tomorrow and Other Stories of Fantasy and Science Fiction (with C.L. Moore)
The Michael Gray Murders (with C.L. Moore) (announced for 2012)
No Boundaries (with C.L. Moore)
Prince Raynor
Return to Otherness
Secret of the Earth Star and Others
The Startling Worlds of Henry Kuttner
Terror in the House: The Early Kuttner, Volume One
Thunder in the Void
Thunder Jim Wade
Two-Handed Engine: The Selected Short Fiction of Henry Kuttner & C.L. Moore
The Hogben Chronicles—Kickstarter Project posthumously pushed by Neil Gaiman, F. Paul Wilson, Pierce Waters, Thomas L. Monteleone, and with special assist by Alan Moore. [10]
Television[edit]
"The Martian Eyes" episode(s) of Lights Out series (1950 and/or 1951) [11][12]
"Price on His Head" episode of series Sugarfoot (1958)[13]
Tales of Frankenstein (pilot for television series that was not picked up, 1958)[14]
"The Eye" episode of Out of the Unknown television series (1966)[15]
Comic Books[edit]
"Doiby Dickles Enters High Sassiety"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #12; Summer 1944

"The Gambler"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #12; Summer 1944

"The Lord Haw-Haw of Crime"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #13; Fall 1944

"Doiby Dickles, Da District Attorney"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; All-American Comics #62; December 1944

"A Tale of a City"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Comic Cavalcade #9; Winter 1944

"The Cave Kid Goes To Town"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #14; Winter 1944-45

"The Jewel of Hope"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #16; Summer 1945

"Doiby Dickles, the Human Bomb"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; All-American Comics #71; March 1946

"The Last of the Buccaneers"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Green Lantern #18; Winter 1945-1946

"The Man Who Doubled In Death, or, The Duplicity of Johnny Double"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #18; Winter 1945-1946

"Sing a Song of Disaster"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"Dickles Vs. Fate"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"Jonah Was a Jinx"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"The Gambler Comes Back"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #20; June–July 1946

"The Good Humor Man"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #21; August–September 1946

"What Makes Goitrude Go?"
Green Lantern / comic story / 13 pages; Green Lantern (1941 series) #21 August–September 1946

"The Man Who Insults Everybody"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #22; October–November 1946

"The Invisible World"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #22; October–November 1946

Pseudonyms[edit]
Edward J. Bellin
Paul Edmonds
Noel Gardner
Will Garth
James Hall
Keith Hammond
Hudson Hastings
Peter Horn
Kelvin Kent
Robert O. Kenyon
C. H. Liddell
Hugh Maepenn
Scott Morgan
Lawrence O'Donnell
Lewis Padgett
Woodrow Wilson Smith
Charles Stoddard
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User avatar
Ashino Tsume roshi
sanctified
sanctified
Posts: 9191
Joined: Thu Jul 02, 2009 8:18 pm
Answers: 0
14
You are...: a master
Male/Female: Male
Number of Spirits: 1000
Spelled Number: 200
Your favorite spirit to work with: Human
If I could be anything, I would be...: A Galactic Executive
My super power would be...: X-Ray Vision
My magical/paranormal name...: Durga Suta Putra
Zodiac:

I suggest all the works (a few novels, and many short stories) of Henry Kuttner He & His Wife influenced Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith, and many mnay other people. I never had the chance to meet Kuttner before his death in 1958, but I did meet his wife C.L. Moore, in the fall of 1960, we had long talks over one weekend in Pitssburg, PA, and besides being brilliant, she was friendly and loved to talk about all these (seemingly unrelated aspects of the world that go far beyond reason"). And she and obviously Kuttner, were well versed in the Occult and the science of the day.

