BOOKS BY GENE/JEAN DEWEESE. JEREMY CASE. Paperback sf. An alien something-or-other gives a borderline retarded young man the power to heal himself and others. Original title before editorial simplification: THE THREE DEATHS OF JEREMY CASE. BLACK SUITS FROM OUTER SPACE THE DANDELION CAPER THE CALVIN NULLIFIER Hardcover juvenile sf series about 12-year-old Calvin Willeford and Kathy Entsminger and the outer space denizens they bump into, including some klutzy dinosaur types and a small yellow cat with retractable fingers who's a sort of feline lensman (interstellar cop, for non-Doc Smith fans). In BLACK SUITS, they find out why Grey Barker's UFO aliens always wore black suits. In DANDELION, Calvin finds out why some people, including himself, can never get a VCR to work properly. In NULLIFIER, they use chocolate chip cookies and a couple of Newton's laws to save a Voyager-type spacecraft during its Uranus flyby. ADVENTURES OF A TWO-MINUTE WEREWOLF. Hardcover juvenile sf/fantasy, depending on your criteria. It was watered down a bit when it was made into an ABC Weekend Special in '85. And it's no relation to TEEN WOLF, unless whoever wrote the TW screenplay had read TWO-MINUTE and decided to really screw it up. THE WANTING FACTOR and SOMETHING ANSWERED The Salman Rushdie Special. In WANTING FACTOR, the Man in Half Moon Street turns out to be Christ. Bob Briney once said, ``If you could get Jerry Falwell to burn a polyester suit on your lawn, you'd have a bestseller.'' Fortunately or unfortunately, it never happened. In SOMETHING ANSWERED, someone finds what may or may not be God and, in the end, answers Her/His/Its prayer. Both are in ``occult'' format but are sf under the surface, if you consider psi powers sf. Both are paperbacks, 1980 and 1983, respectively. A DIFFERENT DARKNESS. 1982 paperback, closer to a ``standard'' occult than either of the above, but still with a more or less science fictional rationale. Reincarnation, dimensional doors, etc. GATES OF THE UNIVERSE and NIGHTMARE UNIVERSE. Paperback collaborations with Robert Coulson. GATES was about a hack writer who bumbles through a dimensional door on his employer's bulldozer and gets involved with aliens from various other universes. One is a scholarly dinosaur, another a six-foot-plus female warrior who tends to pick the protagonist up and throw him away when she gets annoyed with him. NIGHTMARE is an ``interactive'' version of the same story, with some new twists added. Read in the right order, it consists of three separate novelettes, each revealing a bit more of what is really going on. If desired, a map can be included so you can pick the right branches. MAKING AMERICAN FOLK ART DOLLS. Trade paperback. So far as I know, it's the only doll making book that tells you how to make a papier mache' mummy and a dried apple shrunken head. And a gourd George Washington. Illustrated, of course. NIGHTMARE IN PEWTER. Hardcover. Occult/romantic suspense format, but actually it's about a spaceship buried under a midwest Indian mound. For King fans, think of it as a cheapie version of THE TOMMYKNOCKERS, written ten years earlier. HOUR OF THE CAT. Hardcover. Straight mystery in which one of our cats (Fahfrd, renamed Muldoon for the book) is a major character and gets to help do in the villain at the end. GINGER'S WISH. Hardcover. A squeaky clean ``romance'' with some mystery elements involving what Ginger, a recently deceased small town newspaper owner and one-time vaudeville performer, really did with the money everyone thought she had. Written with Connie Kugi of West Allis, WI. For further information, send SASE or email to: Gene DeWeese 2718 N. Prospect Milwaukee, WI 53211 Or phone: (414) 332-7306 GEnie: G.DEWEESE