Friday, May 11, 2018

Feral House Publisher and Author Adam Parfrey, 61, Dies

Now Adam Parfrey!

This time will be recalled as the "great die-off" of close colleagues, frequent correspondents, and creative authors, all friends who were writers on the strange, the unknown, and the twilight world.

In less than a month, we lost a remarkable collection of giants.



There seemed to be a foreshadowing of what was coming when author Guy Lyon Playfair died three days after his 83th birthday, on April 8, 2018. Playfair was a British writer of parapsychology books.


The wave seemed to begin then with Art Bell, 72, dying on Friday the 13th of April 2018.


Then on Sunday, May 6, 2018, prolific author Brad Steiger, 82, died at Mason City, Iowa.


Steiger's death was followed by an announcement that the lightly skeptical, deeply knowledgeable author Daniel Cohen, 82, passed away, also on May 6, 2018.

May 6th is a significant date for deaths. Lyman Frank Baum died 99 years ago on May 6, 1919. He was better known as L. Frank Baum and an American author chiefly famous for his children's books, particularly The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and its sequels. He wrote a total of 14 novels in the Oz series. The 1939 MGM film, The Wizard of Oz, has permanently placed the movie in the forefront of synchromystic thought. May 6th is St. George's Day, and in some countries, Martyr's Day.


Now, four days later, on Thursday, May 10, 2018, Adam Parfey, 61, the publisher of Amok Press and Feral House, the author and editor of many alternative books, has died. Apparently, he had a stroke. He reportedly fell down some stairs, hitting his on April 20, 2018, and never woke up. This is a shock.

May 10 was the date on which the American engraver and Revolutionary soldier Paul Revere died two hundred years ago, in 1818. In 1863, Confederate soldier Stonewall Jackson died on May 10, after being shoot by mistake by a Confederate soldier a few days earlier. On May 10, 1994, the American serial killer John Wayne Gacy died by execution.


Adam was a close intellectual friend with whom I exchanged ideas and emails regularly. He contributed to this Twilight Language blog, for example, regarding his interest in the symbolism of tridents. (See here.)


Adam asked me to write the foreword to his book, Ritual America: Secret Brotherhoods and Their Influence on American Society: A Visual Guide (Feral House, 2012). Adam's and Craig Heimbicher's book was one he was especially proud of and promoted often. Ritual America won the Independent Publisher Awards Best History Book of 2012 Silver Medal.



Adam was deeply involved with an "invisible college" of thinkers interested in the Sirius Rising taped interviews with James Shelby Downard (see here). This core group, included Adam Parfrey, Jim Brandon, Michael Hoffman, Jim Keith, Adam Gorightly, Greg Bishop, Michael Bell, SMiles Lewis, Kenn Thomas, and me, Loren Coleman, who examined Downward's words in the broader context of a Fortean examining the mysteries of the world cryptopolitically. Some of this was reflected in Parfrey's books.

Sirius Rising has been newly re-issued, with updates.




Read more about Downard's links to Parfrey's world here. Some people even thought Parfrey was Downard.

“King-Kill/33: Masonic Symbolism in the Assassination of John F. Kennedy” eventually was published by Adam Parfrey in the first edition of the book Apocalypse Culture.

+++


Adam Parfrey was born in New York City, on April 12, 1957, into a show business family – his father was actor Woody Parfrey, whose extensive film and television career was often chronicled by Adam via Facebook.




Woodrow Parfrey, 61, died young, as did his son. He will be remembered for his many screen and television roles, including as a prisoner in Papillon (1973), and as Maximus, one of the three "See No Evil" orangutan judges in Planet of the Apes (1968).

Adam Parfrey left the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1979. He moved to San Francisco and began a short-lived experimental magazine, IDEA, which published two issues. He also wrote and performed in a play about Gilles de Rais called The Wickedest Man in the World (1983). Later in 1983, Parfrey began work at New York City's Strand Bookstore. In 1984, with co-worker George Petros, he began EXIT Magazine. Parfrey worked with Petros for three of the six published issues.




Back in Los Angeles, Parfrey co-founded Amok Press with Kenneth Swezey in 1986. Amok's first release was an English translation by Joachim Neugroschel of Joseph Goebbels's novel Michael, a remarkable choice for a Jewish publisher. 1987 saw the release of Apocalypse Culture. Apocalypse Culture is a collection of articles, interviews, and documents that explore the various marginal aspects of culture. It has been reprinted twice, once in 1990, and again in 2001 by Parfrey's Feral House. In 2000 the sequel Apocalypse Culture II was released. The book has been widely campaigned against and has been banned in many countries. The partnership of Parfrey and Swezey as Amok published nine books, including: You Can't Win by Jack Black, The Grand Guignol: Theatre of Fear and Terror by Mel Gordon, and Boxcar Bertha, with an intro by Kathy Acker.