Kutner who had such a giant influence on everybody from Lovecraft to Marvel Comics, should not only be remembered, but read for his amazing ideas and that of his wife as well. To first read Kuttner to understand him, his short story - Mimsy Were The Borogroves - is beyond amazing. Sorry for the long length, but I feel it was necessary.
Caiyros

Short stories[edit]
Tony Quade stories[edit]
"I. Hollywood on the Moon" (1938)
"II. Doom World" (1938)
"III. The Star Parade" (1938)
"IV. Trouble on Titan" (1941)
Elak of Atlantis stories[edit]
"Thunder in the Dawn" (1938)
"Spawn of Dagon" (1938)
"Beyond the Phoenix" (1939)
"Dragon Moon" (1940)
Thunder Jim Wade series (as by Charles Stoddard)[edit]
"Thunder Jim Wade" (1941)
"The Hills of Gold" (1941)
"The Poison People" (1941)
"The Devil's Glacier" (1941)
"Waters of Death" (1941)
"Baldy" Stories[edit]
"The Piper's Son" (1945)
"Three Blind Mice" (1945)
"The Lion And The Unicorn" (1945)
"Beggars in Velvet" (1945)
"Humpty Dumpty" (1953)
Other[edit]
"The Graveyard Rats" (1936) adapted for television movie Trilogy of Terror II (1996)[1]
"The Secret of Kralitz" (1936)
"The Eater of Souls" (1937)
"The Salem Horror" (1937)
"The Invaders" (1939)
"Bells of Horror" (1939)
"The Hunt" (1939)
"Beauty and the Beast" (1940)
"Masquerade" (1942), adapted for episode of television series Thriller (1961) [2]
"Mimsy Were the Borogoves" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943) used as the basis for the 2007 movie The Last Mimzy[3], and for the French TV adaptation "Tout spliques étaient les Borogoves" (1970)[4]
"Clash by Night" (with C. L. Moore) (1943)
"The Proud Robot" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"The Time Locker" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"Gallegher Plus" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"Nothing but Gingerbread Left" (1943)
"The Twonky" (as Lewis Padgett, 1940s?), adapted for film of the same name in 1953 [5]
"The World Is Mine" (as Lewis Padgett, 1943)
"What You Need" (as Lewis Padgett, 1945) adapted for "What You Need" episodes of Tales of Tomorrow (1952)[6] and The Twilight Zone (1959) television shows [7]
"The Cure" (1946)
"The Dark Angel" (with C. L. Moore, 1946), later published as "Dark Angel" (as Lewis Padgett, 1975), adapted for episode of same name of television series Tales of Tomorrow [8]
"Call Him Demon" (1946)
"Vintage Season" (with C. L. Moore; 1946), filmed in 1992 as Timescape [9]
"Ex Machina" (as Lewis Padgett, 1948)
"Happy Ending" (1949)
"Satan Sends Flowers" (1953)
"Or Else" (??), published in the anthology The War Book (edited by James Sallis, 1969).
The Best of Henry Kuttner anthologizes 17 stories. (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1975).
The Eyes of Thar
Atomic!
Fixups[edit]
Mutant (the Baldie stories) (1953)
Robots Have No Tails (the Gallegher stories, as Lewis Padgett) (1952)
Novels[edit]
A Million Years to Conquer (1940), published in book form as The Creature from Beyond Infinity (1968)
Earth's Last Citadel (with C. L. Moore) (1943, first book publication 1964)
The Fairy Chessmen (1946, as Lewis Padgett, also retitled as Chessboard Planet and The Far Reality)
Valley of the Flame (1946, first book publication 1964)
The Dark World (with C. L. Moore (assumed)) (1946, first book publication 1965)
The Brass Ring (with C. L. Moore) (1946, nongenre, also published as Murder in Brass)
Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1947, as Lewis Padgett)
Fury (1947, first book publication 1950, later published under the title Destination: Infinity (1958))
The Day He Died (with C. L. Moore) (1947, nongenre)
The Mask of Circe (1948, first book publication 1971)
The Time Axis (1949, first book publication 1965)
The Portal in the Picture (with C. L. Moore) (1949, also known as Beyond Earth's Gates)
The Well of the Worlds (1952, first book publication 1953)
Man Drowning (1952, nongenre)
The Murder of Eleanor Pope (1956, nongenre)
The Murder of Ann Avery (1956, nongenre)
Murder of a Mistress (1957, nongenre)
Murder of a Wife (1958, nongenre)
Collections[edit]
Ahead of Time
The Best of Henry Kuttner (split in paperback into two volumes, The Best of Kuttner 1 and *The Best of Kuttner 2)
The Book of Iod
Bypass to Otherness
Chessboard Planet and Other Stories (with C.L. Moore)
Clash by Night and Other Stories (with C.L. Moore)
Detour to Otherness (with C.L. Moore)
Elak of Atlantis
A Gnome There Was
Hollywood on the Moon / Man About Time: The Pete Manx Adventures (with Arthur K. Barnes) (announced for 2011)
Kuttner Times Three
Line to Tomorrow and Other Stories of Fantasy and Science Fiction (with C.L. Moore)
The Michael Gray Murders (with C.L. Moore) (announced for 2012)
No Boundaries (with C.L. Moore)
Prince Raynor
Return to Otherness
Secret of the Earth Star and Others
The Startling Worlds of Henry Kuttner
Terror in the House: The Early Kuttner, Volume One
Thunder in the Void
Thunder Jim Wade
Two-Handed Engine: The Selected Short Fiction of Henry Kuttner & C.L. Moore
The Hogben Chronicles—Kickstarter Project posthumously pushed by Neil Gaiman, F. Paul Wilson, Pierce Waters, Thomas L. Monteleone, and with special assist by Alan Moore. [10]
Television[edit]
"The Martian Eyes" episode(s) of Lights Out series (1950 and/or 1951) [11][12]
"Price on His Head" episode of series Sugarfoot (1958)[13]
Tales of Frankenstein (pilot for television series that was not picked up, 1958)[14]
"The Eye" episode of Out of the Unknown television series (1966)[15]
Comic Books[edit]
"Doiby Dickles Enters High Sassiety"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #12; Summer 1944

