Showing posts with label frankenstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frankenstein. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2011

Frankenstein books

In honour of this spooky month, I'm going to showcase all of my vintage horror/monster-related books throughout October.


Today is the grand finale. Feast your eyes upon my glorious Frankenstein collection. Frankenstein is by far by favourite horror book. Actually, it's my favourite book full stop. It is a phenomenal piece of literature that has a myriad of interpretations. Despite the fact it was written almost 200 years ago, it is a story that continues to consistently remain relevant. Without further ado, I present my well-loved vintage Frankensteins.


HAPPY HALLOWEEN!


Top Left: 1968
Top Right: 1965
Bottom Left: 1969
Bottom Right: 1963







A peek inside the 1963 copy

I love how Signet Classics have a line drawing and bio of the author on the first page


Sunday, October 30, 2011

Cinema of the Fantastic book

In honour of this spooky month, I'm going to showcase all of my vintage horror/monster-related books throughout October.


This is a large hardcover which is "an excursion into the world of horror, the bizarre, the grotesque, the incredible and satanic".


Cinema of the Fantastic, Chris Steinbrunner and Burt Goldblatt, 1972



A very sinister screen shot of Metropolis


I found it very difficult to capture the true colours of this book without the dust jacket, but it's a neon lime green. Fantastic indeed!

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Dracula and Frankenstein book

In honour of this spooky month, I'm going to showcase all of my vintage horror/monster-related books throughout October.


This book here was quite the find. It is a large double Dracula / Frankenstein hardcover. The illustrations on the dust jacket are gorgeous.
These two monsters have numerous connections and seem indelibly tied together throughout history. As mentioned in a previous blog post, it has been speculated that the historic versions of Frankenstein and Dracula may have battled in the 1400s. The conception of the Frankenstein and Dracula tales came out of the same story writing contest in the haunted summer of 1816 at the Villa Diodati. Universal Studio's film versions of Dracula and Frankenstein both came out in 1931 and unarguably created cinematic history. Plus both Drac and Frank have deliciously sugary children's cereals themed after them.

Dracula / Frankenstein, Bram Stoker / Mary Shelly. There is no date of publication anywhere on this book! Very frustrating, but it does say that it is a book club edition.





He looks so sad

Here is what the book looks like naked. Scandalous. 


Sunday, October 23, 2011

In Search of Frankenstein book



In honour of this spooky month, I'm going to showcase all of my vintage horror/monster-related books throughout October.

Here is a very interesting one called "In Search of Frankenstein" which tracks how Frankenstein came to be written, looking back on Mary Shelly's life, who her parents were, who her husband and friends were, places she traveled, important scientific discoveries up to that point and various other elements which may have impacted her famous frightening novel. Frankenstein combines myth with personal, literary, social, philosophical and scientific history and this book puts a magnifying glass on where many of Shelly's influences may have derived.  
One of the most interesting parts of this book is the author's speculation that "Dracula vs. Frankenstein" may have some genuine historical basis. There really was a German family of Frankensteins (that lived in Castle Frankenstein!) who existed at the same time as the historical Dracula (mid 1400s). Some of the Frankensteins travelled through Transylvania with a mission of Christianizing heathens in Eastern Europe (at the point of the sword). As the book says: "Since Dracula was, in essence, an opponent of the German political and economic penetration of Eastern Europe - he impaled the Germans of Transylvania in large numbers - ...it is by no means impossible that the historical Dracula may have met a real Frankenstein in battle... a Frankenstein may even have ended his career impaled on Dracula's stake!". That is some bloody good stuff.   

In Search of Frankenstein, Radu Florescu, 1975


Amazing font

Photos! Castle Frankenstein!


Monday, October 4, 2010

I have opened an online shop

Not that anyone reads this anyway, but i have decided to put my art up for sale on an Etsy shop.
http://www.etsy.com/shop/DinosDiedOfBoredom

Here are a few to wet your whistle.












More at http://www.etsy.com/shop/DinosDiedOfBoredom

Sunday, January 24, 2010

An Etsy Find

PersephonePlus has fantastic jewelry up on Etsy. I'd love to learn how she makes it, so I can give it a go.
Her style is great - it's art nouveau meets romanticism with some pop culture splash. I love the subject matter of the portraits. Each one seems to tell a story.









