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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

D. Scott Apel on 'The Uncertainty Principle?" and his other fiction


D. Scott Apel (2024 Hilaritas Press podcast photo)

Many of you know D. Scott Apel as Robert Anton Wilson's friend and business partner. Apel co-produced the Trajectories newsletter with RAW, handling the production chores while RAW served as the editorial director. Material from that newsletter is collected in two books: Chaos and Beyond, and also Beyond Chaos and Beyond, both available from Hilaritas Press

But aside from that, Apel also is a prolific author; he has published about 20 books (getting an exact count is complicated), including 11 books of fiction. 

My impetus for seeking a new interview with Scott came a few weeks ago, when I finally got around to reading his novel The Uncertainty Principle? It had been on my Kindle for years, but lots of stuff have been on my Kindle for years -- I read dozens of books every year, but it's hard to get around to everything I want to read!

Anyway, I did finally read it, and it was a good read, hard to put down. It concerns a detective, one Alec Smart, who is hired by a veteran science fiction writer. The client wants to know why the predictions in his fiction always come true. As with Illuminatus!, what seems at first like a straightforward detective story quickly gets very weird. The book includes portraits of Robert Anton Wilson, Arlen Riley Wilson and Philip K. Dick, and a character who is a self-portrait  of Apel himself.  (The ebook is only 99 cents from Amazon, the paperback is $14.95. And if you don't want to buy from Amazon, the Nook ebook from Barnes and Noble, which you can read on the B&N Nook app on your phone or your Nook tablet, also is 99 cents.)

After I discovered I liked The Uncertainy Principle?, I had some questions about it and about Scott's fiction, which Scott agreed to take via email. So here it is.

I will soon publish the only publicly-available, accurate bibliography of Scott's books (the Wikipedia article is very incomplete.)

So here is my interview. See also my 2017 interview with Apel about Robert Anton Wilson, and also my interview with him about the book Beyond Chaos and Beyond.  See also the Hilaritas Press podcast interview. 

RAWILLUMINATION.NET: You have written quite a few works of fiction, is The Uncertainty Principle? your favorite novel?

D. Scott Apel: This is a trick question, on a par with asking a mother which of her children is her favorite. Like most writers, I tend to believe that my latest effort is not just my favorite, but also my best work. So, while I have a fondness for UP? if only because it took 35 years to finish and publish, at this point, my favorite would be Unfriendly Takeover at OzCo, which I love and which I truly do believe is my best work.

But I also have a deep soft spot in my heart for my first novel, E Attraction, written in 1975, partly because it might be the best idea I've ever had; partly because it was my first novel; partly because I devoted two years to its creation, totally upending my life to concentrate on writing it (like moving from California to Virginia to avoid being sidetracked by my dissolute friends); and partly because no less a critic than Joseph Campbell read the original ms. and wrote me saying it was "obviously a serious work of modern mythology." (That quote would have gone on the cover if I could have gotten it published.) Alas, it will forever remain unpublished: about 10 years ago, I exhumed the ms. with the intent of rewriting it, but after rereading it, I came away baffled as to how to accomplish that. (I do love to refer to it in other books, however, like UP? and Exemplary Lives of Impossible Men, and even OzCo.)

Speaking of Exemplary Lives of Impossible Men, I'm quite proud of that one. It's incredibly dense with 50 years' worth of ideas; it works on several levels; and it incorporates virtually every trope of post-modern novels. In the same vein, I'm also quite pleased with Escape from 50sville, which exhibits a lot of literary tricks I've always wanted to use in a novel (like digesting entire chapters into a few sentences as the alleged editor, to skip boring exposition; including a Study Guide; and allowing me to make use of my extensive knowledge of the old TV series The Prisoner). And I think my other two recent comic mysteries (Jobs of Work and Hollywood, Ending) have the best endings I've ever written.

As for non-fiction, I am always proud of the two volumes of Killer B's movie guides. Deep research and fun reviews.


RAWIllumination.net:  I am confused about the history of The Uncertainty Principle?, as it has a 1979 copyright and also a 2015 copyright. Did you revise the book, and if so, how?

