The Top 50 Black Gate Posts in July
Black Gate had 1.26 million page views last month, very nearly a record. Much of that bump in traffic was due to a series of very popular posts. Derek Kunsken has long been one of our most popular bloggers — his interview with Christopher Golden was our third most popular article in October, and last month his piece on Rebirth: DC’s corrective reboot was #5. But he thoroughly dominated the charts in July, claiming both the #2 slot, with his look back at Marvel’s Star-Lord, and the top spot, with his examination of the soaked-in misogyny of Piers Anthony’s famed Xanth series. Remember to leave room for the rest of us, Derek!
Bob Byrne was #3 on the list, with the second half of his two-part history of Necromancer and Frog God Games. Nick Ozment had our second most popular comic article in July, claiming the fourth spot on the list with his retrospective of Kurt Busiek’s Astro City. Rounding out the Top Five was our look at Chaosium’s classic Runequest campaign Borderlands.
Also in the Top Ten were Adrian Simmons’ belated review of Hudson Hawk, M Harold Page’s review of The Trojan War: A New History, some comments on James Wallace Harris’ popular post “Who Still Reads 1950s Science Fiction?”, Bob Byrne’s examination of a century of John D. MacDonald, and our look at the 2016 David Gemmell Award Nominees.
The complete list of Top Articles for July follows. Below that, I’ve also broken out the most popular overall articles, online fiction, and blog categories for the month.
The Top 50 Black Gate posts in July were:
- A Tremendously Disappointing Re-Read: The Soaked-in Misogyny of Piers Anthony’s Xanth
- Thinking about the Evolution of Marvel Comics’ Star-Lord
- Of Necromancers and Frog Gods: Part Two (The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes)
- Kurt Busiek’s Astro City. Also Joyce, Hemingway, Faulkner, and a Tangent on Modernism
- Chaosium’s Borderlands: Can Playing RPGs Really Make You a Billionaire?
- Belated Movie Review #7: Towards a Unified Theory of Hudson Hawk
- Was Homer a Historian After All? A Look at The Trojan War: A New History
- Who Still Reads 1950s Science Fiction?
- The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes: A Century of John D. MacDonald
- The 2016 David Gemmell Award Nominees
- Three Ways to Write a Cast of Supporting Characters Without Confusing the Reader
- Solitaire Wargaming: B-17 Leader
- Announcing the 2016 Robert E. Howard Foundation Award Winners
- Future Treasures: Swords v. Cthulhu: Swift Bladed Action in the Horrific World of H.P. Lovecraft, edited by Jesse Bullington and Molly Tanzer
- Black Gate Nominated for a World Fantasy Award
- The 2016 Hugos: Short Fiction Ballot Thoughts
- The Strange and Happy Life of The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology
- When It’s Time to Railroad…
- Teaching History through Wargaming: Strategy & Tactics #280: Soldiers 1918
- John DeNardo: In Defense of Media Tie-Ins (Part 1)
- Noise About Xignals
- The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes: Mycroft’s Job
- Dark Sleeper by Jeffrey E. Barlough
- Goth Chick News: Kiefer Sutherland and Hollywood Both Flatline
- Reading Burroughs’ Biography as a Writer
- The Top 50 Black Gate Posts in June
- Thrilling Wonder Stories, April 1951: A Retro-Review
- Adventure in The Old Kingdom: The Minikins of Yam by Thomas Burnett Swann
- Weirdbook 32 Now Available
- Lara Destiny and the Question of Identity
- To Ride a Rathorn by P. C. Hodgell
- The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes: Don’t Panic!
- New Treasures: United States of Japan by Peter Tieryas
- Series Fantasy: Apparatus Infernum by A. A. Aguirre
- Here Be Spiders: Arachnophobia & Arachnoquake
- The July – September 2016 issue of The Lorelei Signal Now Available
- Jerry Springer through the Time Portal! Tom Holland’s Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar
- Vintage Treasures: The Collections of Zenna Henderson: The Anything Box and Holding Wonder
- Future Treasures: Drowned Worlds: Tales from the Anthropocene and Beyond, edited by Jonathan Strahan
- Dorsai and Secret Psi Powers: Rich Horton on The Genetic General/Time to Teleport by Gordon R. Dickson
- Goth Chick News Reviews: End of Watch — Stephen King Wraps Up a Trilogy
- July/August Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction Now on Sale
- Sample the Finest Short Stories of a Science Fiction Great: The Best of Robert Silverberg: Stories of Six Decades
- The Conclusion to a Grand Adventure: Hobgoblin Night by Teresa Edgerton
- Try Out Blind Spot, a New Magazine of French Science Fiction
- An Introduction to B.C. Bell’s The Bagman
- See the Comic-Con Teaser Trailers for Justice League and Wonder Woman
- Future Treasures: Four Roads Cross by Max Gladstone
- Roman Lusitania Opens at the Museo Arqueológico Nacional, Madrid
- Goth Chick News: So There Really Was Something In The Woods…?
