As usual, inquiries/orders to the author/publisher: chris<dot>mikul88<at>gmail<dot>com.
Thursday, May 30, 2024
A new issue of Biblio-Curiosa
Friday, March 3, 2023
A New Issue of Biblio-Curiosa
As usual, inquiries/orders to the author/publisher: chris<dot>mikul88<at>gmail<dot>com.
The novel Satan's Drŏme sounds especially delightful. The story takes place around a hell-ish (literally) Hill of Misfortune in Serbia, referred to as Satan's Drŏme-- drŏme, with the unusual breve accent, appears to be related to Greek dromos, a running course or race course, and thus the Hill of Misfortune is itself Satan's Drŏme.
In the dust-wrapper illustration, the body of a long dead monk, occasionally possessed by Satan, is found in a lost monastery.
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
A New Magazine "History, Index and Bibliography" and a New Issue of Biblio-Curiosa
Fores's Sporting Notes & Sketches is a journal new to me. It ran for 116 issues from April 1884 through December 1912.
This history includes the usual item listing for each issue, as well as sample illustrations and a large number of author photos. Plus an index of names (including authors, illustrators, etc.). Familiar names who contributed include Edwin Arnold, Frank Aubrey (also known as Fenton Ash, and Francis Henry Atkins), Frederick Furnivall (an original editor of what has become known as the Oxford English Dictionary), Coulson Kernahan (an early enthusiast and friend of William Hope Hodgson), and Arthur Quiller-Couch, among many others.
And a new issue of Chris Mikul's zine Biblio-Curiosa has just come out, and though it has only five articles in this issue, all five are unusually interesting. First is a discussion of The Master of the Macabre (1946) by Russell Thorndike. This is followed by a discussion of an extremely curious book Doctor Transit (1925), by I.S. [Isidor Schneider], which concerns a married couple, each of whom goes through a transformation into the opposite sex. The third essay is the longest in this issue, and covers the career of Edgar Mittleholzer (1909-1965), remembered for his M.R. Jamesian novel, My Bones and My Flute (1955). Mittleholzer died of self-immolation, dousing himself with petrol before striking a match.
The final two essays cover two lesser-known books and writers, The Death of the Fuhrer (1972) by Roland Puccetto and Gwenllean (1823) by Mary G. Lewis. This issue is highly recommended.
As usual, inquiries/orders to the author/publisher: chris<dot>mikul88<at>gmail<dot>com.
Friday, February 5, 2021
Some Notes on Some Recent Books
First, early on in Covid times, David and Daniel Ritter released The Visual History of Science Fiction Fandom, Volume One: The 1930s. This came out as a lavish (and expensive) hardcover, since reprinted, but also as an affordable Kindle ebook. I can't say enough of praise for this book, so will recommend a visit to the publisher's webpage here, where you can also click on a digital sampler of some 52 pages from the book. What a picture of fandom in the 1930s!
Snuggly Books has published the second volume (of two) of fiction by Montague Summers, The Bride of Christ and Other Fictions, including eight stories, all but one of which are newly published. Introduction by Daniel Corrick.
On the magazine front, there was a new issue of Chris Mikul's Biblio-Curiosa, on unusual writers and strange books. Issue 9 is "The Autobiographies and Memoirs Issue" and covers E.W. Martell, Seamus Burke, Mary MacLane, G. Gordon Liddy, and Crook Frightfulness by A Victim, and a review of a recent autobiography by Sir Edmund Backhouse. Inquiries to the author/publisher chris<dot>mikul88<at>gmail<dot>com. And there was a new issue of Le Visage Vert (no. 31), with stories by Arthur Machen, Maurice Renard, Mark Valentine, Camille Mauclair, Pascal Malosse, Pascal Mulot, and Sophus Bauditz. For a contents listing see here. There is also a companion volume of stories by Maurice Renard, Celui qui n'a pas tué, edited and with a preface and bibliography by Claude Deméocq. Ordering information for both books (and many others) can be found by scrolling around here.And finally, Tartarus Press publisher R.B. Russell collected his own bookish essays, a handful of which first appeared here on Wormwoodiana, in Past Lives of Old Books and Other Essays. It first came out in hardcover, but is now also available as a trade paperback and an ebook. Details here.
Thursday, February 6, 2020
A New Issue of Biblio-Curiosa
Biblio-Curiosa [#8 (2020)] (Chris Mikul, 44pp, digest s/s)
2 · “The Devil's Saint” by Dulcie Deamer · Chris Mikul · ar [Dulcie Deamer]
12 · The Seductions of Gabriele D'Annunzo · Chris Mikul · ar [Gabriele D'Annunzio]
26 · A Visit to the Vittoriale · Chris Mikul · ar [Gabriele D'Annunzio]
32 · "The Human Bat" and "The Human Bat v the Robot Gangster" by Edward R. Home-Gall · Chris Mikul · ar [Edward R. Home-Gall]
38 · "Malombra" by Antonio Fogazzaro · Chris Mikul · ar [Antonio Fogazzaro]
The contents of the previous issues are listed in the FictionMags Index here.
Sunday, March 27, 2016
A new issue of Biblio-Curiosa

Mark Valentine has written here at Wormwoodiana about previous issues of Biblio-Curiosa.
Biblio-Curiosa is available from Chris Mikul at P O Box K546, Haymarket, NSW 1240, Australia, or via cathob[at]zip[dot]com[dot]au.