D. Scott Apel: While this is legally unnecessary, I wanted to add the date of the first version (entitled The Coincidence Caper at that point) to establish that I’d been working on that book for 35 years before publishing it. I also wanted to make sure no one could come around and say, “Oh, you stole that plot/character/scene/location from a novel published in 1980/85/90 (or whatever.)” Just a touch ultraparanoid (like most authors), but I do want credit for being there first, in case anyone finds similarities between UP? and anything published since 1979. I didn’t bother to do this with the two sequels (The Infinite Mistress and Detective, Comics), both of which were written in the 1980s (but unpublished until the 20-teens), or Science Fiction: An Oral History, which was compiled in 1978, since the dates of the interviews are included in the book.

RAWIllumination.net: What did Robert Anton Wilson think of The Uncertainty Principle? Did you get feedback from Arlen Wilson and from Philip K. Dick?

D. Scott Apel: Well, PKD died before I could get him a copy. He wasn't even a character in the book until a 1981 rewrite, when I realized that at only 60,000 words, The Coincidence Caper needed to be expanded, and his story fit nicely into the original plot. But oddly, I recently ran across a photo of PKD from about 1980, standing in front of one of his bookcases, and I recognized a copy of E Attraction on the top shelf, next to his head. I never had a chance to discuss it with him, however, for whatever reason.

Arlen Wilson had also passed before I finished the final version. I read much of this version to RAW when he was bedridden, and he gave me this quote: "Brilliant, original, and damned funny as well!" Bob also served as an inadvertent inspiration, since I intuited the whole backstory sipping Jameson on the terrace of his Capitola apartment.

RAWIllumination.net: The descriptions of the slightly fictionalized Robert Anton Wilson, Arlen Wilson and Philip K. Dick are accurate and affectionate as far as I can tell (I never met any of them), but the portrait of the Robert Heinlein is not very flattering and noticeably wrong on some details; was this  driven by the need of the plot, or were you unhappy with Heinlein?

D. Scott Apel: When I was a teen, like all teen boys who discover sci-fi, I read everything sci-fi by everyone writing sci-fi, from the space opera of Doc Smith to the literary stylings of Ray Bradbury. It took several college lit courses before I began to develop some discrimination and taste about what constituted good writing vs. hack writing. Early on, I consumed everything by the Big 3: Clarke, Asimov, and Heinlein. And as I began to discover and appreciate good literature, I realized that most sci-fi would not be included. But that didn't matter as a teen: sci-fi was the literature of ideas, not literary style, and Heinlein had some great ideas. Eventually, however, I began to see the flaws in his work: wooden writing, two-dimensional characters, etc. -- not to mention his reactionary/Libertarian philosophy and his demeaning treatment of women, both of which made me cringe as a young liberal/radical. The personal enmity enters when my college friend and then-roommate Kevin Briggs and I were conducting interviews for what was supposed to be the first book of interviews with sci-fi authors. Our agent insisted he couldn't sell the book without an interview with one of the Big 3. Well, Clarke was in Sri Lanka, and Asimov was in Boston, which required travel that was out of the question for a couple of poverty-stricken young wannabe authors to accomplish. (How much easier it is today with Zoom and FaceTime!). But Heinlein lived only a few miles away from our Silicon Valley home. We wrote personal letters to him and even had his peer and one of our interview subjects, Ted Sturgeon, call him, vouch for us, and encourage him to meet with us, all to no avail. So the book was never published until 35 years later as Science Fiction: An Oral History. (The whole story of the subversion that prevented that book from being published is included in the book.)

So to answer your specific question: I never knew Heinlein well enough to paint a realistic portrait of him in UP? The Harshlaw character is mostly based on the necessity of the plot -- I needed a famous old SF writer who realized everything he wrote has come true in some way, and an "alternate Heinlein" fit the bill. However, the analysis of his "works" roughly corresponds to my attitude towards his writing. (I mean, shit... Have you ever tried to read The Number of the Beast? I've tried three times, but always gave up in disgust. Absolute garbage.)