There were plenty of older articles popular last month as well. The 25 most popular blog posts written before July were:
- The Scariest Hour in TV History: Space 1999: “Dragon’s Domain”
- The IX by Andrew P. Weston
- Heroic Fantasy with the Sharp Edge of Reality: A Review of The Sacred Band by Janet Morris and Chris Morris
- Part Gothic, Part Sword and Sorcery, and Part Horror: Andrew P. Weston’s Hell Bound
- New Treasures: The Library of America Publishes Elmore Leonard
- Tribulations Herculean and Tragic: Beyond Wizardwall by Janet Morris
- Vintage Treasures: The Silistra Quartet by Janet Morris
- Return to Thieves World in Beyond Sanctuary: The Revised and Expanded Author’s Cut by Janet Morris
- Caught Between Rebels and the Empire’s Blackest Magic: Beyond the Veil: The Revised and Expanded Author’s Cut by Janet Morris
- Love in War and Realms Beyond Imagining: A Review of The Fish, the Fighters and the Song Girl by Janet Morris and Chris Morris
- Art of the Genre: Top 10 Fantasy Artists of the Past 100 Years
- A Detailed Explanation
- Things Your Writing Teacher Never Told You: The Skeleton Matters (Or, Why It’s Not OK to Skip Scenes in Your Third Act)
- Haunted Bushes, Serial Killers, and Mysterious Strangers: Algernon Blackwood’s The Listener and Other Stories
- Wolf’s Empire Genesis: Future Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day
- “A Great Place to let Your Imagination Run Wild:” Joe Bonadonna Reviews Rogues in Hell
- The Devil in the Details: A Review of Lawyers in Hell
- Of Necromancers & Frog Gods – Part One (The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes)
- The IX: Exordium of Tears by Andrew P. Weston
- The Perfect Prescription for Perdition: Doctors in Hell, edited by Janet Morris and Chris Morris
- Giving the Devil His Due: A Review of Dreamers in Hell
- Art of the Genre: Art of Dungeon Maps
- I, The Sun by Janet Morris
- A Mining Colony, a Blind Date, and a Ghostly Alien Hand: A Review of Outpassage by Janet Morris & Chris Morris
- New Treasures: Exordium of Tears by Andrew P. Weston
The Top Black Gate Online Fiction features were:
- An Excerpt from The Sacred Band by Janet Morris and Chris Morris
- An Excerpt from Truck Stop Earth by Michael A. Armstrong
- “Seven Against Hell” by Janet Morris and Chris Morris
- “The Moonstones of Sor Lunarum” by Joe Bonadonna
- “The Renunciation of the Crimes of Gharad the Undying” by Alex Kreis
- An Excerpt from Souldrifter by Garrett Calcaterra
- Excerpt: “Sight of Vengeance,” by Howard Andrew Jones
- Excerpt: “Whispers from the Stone,” by Howard Andrew Jones
- “The Trade,” Part One of The Tales of Gemen, by Mark Rigney
- “The Pit Slave” by Vaughn Heppner
The top categories last month were:
- Art of the Genre
- Vintage Treasures
- Books
- Magazines
- Game Reviews
- Blog Entry
- Conan
- Pulp
- Art
- Reviews
- Comics
- Future Treasures
- Series Fantasy
- New Treasures
- BG Staff
- Discovering Robert E. Howard
- Goth Chick
- Black Gate Goes to Summer Movies
- Convention Report
- Rich Horton
The Top 5o Black Gate blog posts in June are here, and you can see all 101 posts we made in the month of July here.
John, Joe the-one-and-only Bonadonna, Fletcher: Fellows, we are deeply whelmed by this month’s standings. Most gratifying is to see writers such as Andrew P. Weston and Michael A. Armstrong, along with the damnedest writers of the Heroes in Hell universe, all attracting interest and, we hope, new readers. And thanks again, John, for creating a place where fantastical books of all sorts can be seen, and read, and find new friends.
You’re very welcome! And it’s quite a sight to see the Perseid Press books virtually take over our list of popular older articles. Leave some space for lesser books. 🙂
But whatever you do, keep the great books coming!
John, we have slowed down a bit, which means we’ve many wonderful books yet to come, including a novel by Thomas Barczak, Mouth of the Dragon, and one by Walter Rhein, the Literate Thief, as well as the long-awaited Pirates in Hell, followed by a new Hell novel from Andrew P. Weston, and the third in The IX trilogy. And of course our aggressive re-issue program continues, bringing books we love to the digital age. And of course we look hard at what Black Gate is doing, every month, and can only wonder how in the world you manage so much more than we can. Life and glory to you…
Thank you, Janet. And congratulations to one and all!