CounterComics: From Hell - Knockabout Comics

Categories: Books, Reviews
CounterComics: From Hell - Knockabout Comics

Daddytank joins the team of CounterComic fans, this time reviewing the amazing 'From Hell'.  From Hell - Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell  In my heyday of comic reading, graphic novels were a pricey proposition. I used to gaze at these amazing tomes in Forbidden Planet or Games Workshop and wish that I had the patience to save up for them but I needed my weekly fix of Judge Dredd, Nemesis, Rogue Trooper, Slaine etc. I needed 2000 AD. And it was through 2000 AD that I came to be familiar with the name Alan Moore.       “Watchmen” is considered by many a comic nerd to be the ultimate graphic novel, but that honour is given by other comic nerds to another of Moore’s works, “From Hell”. And up until six months ago I had read neither. Now I realize that at this point anyone reading this will be thinking “…what’s this twat doing a review on graphic novels for when he’s only just read Watchmen, released in 1986/7.” Well, that’s why I wrote the first part. It was sort of an excuse. Anyway, on with the review.   “From Hell” is a gothic nightmare. Eddie Campbell must have gone through litres of black ink creating his ...

COUNTERCOMICS: The Walking Dead – Image Comics

Categories: Books, Reviews, featured
COUNTERCOMICS: The Walking Dead – Image Comics

  Scott Carelli loves comics and other geek-related stuff. He talks about it weekly on his podcasts Two Geeks a Mic and a Podcast and True Believers on Geekshow.us. He also created and produces an audio series called Geek by Night also on Geekshow.us. Check them out!   After two comic reviews for series heavy in supernatural elements (Preacher, Lucifer), I thought the best choice would be to review a comic that’s much more realistic and profound. The kind of story filled with thought provoking social commentary that causes you to question the very fabric that makes up our society. Something that is so somber and disheartening that you’ll never look at humanity the same way again. Naturally, only one subject immediately came to mind: Zombies.   Yes, you read that right. Zombies, when used correctly, should make you see humanity in a different light. It might not be pretty, but it’s real and it’s honest. The best zombie stories aren’t about the living dead, but instead use that as the setting for a story about people and how they live and deal with an impossible situation. Not since Romero have zombies been used this well. Not until The Walking Dead.   Created by Robert Kirkman ...

BOOK REVIEW: Strength Through Koi: They Saved Hitler’s Koi and Other Stories - Jonathan Downes

Categories: Books, Reviews, featured
BOOK REVIEW: Strength Through Koi: They Saved Hitler’s Koi and Other Stories - Jonathan Downes

This book made an exceptionally long wait for the train home from this weekends 'Unconvention' in London, far more bearable and amusing. I mean come on, what's better than reading stories about Koi?...no, really!   Jonathan Downes is one of those writers that you'll naturally levitate towards if you're a fan of the 'Fortean' way. He runs the amazing Centre for Fortean Zoology, has written a whole load of books, and goes looking for crazy anomalous creatures in the wildest parts of the world, thus making him instantly one of my heroes.   After finally meeting the man at the Uncon this weekend, I was persuaded by a young lady, I think maybe his daughter, into buying this book. At first I was reluctant, I mean, how can a book about Koi Carp be any fun to read right? I know nothing about carp, nothing at all; luckily for the reader, neither does Mr Downes! We've all been there; broke and desperate for work to pay the rent. But I would never have had the balls to trick a Koi Carp Magazine into running a series on the 'Fortean aspects of their hobby'.    After a hilarious forward, we are propelled into the semi-true Fortean-world of Koi ...

CounterComics: Lucifer - Vertigo

Categories: Blog, Books, Reviews, featured
CounterComics: Lucifer - Vertigo

When Scott offered up his first review, and it turned out to be Preacher, I cursed the skies for not calling shotgun on reviewing that classic series first! However, not to be outdone, I eyed up my own collection of oddball comics and imediatley landed on Lucifer....must be the devils work (drumroll please).   Now, you may be suprised to hear that I actually do not like Neil Gaimen's Lamented goth-fest Sandman, in fact, a mere glimpse of it's 'Sisters of Mercy-esque' covers bring bile to my throat. I might have to re-read the series, however, as my hatred spawns not just from the work per se, but more from the pretensious idiots that idolise it! I swear to god, if I see one more girl trying to dress like 'Death' from the book, I will actually go insane!   Anyway, bearing this in mind, I naturally avoided this long-running spin-off for many years, but the devil got the better of me (ow! they keep coming), and a couple of years ago I found myself flipping through the first book whilst trying to kill some time.  An hour, and a dirty look from the comic-shop's manager later, I decided that I should probably invest in ...

