Friday, September 11, 2015

Book List 2015: July/August


* = reread

[GN] = Graphic novel or comic anthology

-CB- = Children’s Book



July


-CB-   88.   -CB-

The Princess and the Pony

written and illustrated by: Kate Beaton


A little princess in a land of warriors wanted nothing more her birthday than a powerful war stallion, but her parents got her...a roly-poly pony?


Oh, Kate Beaton, is there anything you can’t do?

Such a fun little children’s book. It’s cute and funny, but also has a pretty great moral for kids too.



“In a kingdom of warriors,
the smallest warrior was Princess Pinecone.
And she was very excited for her birthday.”





[GN]   *  89.  *   [GN]

Watchmen

written by: Alan Moore
art by: Dave Gibbons
colors by: John Higgins

In an alternate timeline to our own, individuals around the United States began to put on costumes and fight crime. However, when the masked vigilantes got out of hand the government cracked down on them. Now, years later, the cold war is heating up, the world is on the precipice of global thermonuclear war, and someone has started attacking former costumed crusaders. Something big is going down and the former crime-fighters are the keys to unlocking the mystery.


Watchmen is one of the best structured pieces of literature I have come across. The story it tells is at times so epic that the characters themselves seem to be dragged along by the force of its tides. It is one of those rare stories that is perfectly suited to its medium. Like how House of Leaves cannot be told as anything but a book, Watchmen cannot rightfully be anything but a comic.

Yes, yes, I know: they did make a movie out of it. But trust me, the comic is so much better. The story was kind of able to make the shift to movie, but the tone and depth were completely lost

The first time I ever read it was when my mom found it at a used book table at a community ice cream social and picked it up for me because she knew that I liked comics. I was probably too young for it and when I first paged through it I was thinking, “What the f---?” There was pulp fiction-style violence, nudity, old-school art & coloring, sections that seemed to be out of a textbook and had no pictures at all. It was crazy! I started reading it regardless and it blew my mind. Once I got started I sped through it in an entranced rush all the way to the end. And mygoodness! What an ending!

At its heart its a story about mankind being inherently and inescapably flawed. Some embrace it, some fight to rectify it, some ignore it, and still others rise above.

But at the end of the day those flaws are what it means to truly be human.



“Quis custodiet ipsos custodes”





90.

Private Demons:
The Life of Shirley Jackson

by. Judy Oppenheimer

A biography of Shirley Jackson, the author of such classics as “The Lottery” and The Haunting of Hill House.


In case you weren’t aware I’m a big fan of Shirley Jackson’s work and was curious to learn more about the woman herself. Turns out she was a very different person than I had assumed from the snippets I had heard about her. Yet, at the same time, exactly the same. She was cognitive dissonance personified: a living contradiction. She both loved and hated so much of her life and herself, just as she sought both the acceptance and exclusion of the world around her.

I can’t really say if this book is going to appeal to anyone unfamiliar with Shirley Jackson, but if you’re a Jackson fan and are curious about the woman behind the text then this is a pretty darn thorough way to do it.



“It was Shirley’s genius to be able to paint homey, familiar scenes like this, and then imbue them with evil—or, more correctly, allow a reader to see the evil that had been obvious to her all along, even in sunny Burlingame. One felt the presence of a grinning skull behind the cover of surface gentility, homemade biscuits, shining floors, and this is what made the tales so disturbing. Shirley never had to search for exotic locales or strange characters. You see, her stories seemed to nudge lightly, insistently at the reader, it was right in front of you all the time.”

-pg. 101





*   91.   *

Jingo

by. Terry Pratchett

A new island has just surfaced in the ocean of the Discworld and the great countries of Ankh-Morpork and Klatch have both laid claim to it. Now war is on the horizon, politicians are scheming, generals are rallying, and the policemen are doing whatever they can they can to protect everyone from the politicians and generals.


I’m not a big fan of the Discworld travelogue stories; their satire tends to sit right on the surface waving at you. I mean, it’s still a Discworld book, so theres always some brilliant writing taking place, it’s just that the format dulls the usually razor edge of its satire.

This particular book satirizes international politics, the concept of war, the Middle East, and the Western world’s ridiculous ignorance surrounding the Middle East. Luckily this time it did not stray into the off-putting world of ignorant racism like Interesting Times did. It dipped its toe in from time to time, but it always kept a foot firmly in “We westerner’s are just so utterly clueless about other parts of the world and look how dangerous our ignorance is.” Which, frankly, is a very accurate point that you don’t hear nearly enough these days.

