Man. A Couple of Really Bad Days at Black Rock.
A few days after the fact I heard from fellow Posse McMillan member Kent Harrington that our pal, publisher Dennis McMillan, had passed away on Friday May 1st. Word as of now, from pneumonia. I believe Dennis was around 76 years old.
I mentioned earlier that I was working on a new memoir of Dennis for the Crime and Company section of the follow-up collection to Death Lit. Got it done a couple of weeks ago. One of the best parts was calling up Dennis to check on the accuracy of the reportage, chatting for an hour or two each time. And it turns out his quotes now will be the last word on the subject. I was expecting him to be around to read it, for his amusement, since he’d totally forgotten about getting the speeding ticket in West Texas as we pointed his Pontiac Aztek toward Austin for the 2002 Bouchercon and the launch of Measures of Poison. That whole trip, one of my fave Dennis memories.
I met Dennis in San Francisco in 1982, when he was on the cusp of jumping into publishing. A couple of earlier memoirs, written for convention program books, appear in Death Lit — and I guess I need to do at least one more, about the time Dennis poisoned me.
And maybe I ought to do something about the Most Absurd Moment I Ever Experienced, when Dennis — who drove giant cars, Packards, Caddies, Lincolns, Hummers, Sherman Tanks — his entire adult life suddenly became a proponent of the views of that moron Greta Thunberg. I’ve never been more flabbergasted.
Poisoning aside, it was always fun to hang out with Dennis. I was lucky to know him.
Word drifted in that on May 2 Donald Sidney-Fryer — The Last of the Courtly Poets, Arkham House author, etc. & etc. — died at the age of 91. The death of DMac was unexpected, but DSF had been in hospice care for terminal cancer for a few months, so it was just a matter of time. One of my great pals — I met him late in 1973.
Yes, I’ll be doing bits on DSF for that next book — I would have done them if he had made it to 100. So far, I have only jotted down key words or ideas on scraps of paper, but soon enough it’ll be time to fill the moments out, get them in some sort of order. DSF gets his own section in the book, but appears throughout, notably in other sections on Fritz Leiber and Clark Ashton Smith.