BOOK REVIEW: The Heretic’s Guide to Thelema - Gerald Del Campo - Megalithica Books

Categories: Books, Reviews
BOOK REVIEW: The Heretic’s Guide to Thelema - Gerald Del Campo - Megalithica Books

The Heretic's Guide to Thelema By Gerald Del Campo Megalithica Books   Thelema. This ancient Greek word meaning ‘will' first took prominence in Rabelais' famous 16th century religious satire Gargantua and Pantagruel. Rabelais' book featured the ‘Abbey of Thelema', whose monks and nuns proclaimed no law other than ‘Do as thou wilt'. Conceived as a humorous literary criticism of the strictures of late medieval religious hegemony, the book caused considerable controversy in its day for daring to poke fun at the establishment. In fact, the book's cultural impact was such that it heavily influenced the various Hellfire Clubs that came into vogue amongst the European gentry some two centuries later. By 1922, an English occultist by the name of Aleister Crowley was to form a real Abbey of Thelema, based on his own magickal and mystical system of the same name. Crowley's Abbey was doomed to failure, but his version of Thelema with its oft-misunderstood central maxim of ‘Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law' lives on to this day. Crowley's writings, now in much wider circulation than they ever were during his lifetime, have since gone on to spur generations to seek after the hidden truths at the heart ...

BOOK REVIEW: The Book of the Damned- Charles Fort: Tarcher/Penguin

Categories: Books, Reviews
BOOK REVIEW: The Book of the Damned- Charles Fort: Tarcher/Penguin

Charles Fort, the Grandfather of anomalous-research, really does have to be respected, if for nothing more his influence on alternative thinkers, and Paranormal researchers bearing even the minutest quantity of wit. Fort gave an antiquarian middle-finger-salute to the almost cult-like scientific community of the time, by daring to docment that which was virtually ignored by the mainstream. You may recognise his name, well, at least part of it from such great longstanding publications as The Fortean Times, which still exists today as a testament to the mans influence. Fort, basically, took it upon himself to catalouge the weird happenings of his time, and publish them in a almanac-style . He occasionally injected his own opinions, though often preferred to remain impartial (much like the magazine of his namesake). This book, a complete collection of Fort's writings, makes it clear very early-on why Fort's work has remained the staple of so many bookshelves. The man's wit must be commended; whilst dedicating his life to such a bizarre topic must demand a degree of seriousness, Fort doesn't forget to laugh at it from time to time. Considering the vast compendium of strangeness on offer in the book, one of the oddest things on offer is the ...

CounterComics: Preacher - Vertigo Comics

Categories: Books, Reviews, featured
CounterComics: Preacher - Vertigo Comics

One of the greatly ignored mediums of our little corner of the web so far has been comics which, in my opinion, produce some of the most compelling, original and revolutionary concepts of our time. When I first thought of who to 'pen' a regular feature, it was imediatly obvious; Scott Carelli, one of the first guests on our podcast, has a passion for comics and all things 'geek' unlike anyone else I can think of, he's also really good at expressing that passion in the written word...   When I was asked to begin writing reviews for comics with a counter-culture spin for Sitting Now, only one comic immediately came to mind: Preacher. Part Western, part Horror story, part Religious Epic, and a lot of weird, Preacher is as counter-culture as it gets. Created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon, Preacher is the story of a small town Texas minister, named Jesse Custer, slowly losing his faith in the god he’s devoted his life to. In one bizarre instant, his life is changed forever, and with his gun-toting ex Tulip and a hard-drink Irish vampire named Cassidy, he aims to find out why and who’s to blame. The story that ...

BOOK REVIEW: Enochian Vision Magic - Lon Milo Duquette - Weiser Books

Categories: Books, Reviews, featured
BOOK REVIEW: Enochian Vision Magic - Lon Milo Duquette - Weiser Books

Here at Sitting Now, we don't claim to be Conspiracy theorists, Mystics or Counter Cultural experts (though, I am working on the latter), we just find it all really interesting and enjoy discussing, and exploring it. Now, i've gone on the record in one of our shows saying that, personally, I find the world of Magic/Magick (call it what you will) fascinating...but a bit too snobby. There are a few exceptions to this rule, and one of those is the author and magician Lon Milo Duquette. In Enochian Vision Magic, Duquette attempts to not only document the fascinating story of Dr John Dee and Edward Kelly's quest to make contact with spiritual entities, but also to instruct the reader in the practical application of their findings in the modern environment. Readers not already familiar with Duquette's writings will feel instantly at ease with this book, while regulars will appreciate his attention to detail/yet solid conveyance of the topic at hand. What I feel separates this work from others on the subject, is the intensive research and notation of the original Dee texts. Duquette doesn't just present the reader with a 'how-to' textbook, he painstakingly explains all the symbology and application of each element. ...