Between 1990 and 1994 Parfrey wrote the weekly column "HelL.A." for the San Diego Reader. Parfrey wrote cover stories and feature articles for the Village Voice, San Diego Reader, Penthouse and Hustler magazines.

Adam Parfrey co-founded the independent publishing company Process Media with Jodi Wille of Dilettante Press in 2005, according to Wikipedia.









Deadline also noted in its Hollywood subsection:
Parfrey grew up in the punk culture of the ’70s and ’80s.
His edgy works for Amok Publishing soon gave way to his own imprint, Feral House, which was the source and authority for many Hollywood films that explored the underground, including the Tim Burton film Ed Wood, the American Hardcore feature documentary, and Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground, for which he also co-wrote the screenplay.
Parfrey was on the cutting edge of subjects that other publishers did not have the interest or courage to publish. He co-founded Amok Press with Kenneth Swezey in 1986, publishing Joseph Goebbel’s novel Michael. Its most prominent release was Apocalypse Culture, a collection of articles, interviews and documents exploring the margins of culture. It was subsequently banned in many countries.
Hailed by one website as “probably the most influential ‘underground’ publisher in post-millennial America” and called “The Most Dangerous Publisher in America” by a Seattle Weekly cover story, Parfrey ran an unusual outlet in publishing. It was mostly the product of Parfrey’s boundless curiosity, and did not publish based on query letters or agent inquiries, the standard method of the trade. As a result, he often co-authored many of the books in the catalog, which ranged from examinations of men’s adventure magazines to secret brotherhoods (Ritual America) to 1960s sex magazines. As such, his stable of authors included Satanist Anton LaVey and “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski.
Feral House’s collections of bizarre conspiracy theory, such as Secret and Suppressed: Banned Ideas and Hidden History, were also an influence on Chris Carter’s X-Files.
Parfrey also appeared in and co-wrote Crispin Glover’s controversial What Is It? a Sundance Film Festival selection in 2005, and he had several spoken word recordings.
Parfrey’s second publishing imprint, Process Media, a collaboration with Jodi Wille, debuted in 2005 with publications by authors Jerry Stahl (Permanent Midnight), Humphry Knipe (The Nero Prediction), Timothy Archibald (Sex Machines), and Jolene Siana (Go Ask Ogre).
Survivors include two sisters, a brother, and six nieces and nephews. No memorial details have been released.


It is worthy of mentioning that CBS's original drama series Strange Angel, credited as being based on George Pendle's book Strange Angel: The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons (Mariner Books, 2006), premiers on June 14, 2018. Jack Parsons was brought into modern popular culture first by Feral House. The first edition of Sex and Rockets: The Occult World of Jack Parsons by John Carter was published by Feral House in 1999, with an introduction by Robert Anton Wilson. The second edition appeared in 2005. Adam Parfrey shared Jack Parsons with America first.

Adam's output has been masterful. He reflected his interest in unorthodox theories by writing, editing, and publishing material on the hidden, forbidden, and verboten topics of Amok Press and Feral House. Our society is all the better for it, and for the passions of Adam Parfrey.











h/t Greg Bishop

(Footnote: Since the beginning of 2018, the following friends of mine and of cryptozoology have died: John Bindernagel, 76, on January 17; John "JC" Johnson, 53, on February 3; Sandra Mansi, 74, on March 31; Al Hodgson, 94, on April 1; and Dave Hilts, 83, on April 7. ~ Loren Coleman.)

(See also "Mason City: Brad Steiger, The Music Man, The Day the Music Died, and the Griffins".) 

Wednesday, May 09, 2018

Mason City: Brad Steiger, The Music Man, The Day the Music Died, and the Griffins




Mason City, Iowa, a city of under 30,000 folks, with a meaning that aligns itself with Freemasonry, was in the news with the death on May 6, 2018, of writer Brad Steiger, 82



Mason City is known for its musical heritage, consistently producing successful performers and educators.The city's "favorite son," Meredith Willson, grew up in Mason City and played in the Mason City Symphonic Band as a high school student. Willson's crowning achievement was the famous musical The Music Man. Many of the characters in it were taken from people Willson knew from his childhood in Mason City.

Andrew Griffin on the "footbridge" made famous in Meredith Willson's The Music Man in Mason City - for the Walter Burley Griffin Society's annual meeting in 2014.