RAWIllumination.net: According to the Apel bibliography I am working on, you have written five books that feature private detective Alec Smart: The Uncertainty Principle?; The Infinite Mistress; Detective, Comics; Jobs of Work and Hollywood, Ending. Is that accurate?

D. Scott Apel: Yup. I have two more I'd like to write, but both are still in the research and brainstorming phase. You Killed Out There Last Night has Alec Smart hired in about 1981 by Don Rickles, who realizes that comedy is changing from his Old School/Catskill approach to a more observational approach, and who hires Alec to chauffeur him around to Bay Area comedy clubs to try out new material without the pressure of potentially bombing in a big city club. When he's still recognized and realizes everyone still wants the "old Rickles," he tutors Alec into delivering the new material, which provides the opportunity to discuss various theories and observations about humor and comedy. During the course of their comedy club gigs they cross paths with several rising standups of the time (which allows me the opportunity to use jokes I've written in their style). There is also a subplot concerning a teenage misfit who's built a dirty A-bomb in his garage, and a visit with Frank Sinatra, when Don and Rickles urge him to use his connections to persuade the Mafia to buy the bomb and dispose of it so the kid doesn't sell it to foreign terrorists. (The Mafia was always patriotic -- and they'd have no use for an A-bomb. Would they?)

The second would be The Dating Detective, in which Alec's look-alike frenemy David Call (who shared an adventure with Smart in Hollywood, Ending) hires him to pretend to be him and go on dates he's lined up at a video dating service, to screen potential girlfriend candidates since he's too busy to do it himself. This assignment is complicated by the fact that Call's wife is pregnant, which results in him saying things like, "I can't go to Lamaze class with you tonight... I have a date." There's also a plot about video piracy. But unless I'm inspired, I'll probably never get around to writing those two. (I can only hope that last sentence comes back to bite me when I do, in fact, write both comic mysteries.)

At the moment, I'm researching a non-comic mystery -- a Sherlock Holmes story set in 1894, during the period SH was missing from London, after his alleged death at Reichenbach Falls. In my story, he's in Chicago to visit the Columbian Exposition and gets involved with tracking down missing women, all victims of the notorious mass murderer: H.H. Holmes, who lured single young women to his "Murder Palace" and disposed of them. (Hence the working title, Holmes vs. Holmes.) (Erik Larsen covers this story in depth in his wonderful bestseller, Devil in the White City.) Holmes combines forces with journalist and proto-feminist Nellie Bly to track down the killer. It's discouraging that dozens, maybe even hundreds of writers have penned Sherlock Holmes stories (some even seem to make a career out of this), but I'm slowly warming up to that idea that apres-Doyle Holmes stories are in fact a genre all their own, and I'd be in good company contributing a unique and original adventure for the iconic (shit, almost archetypal) character, Sherlock Holmes. 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Tuesday links


Darryl Hannah, getting arrested at a Keystone pipeline protest. (Creative Commons photo, source).

 "I have never used cocaine in my life or hosted cocaine-fueled parties. I have never pressured anyone into marriage. I have never desecrated any family heirloom or intruded upon anyone’s private memorial. I have never planted any story in the press. I never compared Jacqueline Onassis’ death to a dog’s." Darryl Hannah. Has Hollywood gone too far with "based on a real story" lies? Is Robert Anton Wilson lucky he never became truly famous? I enjoyed Darryl Hannah's home movies of her husband, Neil Young, during the lockdown.

A New York Times reporter tries ibogaine. Compare with the recent Mike Gathers Hilaritas podcast. 

Can psychedelics fix cluster headaches, "probably the most painful medical condition known to science"? 

Hey, audiophile, is that an expensive cable or a banana? 

"America has become a bit like a banana republic, where the government is now so overbearing that everything becomes seen as a political issue. Indeed, President Trump often goes out of his way to make everything seem to be about politics. I used to think of this as something that happened elsewhere, say in Peron-era Argentina. It’s a sad way to go through life." Scott Sumner, maybe my favorite blogger right now. 

"Still, the point of the tale of the Boy Who Cried Wolf is not that wolves don’t exist, or that wolves are always easy to spot. Though I’m painfully aware of the ubiquity of false accusations of fascism, one glaring expression of fascism hides in plain sight all over the world: anti-immigration policies." Bryan Caplan, the piece cites Alan Moore. 