This book is in the area where Pratchett has started pushing the boundaries of his writing. Where he starts undertaking much more epic plotlines, but hasn’t quite gotten the hang of it yet. He’ll attempt epic political storylines of this kind later and pull them off brilliantly, so it’s hard not to compare it with them.

Like all the Discworld books it is filled with brilliant observations, amazing turns of phrase, and lots of fun. But I have to say that there are too many eddies in the flow of the plot to make it brilliant.

It does, however, prominently feature the Watch and they are always a treat. Sam Vimes is everything we wish our own police force would be and more.



“And then he realized why he was thinking like this.

It was because he wanted there to be conspirators. It was much better to imagine men in some smoky room somewhere, made mad and cynical by privilege and power, plotting over the brandy. You had to cling to this sort of image, because if you didn’t then you might have to face the fact that bad things happened because ordinary people, the kind who brushed the dog and told their children bedtime stories, were capable of going out and doing horrible things to other ordinary people. It was so much easier to blame it on Them. It was bleakly depressing to think that They were Us. If it was Them, then nothing was anyone’s fault. If it was Us, what did that make Me? After all, I’m one of Us. I must be. I’ve certainly never thought of myself as one of Them. No one ever thinks of themselves as one of Them. We’re always one of Us. It’s Them that do the bad things.”


-pg 205-206





92.

Jurassic Park

by. Michael Crichton


A foolhardy millionaire uses genetic engineering to bring dinosaurs to life in order to create the world’s greatest theme park. But his group of consultants and he are about to learn that when it comes to a park full of gigantic killer dinosaurs...there’s a lot that can go wrong.




“Living systems are never in equilibrium. They are inherently unstable. They may seem stable, but they’re not. Everything is moving and changing. In a sense, everything is on the edge of collapse.”



I’ve always been meaning to read this book and yet for some reason I just never got around to it. But now I have!

First of all, let me just say that the beginning to this book is pretty brilliant. In fact, I’d say it’s much better than the movie. The set-up is so much more creepy and tension-building. However, when they get to the park the power of the cinema definitely overshadows the events of the book.

The really crazy thing is that every single Jurassic Park movie has been taking scenes from this book! Every. Single. One. I was not expecting to keep seeing parts of the other movies popping up left and right.

If you are like me and loved the movie, but never read the book, then I think you should read the book. It’s pretty darn fun getting to see what started it all. And plus it’s a book about dinosaurs. What’s not to love about that?



“You know, at times like this one feels, well, perhaps extinct animals should be left extinct.” 






August


[GN]   93.   [GN]

Rocket Girl, vol.1:
Times Square

story by: Brandon Montclare
art by: Amy Reeder

A time-traveling detective from the year 2013 goes back to 1986 to attempt to stop a group of scientists from disrupting the time stream.


I found out about this one because I was intrigued by Amy Reeder’s work on Ms. Marvel and wanted to see more of her art.

Overall it’s a pretty fun story, but I felt like it fell in that usual time-travel trap of making itself too convoluted to be easy to follow. And being hard to follow doesn’t quite work when you’re doing a fun quick-paced action-adventure.

So all in all: great art, fun premise, interesting characters, clunky plot.



“I’m detective Dayoung Johansson of the New York Teen Police Department

    I’ve come from the year 2013 to investigate crimes against time

         And you’re all under arrest.”

-issue 1





94.

City of Thieves

by. David Benioff


During the siege of Leningrad in a starving and war-torn WWII Russia, a young looter and an army deserter are given a second chance. They can either, A) somehow find an influential Colonel a dozen eggs for his daughter’s wedding cake and have their records cleared, or B) be executed for their crimes. Together they embark on a strange and dangerous mission where war, death, hunger, and cold are around every turn.


When this one was recommended to me I wasn’t expecting it to be quite as light-hearted as it is. I mean, sure, it deals with some very dark material, but nevertheless it always carries a unique sort of humor with it.

Although in the same breath it’s that same omnipresent humor that prevents the story from achieving any sense of true drama.

In any case, if you’re in the mood for a light and intriguing adventure story this one is a thoroughly enjoyable and memorable read.



“Contrary to popular belief, the experience of terror does not make you braver. Perhaps though, it is easier to hide your fear when you’re afraid all the time.”





95.

The Toughest Indian in the World

by. Sherman Alexie


A collection of short stories centering around Native American life from author Sherman Alexie.


As far as Sherman Alexie collections go this one this one is far from my favorite. But there are still some real gems in this one. “Saint Junior” and “Dear John Wayne” were my favorites.

If you’re a fan it’s worth a read, but if you’re new to Alexie I’d recommend you start elsewhere.