Monday, January 4, 2010

Books I got for Christmas and my birthday

I was spoiled this Christmas and birthday. I received so many wonderful books from my mom and Stuart; I am so excited that I'm reading them all at the same time. Some of them are used, some are new, all are awesome.

Here they are:






First one on my wish list was The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. I'm only on page 98 or so and it's already a fantastic read. Stuart laughs at me because as I read it I keep on chuckling to myself each time Dawkins brings up another great point. It just makes so much sense! More on this once I finish reading it.





One of my favourite artists is Alphonse Mucha. The gorgeous book Alphonse Mucha; Master Works by Rosalind Ormiston was a lovely Christmas surprise. It's huge, full of pictures of his stylistic fin de siècle art, and also includes interesting biographical information on Mucha.


Another Mucha book, Art Nouveau Figurative Designs by Ed Sibbett, Jr. is sort of like a colouring book of Mucha art. Wicked book, but I'm not totally sure what I'm going to do with it yet. Perhaps try using them as patterns for water colour and ink projects.



Continuing with the Art Nouveau theme, I got a book called Art Nouveau; Stained Glass Pattern Book by Ed Sibbett, Jr (included with this gift, I got a stained glass window kit. Never done stained glass before, but it's a pretty neat gift and I'm pumped to give it a go).




Gotta love Michael J Fox, or as he's better known, Marty McFly. His book, Always Looking Up, seems like quite the feel-gooder. Can't go wrong with a good kick of optimism every once and a while. Especially when delivered by a time traveler. That's heavy.







This book, which I think is just called Gnomes by Poortvliet / Huygen wasn't actually a gift specifically for me for Christmas. It used to be my grandma's (grandma is obsessed with Gnomes as all good old ladies should be) but she left it at my mom's place before she moved out west. So I adopted it. The drawings in it are so lovely and detailed. It's almost like a text book on all things one would need to know about Gnomes. My copy doesn't have the dust jacket, but I actually prefer the cover sans jacket.




This copy of R.L. Stevenson's Treasure Island was actually a gift I gave to Stuart. I love Penguin's new line of cloth-bound editions of classic books. They are all so pretty. It is a fantastic idea and so visually appealing to take one iconic image from the book and repeat it like that. So simple, yet far from boring. I hope they come out with a Frankenstein edition.



Another favourite artist of mine is Nelle Brinkley. Here is Trina Robbins' book called Nell Brinkley and the New Woman in the Early 20th Century. I already have Robbin's other beautiful book with Brinkley's colourful art but this one is more information based rather than a visual read. One of its focuses is how Brinkley's art reveals a post-Victorian sense of feminism. I love reading about the cultural influence of art. Ah, I can't wait to read this book!



How fantastic is the cover of this vintage Penguin book on The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe?!





I love Eddy.






Ohhhh jeez. Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita is something else. I saw the film years and years ago and really dug it. I've always wanted to read the book, and it's always on "top 50 books to read" lists. I started reading it last night and this morning. I was almost embarrassed reading it on the street car, nervous someone was reading over my shoulder. Yikes, quite the content. It's odd though, because the subject matter is perverse and disturbing yet it is some of the most beautifully written prose I've ever read. It creates quite a conflicting feeling when I read this book.






Another great vintage book; In Search of Frankenstein by Radu Florescu is right up my ally. It has loads of pictures and great gothic fonts inside.





The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. What can I say? You can never have too many of these lying around.






A Tale of Two Cities and Christmas Stories
by good ole Dickens. Have you ever actually read "A Christmas Carol"? I hadn't until this Christmas, and I don't know what I've been waiting for all these years. Sure I've seen the Muppet's version, and yeah, I was in some crappy community theatre version years ago, but now I know what all the hype is about. It is a good friggin read. Funny, touching, heartfelt, creepy and all that good stuff you come to expect from your yuletide classics.




Jack Kramer's Miniature Plants Indoors and Out. I'm into houseplants for some reason now. I guess it's all those plants Janet has in Three's Company... it just looks so 70s.




Stuart made this for me. He's repurposed it by removing all of the old pages and inserting water colour pages to make a beautiful sketch book. I love it.


Fact: Doing blogs is ridiculously time consuming.

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