Front cover of my latest book, A Manifestation of Monsters (© Dr Karl Shuker/Michael J. Smith/Anomalist
Books)
I'm delighted to announce that my latest book, A Manifestation of Monsters: Examining the (Un)Usual Subjects,
published by Anomalist Books and containing a foreword by my good friend and
fellow cryptozoologist Ken Gerhard, is now available to pre-order on Amazon.
Please click its title above to access its own dedicated
web-page on my website, which includes direct clickable links to its ordering
pages on Amazon's American and British sites.
Fellow cryptozoologist and good friend Ken Gerhard, who very kindly wrote the foreword to my new book - thanks, Ken!! (© Ken Gerhard)
And here's a summary of what inspired this 22nd book of mine and
what it contains:
During the 30
years in which I have been investigating and documenting mystery creatures, my
writings have been guided by countless different inspirations, but what
inspired this present book was a spectacular work of art. Namely, the wonderful
illustration that now graces its front cover, which was prepared by Michael J.
Smith, an immensely talented artist from the USA, and which I
first saw in 2012. It depicts no less than 17 cryptids and other controversial
creatures, including the Loch Ness monster, bigfoot, coelacanth, mokele-mbembe,
Jersey devil, chupacabra, Mongolian death worm, Tasmanian wolf, dogman, giant
squid, skunk ape, and dodo.
Ever since seeing
it, my notion of preparing a book inspired directly by this painting and the eclectic
company of entities that it portrays has always stayed with me, but the
fundamental problem that I faced if I were to do so was how to categorise them
collectively.
What single term
could be used that would effectively embrace, encompass, and enumerate this exceptionally
diverse array of forms, as well as the range of additional creatures that would
also be included in the book? 'Cryptid' was not sufficiently comprehensive, nor
was 'mystery creature' or 'unknown animal', because some of the depicted beasts
seem to exist far beyond the perimeters - and parameters - of what is
traditionally deemed to be the confines of cryptozoology. Consequently, I eventually
concluded that there was only one such term that could satisfy all of those
requirements – indeed, it was tailor-made for such a purpose. The term? What
else could it be? 'Monster'!
UPDATE: 2 September 2015 – Look what manifested through the post today! (© Dr Karl Shuker)
Derived from the Latin noun 'monstrum' and the Old French 'monstre', 'monster' has many different modern-day definitions - a very strange, frightening, possibly evil (and/or ugly) mythical creature; something huge and/or threatening; a malformed, mutant, or abnormal animal specimen; and even something extraordinary, astonishing, incredible, unnatural, inexplicable. These definitions collectively cover all of this book's subjects – and so too, therefore, does the single word 'monster' from which the definitions derive.
Thus it was that
this became a book of monsters, but not just a book – a veritable manifestation
of monsters. That is, a unique exhibition, a singular gathering, an exceptional
congregation of some of the strangest, most mystifying, and sometimes truly
terrifying creatures ever reported - still-unidentified, still-uncaptured,
still-contentious. Even 'mainstream' species like the dodo and coelacanth,
whose reality and zoological identity are fully confirmed, still succeed in
eliciting controversies, and are veritable monsters - the dodo having been
referred to by various researchers as a monstrous dove, and the coelacanth as a
resurrected prehistoric monster.
So, if you're
looking for monsters, you've certainly come to the right place, and will
certainly be purchasing the right book. Just pray that once you open it and encounter
the incredible creatures lurking inside, you don't live to regret your bravery –
or foolishness - in having done so. In fact, just pray that you do live...
Hoping that you enjoy encountering my manifestation
of monsters!!
Michael J. Smith's spectacular original
artwork, 'Cryptids', which inspired my book and which now appears on its front
cover – thanks, Michael!! (© Michael J. Smith)
Fantastic cover... I will definitely be getting this book.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tyler!
DeleteGot my copy today. It looks great!
Delete