The People in the Attic: The Haunting of Doretta Johnson [Doretta Johnson & Jim Henderson][Spooky Attics] [Paranormal] [Psychedelic True Horror] The People in the Attic: The Haunting of Doretta Johnson Doretta Johnson & Jim Henderson St. Martins Press, New York, 1995. First Edition. Slight chipping of dust jacket, otherwise very clean. Very good. I love a good, haunted house history, and this book is absolutely in the upper echelons of the genre. Psychedelic, legitimately frightening, and written with a surprisingly compelling novelistic
Really still quite ahead of its time
[Origins of Techno] [Afrofuturism] [Sonic Weaponry]
expanding the possibilities of narrative form and literary genre
assuming the form of the killers
[Neo-Decadents] [Post-Naturalist] [Rare Transgressions]
desperately sad lamentations about a life both lived to it’s extreme and yet lost in its own debauchery
Tombstone: Myth and Reality
Limited edition poster with art by Noelle Lee and Keegan Dakkar L
and his distinctive style shaped the look of books that remain prized by collectors of horror and weird fiction
artists covered (everything from Incapacitants to Guns N' Roses)
the fliers themselves represent a master-class in punk graphic design
This particular copy has quite a bit of notes from an apparent scholar and searcher