Presented By Pulp Devil Press Slaugher Realms

Who is Alan Philipson?

Alan Philipson wrote and drew his first comic strip in second grade—his teacher, Miss Pickerel, was not amused by its light-hearted, mechanized slaughter of grammar school educators. He wrote his first science fiction short story a year later, and read it aloud to thunderous applause from Miss Gonerman’s third grade class. In high school, after reading a piece of his short fiction, his English teacher chided him with the unforgettable and scathingly delivered line, "Oh, you bitter, bitter boy." During his university years (which stretched on and on and on) he was waylaid by rock and roll. In 2008 a song of his was rereleased on a compilation CD set Love is the Song We Sing by Rhino Records. The set includes a beautiful coffee table book with pictures of San Francisco psychedelic bands (1965-70) and their stories. Alan’s picture is between Blue Cheer and Sly and the Family Stone.

He got into writing novels when a friend of his from junior high and high school, a fellow "bitter, bitter boy," his college roomate (at two different schools), and a Phi Beta Kappa in English from UC Berkeley, landed a job as editor of a cheesy (if not the cheesiest) Los Angeles pulp fiction house. The friend said, "Everybody should write one novel," and gave Alan his first book assignment.

Alan failed to heed his friend’s advice and has been writing novels ever since.

Privacy Statement  |  Terms Of Use    Copyright 2009 by Pulp Devil Press

Web Hosting and Support by Purple Ant