Monday, March 9, 2026

A Shea and Wilson anecdote


Robert Anton Wilson, left, and Robert Shea.

An anecdote from Scott Apel, after I mentioned my Shea book to him: "How great you compiled a Shea tribute! I met him once, at the 12-hour Seattle performance of Ken Campbell's Illuminatus play. He was tall and thin with a high voice and RAW was short and round with his deep Brooklyn accent. Standing together, they reminded me of Mutt & Jeff, if it isn't heretical to say that. "

More soon, by and about Mr. Apel. 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

New online reading group for Rosen's 'Classical Style'

 


Eric Wagner has asked to lead a new online reading group for The Classical Style: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven by Charles Rosen and I have agreed, note that Eric recommends the expanded edition. We start in May with the usual format, i.e. Eric will write a blog post and anyone who wants to take part will be invited to weigh in with the comments.

Here is Eric's statement:

"It pleases me to announce that we will begin a reading group on Charles Rosen’s The Classical Style: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven. This book provides a great analysis of music dear to Bob Wilson, especially Beethoven’s Hammerklavier Sonata. Many people, including me, consider this book one of the best books on music ever written. We will begin on Monday, May 25. I recommend using the Expanded Edition of the text, but you may use the original edition if you would like to. I really look forward to this study group!"

I can't resist adding a couple of points. This book won the National Book Award, so Eric is not alone in his opinion.

I recently ran across a Tyler Cowen podcast that discussed music, and Tyler said that he believes the top three composers are Bach, Mozart and Beethoven. This is the received opinion, but I agree with it. Haydn also is considered an important composer; Sviatoslav Richter, my favorite piano player, once said that Haydn is better than Mozart. So if you are a music fanatic, this is a good opportunity to learn something.

Eric has more musicological  knowledge than I do. I told Eric I was worried I would not be able to follow Rosen's points, and he assured me, "Yes, he has technical stuff, but he also has tons of entertaining nontechnical stuff." So apparently if you are as ignorant as me, you can still learn something.

If you are searching for a cheap used copy, it might help to know that the ISBN for the expanded edition is 9780393317121. Bookfinder.com is a good search engine for finding used books and I found a copy for less than $10.

Charles Rosen was a noted piano player as well as a scholar, as the Wikipedia bio explains. Eric has been bending my ear about him for years. 

I am currently listening to all of Beethoven's 32 sonatas, concentrating on a particular sonata each week (I am at number 18, about to start on number 19). Eric currently has a similar Beethoven listening project, tying it to a re-read of Timothy Leary's The Game of Life. 



Saturday, March 7, 2026

Tom Woods on the latest U.S. war

 


Severe damage to Gandhi Hospital in Tehran after U.S. and Israeli airstrikes. (Creative Commons photo, Tasnim news agency. Source.)

[I try to avoid "politics" here --- you can get plenty of that everywhere else --- but given the longtime antiwar stance of both Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea, it seems false to simply ignore what's going on with the U.S. and Israel's attack on Iran and the  ensuing war.

I  am often not on the same page as Tom Woods, the conservative-leaning libertarian, but he's always been good on antiwar issues, his latest email is worth quoting at length. So here is an excerpt. -- The Management.]

This sh** is out of control.

The Wall Street Journal just released an op-ed called "An Urgent Need to Contain Turkey." Subtitle: "If the Iranian Regime Falls, Beware Ankara's Regional Influence."

It's echoing a former Israeli prime minister, who let us know a few days ago that Turkey "is the new Iran."

Turkey, a NATO member, is now the new Iran.

I am not looking forward to when you and I have to endure, in 2029: "Sure, everybody knows the Iran war was a fiasco, but there was no way we could have known that even though everyone tried to explain it to us. But it's urgent that we go after Turkey. That will be completely different. Not on board? You're an America hater!"

I wrote on my other list today that my Twitter feed has become almost intolerable, overrun by talking-point so-called arguments in favor of this Iran operation.

