Pulpfest 2010
Posted by Morgan Holmes on 10th August 2010
The weekend of July 30-August 1st was the time for Pulpfest 2010. Rising from the ashes of the old Pulp-Con, Pulpfest is picking up speed. If you ever thought of getting into reading pulp magazines, this is the place to go. Held in Columbus, Ohio, which makes for easy driving for me, it is an excuse for a 3 day weekend 2/3 of the way into the summer.
There you will finds dealers of pulp magazines, paperbacks, pulp reprints which includes both books and pulp replicas.
Membership was just a few people shy of 400 this year. Guest William F. Nolan, author of Logan’s Run among others, proved to be a great raconteur. I was able to ask him about the claim that he rewrote some Frederick Faust/Max Brand stories for some collections back in the 80s. He denied he did stating he wrote a framing sequence for one novella at the bequest of Faust’s family for copyright purposes. He told me there is a Faust biography by him on the way. Also a new treatment of Logan’s Run.
Saturday, there was a Robert E. Howard Foundation lunch at the Pig Iron Grill. Those pictured above include myself, Jason Landers, Jim Barron, Ed Chaczyk, Eric Johnson, Scott Hartshorn, Rusty Burke, Don Herron, and John D. Squires. Don Herron told tales of E. Hoffman Price while John Squires reminisced about Karl Edward Wagner.
This is a golden age for pulp reprints. John Gunnison’s Adventure House continues to bring forth a steady number of affordable replicas. Black Dog Books has sprinted, and I mean sprinted ahead to become the leader of pulp reprint authors collections and anthologies. Paradox should give serious thought to allowing Black Dog to do some Robert E. Howard books. I can remember when Tom Roberts was producing cool chapbooks. Now he is producing cool trade paperbacks. I just started reading The Best of Adventure Volume 1 1910-1912 and am enjoying it mightily.
Haffner Press continues to be the benchmark for small press hardbacks. Steve Haffner just unveiled Detour to Otherness, a great big honkin collection of Henry Kuttner & C. L. Moore stories.
Ed Hulse’s magazine Blood and Thunder is a great publication. The production values keep going up with each issue. It might be the best looking pulp oriented magazine today though I am awaiting the triumphant return of Pulp Vault.
So next year, block off the last weekend of July and make plans for heading to Columbus. Remember, all serious Robert E. Howard fans wear Hawaiian shirts at events such as these.
Posted in Conventions |





