|
|
|
|
|
Novel about Holocaustic goings-on in modern-day Manchester. |
|
|
Not a Savoy book as such but certainly a Savoy production, based on David Britton’s collection of Beefheart cuttings and interviews. |
|
This issue is subtitled “Born-Again-Atomic-Bomb-Horror”. |
This issue is subtitled “Romance of Sword and Book”. |
Hardback book collecting all 8 parts of the “Reverbstorm” series in a definitive edition, the final part of which was previously unpublished. This edition also adds a prelude and appendix, but omits the short stories in the original volumes. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Graphic (really!) horror collection, written by Britton, edited by Butterworth, and drawn by Guidio. An explicitly brutish, violent, offensive and satirical set of tales in text and graphic form. |
Described as Merry Melodies meets Blade Runner and subtitled “A Jessie Matthews Special”. |
Literary horror novel set in a surreal and brutish alternate Britain. Companion to the novel Lord Horror and the “Meng and Ecker” graphic series, both of which were prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act for their uncompromising offensiveness. |
Posthumously published novel Lord Horror steps into his creator’s shoes, to become Death himself. |
Novel in the “Lord Horror” sequence. |
The first thousand copies came with a free CD-single of “Jessie Matthews sings Reverbstorm”. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
A companion CD of Fenella Fielding reading from the book is included. |
A masterpiece of appropriation art: a reimagining of The Truth About Wilson by W.S.K. Webb, originally published in 1962. Britton has retained the entire text, merely replacing all references to Wilson (“The Wonder Athlete”) with the name Lord Horror. The original captions to all of the book’s illustrations have been rewritten, and Britton has contributed new illustrations, revamped some of the originals as well as the dust jacket design. Printed for private circulation only, limited to a very small print run of perhaps fewer than 20 copies. |
|
|
|
|
Original anthology of 26 horror stories and five poems about faith. Authors include Brian Keene, Lavie Tidhar, Jay Lake, and Tom Piccirilli. |