It's all one-liners that very suggestible people heard on TV:

(1) "They've been at war with us for 47 years" (in response to this one, Glenn Greenwald correctly comes back with: we've been in a war with Iran for 47 years but no prior American presidents remembered to wage that war against Iran or even mention to the American public that we've been in a decades-long war with Iran until about six days ago when Israel wanted to attack them?);

(2) Iran would have had a nuclear bomb two weeks from now if we hadn't acted (I don't hear this one so much because nobody really believes it);

(3) although we've been at war for 47 years, this is not actually a war and we shouldn't call it that because Speaker Mike Johnson told us not to, even though if anyone did these things to the United States we would of course describe them as acts of war, and even though up until the Iran intervention we all agreed that Speaker Mike Johnson was a lying weasel.

Ronald Reagan did the right thing in 1983 when the US Marine barracks was bombed and he got out of there, though of course Lindsey Graham and assorted other lunatics are implying that Reagan -- Reagan! -- was a wimp because he didn't respond with a rampage throughout the region.

You will have to forgive my impertinence -- I have a habit of asking questions that send a hush through cocktail parties -- but why the hell was there a U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut to begin with?

"USA! USA!" does not count as an answer.

None of this benefits the average American. That's not to say absolutely nobody benefits, but you and I are not among the beneficiaries, I regret to inform you, dear reader.

[More here, with a link to subscribe to the newsletter. You can view the official website.  Here is antiwar.com.  Reason Magazine is good on this issue, here is an example from Nick Gillespie.]


Friday, March 6, 2026

Mary Butts, a modernist writer


Mary Butts in 1919 (public domain photo)

Every once in awhile, I run into a writer and wind up being surprised that I did not know the name. The modernist writer Mary Butts (1890-1937) would be the latest example.

I am on the email list for Standard Ebooks, an outfit I've written about before that makes available excellent free editions of public domain books. The latest newsletter announced the publication of  the "influential but obscure modernist novel" Armed With Madness by Mary Butts: 

"Six friends are staying in a cottage in the English countryside when they discover a mysterious ancient cup buried deep in a local well. The cup seems to have a long history—could it be the legendary Holy Grail? Long-held tensions start simmering as the friends begin investigating the cup’s story, threatening the formerly peaceful retreat.

"Butts adapts the grail myth to early 20th century England in a highly modernist prose style that invites comparison to Virginia Woolf or Ford Madox Ford. The narrative resembles a kaleidoscope in its shifting perspectives, abrupt dialogue, and dreamlike feel, and close reading reveals densely packed allusions ranging from Greek mythology to English legend.

"The first edition of Armed with Madness was illustrated by none other than Jean Cocteau and won praise from her modernist contemporaries. Butts went on to write a companion novel in 1932 following some of the same characters, The Death of Felicity Taverner."

Who knows what I'll think of Armed With Madness when I get around to reading it, but I saw other indications that, at the very least, Butts was an interesting person who hung out with other interesting people. The Wikipedia bio records that she was a student of Aleister Crowley and spent time with him at the Abbey of Thelema in Sicily. She knew modernist writers such as Ezra Pound. A biography is available, by Nathalie Blondel.

A university professor in Canada provides the Mary Butts Letters Project online.  And here is an interesting piece from The New Yorker, "Modernism's Forgotten Mystic." That 2021 piece by Merve Emre describes Butts as pretty much forgotten, so maybe I get a pass for not knowing the name until a few days ago. Read the piece for the William Blake connection! 

Based on what they read, I  think both Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea would have been interested in her. But if either of them ever mentioned her, I  don't know  about it. 



Thursday, March 5, 2026

What we read last month


Another reading log from Mark Brown and myself.

What Mark Brown read last month: 

Trouble is My Business by Raymond Chandler 2/6 
The Night Land by William Hope Hodgson  2/11
Two Hawks from Earth by Philip Jose Farmer  2/18   
Domnei by James Branch Cabell  2/22   
Land of Terror by Edgar Rice Burroughs   2/25   
Turn on Your Mind: Four Decades of Psychedelic Rock by Jim de Rogatis  2/27

What I read:

The Uncertainty Principle?, D. Scott Apel
War By Other Means (Fall of the Censor Book 7), Karl Gallagher
The Workshop of Democracy, 1863–1932 (The American Experiment Book 2), James MacGregor Burns
Colors of Asia: A Visual Journey, Kevin Kelly
Forged for Prophecy (Forged for Destiny, #2), Andrew Knighton

As usual, everyone else is invited to share what they have read. 