The city is also associated with a historical musical event associated with its municipal airport, Mason City Municipal Airport, from which Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper took off on the night of February 2, 1959, after a concert at the Surf Ballroom in nearby Clear Lake, Iowa, only to crash their plane in a historic event later referred to as The Day the Music Died (February 3, 1959).


Andrew Griffin at the very spot where Buddy Holly's plane went down in 1959. More.

Mason City has a few other strange syncs, too.



The Kraft Foods plant in Mason City produces the United States' entire supply of refrigerated ready-to-eat Jell-O pudding snacks. Wow.


Mason City is widely known for its collection of Prairie School architecture, the largest concentration of any city in Iowa. At least 32 houses and one commercial building were built in the Prairie Style between 1908 and 1922, 17 of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and eight more are contributing properties to a historic district.


The first two Prairie structures, the Dr. G.C. Stockman House (1908) and the Park Inn Hotel and City National Bank Buildings (1909–1910) were both designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The hotel and bank, a mixed-use development at the corner of State and Federal Avenues, was the first to be commissioned by local attorneys James E. E. Markley and James E. Blythe. Within a year, Wright was hired to design the Stockman House by Markley's neighbor.

Both the Park Inn Hotel and Stockman House suffered from neglect and unsympathetic alterations before they were saved by community organizations. In 1989, the Stockman House was moved four blocks to prevent its demolition; it was subsequently restored and opened to the public by the River City Society for Historic Preservation. Likewise, Wright on the Park, Inc. began restoration on the Park Inn Hotel in 2005 and the former City National Bank building in 2007. The organization will reopen both buildings as a boutique hotel in August 2011. The Park Inn Hotel is last remaining of the few hotels that Wright completed during his career and is considered a prototype for Wright's Imperial Hotel.

The Rock Glen and Rock Crest National Historic district is a small enclave of single-family homes situated along the banks of Willow Creek five blocks east of downtown. It is the largest collection of prairie style homes in a natural setting in the world. It features both Prairie School and Usonian design. Five of these houses were designed by Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin, two by Francis Barry Byrne, and others by William Drummond, Einar Broaten, and Curtis Besinger. More.


Wikipedia notes as one of the "Notable People" of Mason City, Iowa, is Walter Griffin.

Walter Burley Griffin (November 24, 1876 – February 11, 1937) was an American architect and landscape architect. He is known for designing Canberra, Australia's capital city. He has been credited with the development of the L-shaped floor plan, the carport and an innovative use of reinforced concrete.



In 1911 Griffin married Marion Lucy Mahony, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in architecture. She was employed first in Frank Lloyd Wright's office, and then by Hermann V. von Holst, who had taken over Wright's work in America when Wright left for Europe in 1909. 


Marion Mahony recommended to von Holst that he hire Griffin to develop a landscape plan for the area surrounding the three houses on Milliken Place for which Wright had been hired in Decatur, Illinois (my, Loren Coleman's hometown). Mahony and Griffin worked closely on the Decatur project immediately before their marriage.



After their marriage, Mahony went to work in Griffin's practice. A Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony-designed development with several homes, Rock Crest – Rock Glen in Mason City, Iowa, is seen as their most dramatic American design development of the decade and remains the largest collection of Prairie Style homes surrounding a natural setting.


Walter Burley Griffin is the uncle of the grandfather of Andrew W. Griffin, editor of Oklahoma’s Red Dirt Report.


A balsa wood model made by Iowa State University design students shows what the incorrectly-credited "Frank Lloyd Wright-designed" City National Bank building (left) and the Park Inn Hotel in Mason City looked like when they opened.

Sunday, May 06, 2018

Disaster Buildings: Waffle House

As readers of the Twilight Language know, there is a long history of violence at Waffle Houses. This fact was reinforced by the recent Antioch, Tennessee Waffle House killings of April 22, 2018 (see "Naked Comes The Waffle House Shooter").

Therefore, due to the significance of these locations, I've added a small generic replica of a Waffle House building to my "Buildings of Disaster" collection. (See the previous posting, "The Boyms and Beyond: Collecting Disaster Buildings.")


An American dime for scale.


This example is from the train buildings hobby, and not exactly at the level of the museum quality standard I routinely maintain. But it will do, for now.


I am a member of the Souvenir Building Collectors Society. Most of my 500+ buildings in my collection are metal and/or are other kinds of official souvenirs.


A landmark commemorating the first Waffle House in Avondale Estates Georgia. Photo: Erik S. Lesser. Source, "What Waffle House Means to Southerners," by Bob Moser,  Rollingstone, April 25, 2018.