"The Gambler"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #12; Summer 1944

"The Lord Haw-Haw of Crime"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #13; Fall 1944

"Doiby Dickles, Da District Attorney"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; All-American Comics #62; December 1944

"A Tale of a City"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Comic Cavalcade #9; Winter 1944

"The Cave Kid Goes To Town"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #14; Winter 1944-45

"The Jewel of Hope"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #16; Summer 1945

"Doiby Dickles, the Human Bomb"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; All-American Comics #71; March 1946

"The Last of the Buccaneers"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Green Lantern #18; Winter 1945-1946

"The Man Who Doubled In Death, or, The Duplicity of Johnny Double"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #18; Winter 1945-1946

"Sing a Song of Disaster"
Green Lantern comic story; 12 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"Dickles Vs. Fate"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"Jonah Was a Jinx"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #19; April–May 1946

"The Gambler Comes Back"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #20; June–July 1946

"The Good Humor Man"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #21; August–September 1946

"What Makes Goitrude Go?"
Green Lantern / comic story / 13 pages; Green Lantern (1941 series) #21 August–September 1946

"The Man Who Insults Everybody"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #22; October–November 1946

"The Invisible World"
Green Lantern comic story; 13 pages; Green Lantern #22; October–November 1946

Pseudonyms[edit]
Edward J. Bellin
Paul Edmonds
Noel Gardner
Will Garth
James Hall
Keith Hammond
Hudson Hastings
Peter Horn
Kelvin Kent
Robert O. Kenyon
C. H. Liddell
Hugh Maepenn
Scott Morgan
Lawrence O'Donnell
Lewis Padgett
Woodrow Wilson Smith
Charles Stoddard


EarthGalactics online....
Leautremontmars Virtual Mall
Occult Metaphysical
Children of the Night Lugoss
User avatar
Empress M
neophyte
neophyte
Posts: 423
Joined: Fri Mar 25, 2016 5:33 pm
Answers: 0
8
You are...: in the learning process
My super power would be...: Ability to shape-shift

Thank you Noctifera =D


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