escargot1 said:The milkman used to bring mine! :lol:
47Forteans said:escargot1 said:The milkman used to bring mine! :lol:
He's run off with it! :lol:
gncxx said:...Taxidermy stuff is something I always find quite eerie, especially when made into artworks, but I can't deny it has its fascination (not the bottle opener in a deer's arse, I can live without that)....
...I've heard the Alec Guinness warning to James Dean before, the John Simpson one is interesting, though, might have been a prank, yet still sinister...
Liked the weirder IHTM too, the weirder they get the paradoxically easier they are to believe: e.g. aliens under the bed, why make that up?...
I had quite the deja vu moment when I read that. I found the ''Speakers were denouncing me and arousing men against me'' men against me'' very amusing under the picture of Lucy Pringle in the Stonehenge Surprise article, a remnant of the Crook Frightfulness article lingering on. None of which diminishes the great pleasure I take in reading this publication.Monstrosa said:Why has the letter from Geoff Clifton been printed in a second edition?
HenryFort said:old benjamin radford wasnt at his fortean best re crop circles ... seemed a bit of a lame and lazy runthrough to me not on a par with his usual pieces ... alan murdie was fantastic as ever and the guy emerging from the vietnam jungle after 40 years with salon quality hair deserves a mention
Urvogel said:I've just discovered that this issue of FT was my 200th! Happy anniversary!
And yes, I still have them all
47Forteans said:So that's about ten years or so (very rough guess there!) of back issues you have hoarded, er, carefully archived away at your house? Lucky you!
Urvogel said:47Forteans said:So that's about ten years or so (very rough guess there!) of back issues you have hoarded, er, carefully archived away at your house? Lucky you!
Expect to see me in the Strange Deaths column at some point in the future, having been crushed to death by a giant pile of FT back issues.
Urvogel said:Expect to see me in the Strange Deaths column at some point in the future, having been crushed to death by a giant pile of FT back issues.