'Seventies Research for October Dark
October Dark, and its secret history of the fantastic film, benefited from my packrat's collection of 1970's-era film books and magazines, from Starlog to Cinefantastique to Fantastic Films to Mediascene Previews. This first example comes from a fat hardback published in 1977, Horror, SciFi and Fantasy Films of the Fifties. I found it not in the bookstore (in that era, B.Dalton or Waldens in downtown Seattle) but in Golden Age Collectibles.

These next few come from Wizards of Wonder: The Special Effects Magicians, a magazine-book hybrid, from the same folks who published Film Magic, edited by the late, great Don Dohler, the original publisher of Cinemagic magazine. I purchased it at Golden Age in Seattle's Pike Place Market, circa 1979.
Still there, though not quite as magical (focusing mostly on comics), Golden Age Collectibles was Mecca for fantastic film lovers, a warren of waterfront rooms and glass cases packed with movie magazines, scripts, lobby cards, novelizations, Super 8 film digests -- you name it.

These next few come from Wizards of Wonder: The Special Effects Magicians, a magazine-book hybrid, from the same folks who published Film Magic, edited by the late, great Don Dohler, the original publisher of Cinemagic magazine. I purchased it at Golden Age in Seattle's Pike Place Market, circa 1979.
Still there, though not quite as magical (focusing mostly on comics), Golden Age Collectibles was Mecca for fantastic film lovers, a warren of waterfront rooms and glass cases packed with movie magazines, scripts, lobby cards, novelizations, Super 8 film digests -- you name it.
Wizards of Wonder wasn't the greatest book about special effects artists, but it was remarkable for its encylopedic small-press enthusiasm for folks like Willis O'Brien, Marcel Delgado, Douglas Trumbull, Jim Danforth, and the great David Allen.
This last example I pilfered from a low, dusty shelf in the Seattle Public Library. I quote it in my novel.