Wednesday, March 4, 2026

A bit more on 'All Things Are Lights'

 


I've updated my Feb. 20 post on Robert Shea's All Things Are Lights. 

Here (in part) how Shea described the novel in an interview (reproduced in my new Shea book, Every Day Is a GOOD Day.

"The title comes from a medieval  philosopher, Scotus Erigena, who said, 'All that are, are lights.' The main characters have an outlook that is as mystical as that statement, only their mysticism is not of the orthodox variety. The main character is a troubadour who achieves illumination in an adulterous affair with a countess through the rites of courtly love, which I portray as a westernized version of tantric yoga. The troubadour is also in love with a woman minister of the heretical Cathar sect. Nowadays they tell women they can't be priests; in those days they burned them at the stake for trying." 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Oz Fritz continues 'Shadow Ticket' analysis



Oz Fritz has continued his discussion of Shadow Ticket by Thomas Pynchon, with a Part Two post now up at his The Oz Mix blog. 

This one focuses quite a bit on Dante. Oz observes:

"The Divine Comedy by Dante provides a foundational pillar in the canon of Western and Near Eastern literature. It poetically describes a journey through death and the underworld. The influence of this opus on modern and postmodern writers has been profound. You'll find it in James Joyce (Finnegans Wake), Ezra Pound (The Cantos), Robert Anton Wilson (Illuminatus! and others), Malcolm Lowery (Under the Volcano) to name a few."

Here is Oz' first post.   Also, please see my earlier post for links to what Eric Wagner and Peter Quadrino wrote about Pynchon's latest novel. 

A Part Three post is planned with "a Deleuzean perspective."

Monday, March 2, 2026

Dan Simmons has died


Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea both loved science fiction, and I do, too, but science fiction writers  still don't get as much respect as other fiction writers; Dan Simmons, who wrote the Hyperion Cantos novels, did not get an obituary in the New York Times after he died on Feb. 21. So I am telling you about it here.

The Hyperion books are really good; the Ilium/Olympos books also are well known, but I was less impressed with them. Simmons also  wrote horror and other work. Here is an obituary from Newsweek. 


Sunday, March 1, 2026

Joseph Matheny announces free audio versions of his work



In his latest newsletter, available here, Joseph Matheny announces audio versions of several of his works are now available for free. 

The titles include the audiobook of This is Not a Game, Ong's Hat: The Beginning, Ong’s Hat: COMPLEAT, and Xen: The Zen of the Other. They are torrents, but Joseph includes a video explaining how to use the technology.

Joseph also explains what you can do -- and not do -- with the free versions of his work, and it's worth quoting:

As many of you know, I always make a free digital version of my work available for free after a year of selling it through commercial channels. Some unscrupulous players have taken that to mean that those works are available to be taken, resold, and reused without permission. I shouldn’t have to explain this, but one more time for the folks in the back:

You’re free to download the free versions for your personal use. You are not allowed to resell, remix, or include in any collections without my express, written permission. There are legitinmate, legal copyrights on all my works, for that very reason. The free versions are distributed under the following Creative Commons agreements (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International) and are also legally copyrighted, registered with the U.S. Copyright Office. Look it up. I'm happy to offer my work for free; I’m much less than happy for people or corporations to profit from it.

There are other interesting items in the newsletter. 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Mike Gathers' interesting podcast

As I mentioned I would, I listened to Mike Gathers' in the latest Hilaritas podcast, above, as I was intrigued. It is interesting, personal and candid. Mike talks about his two trips to Costa Rica for Iboga psychedelic therapy, what is was like, how it affected her personal habits and his health. He's planning a follow-up session. Mike is careful to explain that Iboga is dangerous, and not something to experiment with by yourself.