Germophilia Gallery Show Opening

Date: Friday, August 7, 2009

Time: 5:00pm – 9:00pm
Location: Jennifer Bates Gallery @ Germ Books
Street: 2005 FRANKFORD AVE
City/Town: Philadelphia, PA

Underworld Amusements presents:

GERMOPHILIA

GERMOPHILIA is about loving the disease. The disease is one of this world, the reason why your parents lied about there being a god and the Easter bunny. It’s the flesh, the darkness, the idea that freedom is not given – but taken. GERMOPHILIA presents a collection of artists with a wide range of styles and mediums together to serve as a catalyst to spread just that sickness…
The cutesy cheesecake of Stacey Barich will stir the loins, the totalitarian and infernal collage and painting of Peter H. Gilmore (Church of Satan), the disturbing clash of beauty and tragedy of the photos of Christopher R. Mealie (SexCats!), the worship of strength found in the paintings of Jack Malebranche (author of Androphilia: A Manifesto), the perverse misanthropy of Stephanie Crabe (Motel Bizarre), the haunting dreamworld canvasses of Stephen Kasner (Stephen Kasner: Works 1993-2006), and more. Nine artists presenting a collective picture of the world that subverts that status quo without slipping into the arms of the usual suspects. As a thirst for knowledge is a sin, GERMOPHILIA is a disease that will feed your eyes, mind and passion.

Underworld Amusements Variety Hour conducted interviews with all of the artists participating in the show and made them availablevia podcast. Available from the UA website, iTunes, and RadioFreeSatan.com. Two truncated versions of the print catalog are available in PDF form to view along with the podcasts.

UAVH Germophilia Special 1 – Donovan, Mealie, Barich

UAVH Germophilia Special 2 – Kasner, Crabe, Gilmore, Slaughter, Tydings

Germophilia event on Facebook

Germophilia event on MySpace

William Lindsay Gresham dot com

Monster of the Midway is a new site dedicated to Nightmare Alley author William Lindsay Gresham.

Though this site doesn’t get updated often, there isn’t much demand for it, as will probably be the case with the new site.

Like this site, though, it will easily become the best place to find information on the obscure author – considering there’s little more than a wikipedia entry on him.

http://www.williamlindsaygresham.com

Amazon.com: Iron Youth Reader: Kevin Slaughter, Marquis deSade, Oswald Spengler, Savitri Devi, Boyd Rice, Gustave LeBon, Francis Galton, Adam Parfrey: Books

Amazon.com: Iron Youth Reader: Kevin Slaughter, Marquis deSade, Oswald Spengler, Savitri Devi, Boyd Rice, Gustave LeBon, Francis Galton, Adam Parfrey: Books.

I’m not sure how it got onto Amazon.com, but it’s there… can’t buy it direct from them though!

Iron Youth Reader by Kevin Slaughter, Robert Eisler, Marquis deSade, Oswald Spengler, Savitri Devi, Gustave LeBon, Francis Galton

Iron Youth Reader by Kevin Slaughter, Robert Eisler, Marquis deSade, Oswald Spengler, Savitri Devi, Gustave LeBon, Francis Galton (Book) in Reference

Printed: 322 pages, 6″ x 9″, perfect binding, cream interior paper (60# weight), black and white interior ink, white exterior paper (100# weight), full-color exterior ink

Description:

This is the first annual installment of “Studies Beyond Good and Evil”– the Iron Youth Reader. These largely out-of-print works have been selected as a guide to assist the explorer of the taboo and left-hand paths. Neglected, infamous and infernal texts from philosophy, sociology, history and psychology are compiled, with blank pages for notes after each selection. Starting this collection is Robert Eisler’s exploration of sadism, masochism and lycanthropy; Man Into Wolf. Appearing next in the volume is a short anti-religious tract from Marquis deSade- A Dialogue Between a Priest and a Dying Man followed by Oswald Spengler’s Man and Technics. Savitri Devi’s Rocks of the Sun is an excerpt from her book Pilgrimage. LeBon’s The Psychology of the Crowd, a landmark work giving insight into what happens when an individual finds himself one of many. The final contribution to the Reader is Sir Francis Galton’s Essays In Eugenics.

Ladies In The Parlor – Underworld Amusements

While preparing the forthcoming Scapegoat Publishing edition of Circus Parade I was able to purchase a copy of Ladies in the Parlor, one of the more scarce Tully novels. Since most of the copies available start at $400 (abebooks and amazon.com), I’ve produced a low priced paperback edition.

164 pages, 6″ x 9″, perfect binding, cream interior paper (60# weight), black and white interior ink, white exterior paper (100# weight), full-color exterior ink.

Ladies In the Parlor

The paperback is available for $15 (plus shipping) from lulu.com or from Scapegoat Publishing’s official online seller Reptilian Records (link up soon). It will also be available from a few select retailers. I may or may not make it available through Amazon.com in the future.

The cover features model Amy Feline, from a shoot by CatFight! Photography.

This is not a facsimile edition, the entire book has been retypeset and designed. Samples of the title page and the first page of Chapter 1 are below:

Title Page First Page of Chapter 1

Copy from the back cover:

This is the saga of Madame Rosenbloom’s fashionable establishment in Chicago and of the ladies in her domain. And here is the Jim Tully of “Circus Parade”—the forthright Tully whose language is as frank as life itself. Tully does not pull his punches. The big men and the little ladies for whom Madame Rosenbloom’s house is a social center are portrayed with vigor and hon­esty. The novel is crammed with incident and penetrating word pictures. It is not a story for the squeamish. But if life itself, —that robust, lusty segment of life that is here so honestly and brilliantly de­picted—does not frighten or shock you, this novel will hold your deepest interest.

Upon initial printing of this book in 1935, copies were seized from the publisher and destroyed by police based on allegations that the material was obscene and blasphemous. It is unknown how many copies survived. This is the first printing since that time.