“Inside their small house, Grave listened as Roman stood from the couch and walked into the bathroom. He sat down to piss. She thought Roman’s sit-down pisses were one of the most romantic and caring things that any man had ever done for any woman.

After the piss, Roman pulled up his underwear, climbed into a pair of sweatpants hanging from the shower rod, slipped his feet into Chuck Taylor basketball shoes, and stepped into the bedroom.

Grace pretended to be asleep in their big bed, warm and safe beneath seven generations of sheets, blankets, and quilts. She was a big woman with wide hips, thick legs, large breasts, and a soft stomach. She was deep brown and beautiful.”

-pg. 162-163





96.

Incarnadine:
poems

by Mary Szybist


A collection of poems from Mary Szybist and the 2013 National Book Award winner.


Mary Szybist was a professor at my college. I never had a class with her or anything, but nevertheless it made me a little curious.

I think I’m going to have to check out a different collection of hers sometime though, because there were some reoccurring patterns/themes in this collection that I wasn’t a fan of. But considering the awards this collection has won, I am clearly in the minority there.

Poetry is an ever-so subjective arena, don’t you think?



Here, There Are Blueberries

“When I see the bright clouds, a sky empty of moon and stars,
I wonder what I am, that anyone should note me.

Here there are blueberries, what should I fear?
Here there is bread in thick slices, of whom should I be afraid?

Under the swelling clouds, we spread our blankets.
Here in this meadow, we open our baskets

to unpack blueberries, whole bowls of them, berries not by the work of our hands, berries not by the work of our fingers.

What taste the bright world has, whole fields
without wires, the blackened moss, the clouds

swelling at the edges of the meadow. And for this,
I did nothing, not even wonder.

You must live for something, they say.
People don’t live just to keep on living.

But here is the quince tree, a sky bright and empty.
Here there are blueberries, there is no need to note me.”

-pg. 59





[GN]   97.   [GN]

Rat Queens, vol.2:
The Far Reaching Tentacles of N’Rygoth

Story by: Kurtis J. Wiebe
art by: Roc Upchurch & Stjepan Sejic


The adventures of The Rat Queens continue! Someone has stolen a powerful relic from Dee’s former flying-squid cult and now she’s the only one with the tentacle know-how to save the world from some tentacled elder-god-style Doom.


Overall I’d say this volume wasn’t quite as strong as the first one, but it was still lots of fun. We get a lot of the backstories to the characters and they are all amazing. However, the plot device by which those backstories occur seemed rather forced. I actually found myself kind of bored with the main story, but adoring the backstories. So go figure!

In any case, I’m excited to see what the next volume has in store.



“‘You’re not wearing...any of the clan symbols on your armour. Are you a mercenary?’

‘Hah! I wish! then I’d get paid for all the work I do.’

‘What then?’

‘A mom. And you know what that means. Cleaning up everyone else’s garbage.’

‘What’s with all the rats?’

‘Don’t you know your mythology, girl? Rats are the harbingers of impending destruction.

      I like to give my enemies a bit of warning before I destroy them.’

‘You shaved your beard...your clan, they allow it?’

‘Fuck no. I just felt like doing it.’

‘But...what about tradition?’

‘Tradition?

     Fuck tradition.’”

-chp 8





*  [GN]   98-99, 102-104   [GN]  *

Scott Pilgrim
[Color Editions]

story&art by: Bryan Lee O’Malley
color by: Nathan Fairbairn


A twenty-something bassist named Scott Pilgrim doesn’t have much motivation in his life. But all that changes when he meets a girl named Ramona Flowers. He’s determined to win her heart, but in order to do that he’s going to have to first defeat her seven evil exes.


Most people I know have already read and loved Scott Pilgrim. So they already know why the series is amazing. Instead I’ll use this time to address the people who don’t want to read it.

Generally when I happen to meet someone who isn’t interested in checking the series out their reason for not wanting to try it is that they “aren’t interested in any of that ‘manic pixie dream girl’ bullshit.”

However, they’re misunderstanding the premise of the series. You see the entire story of Scott Pilgrim is filtered through Scott’s mind. Just like we all use stories and pop-culture metaphors as ways of understanding things, so does Scott. He sees himself as the hero of a video game who has to defeat his girlfriend’s evil exes in order to be with her. But as the story unfolds we slowly find that Scott’s view of things is at odds with reality.

When he first meets Ramona he sees her as a “manic pixie dream girl,” but as her character is fleshed out we see that she’s really not. In fact lots of the characters turn out to not quite be how Scott sees them. Scott himself isn’t who he thinks he is either. This conflict between his perceptions and reality slowly build until they, not the evil final boss ex, prove to be the real final obstacle Scott needs to overcome to be with Ramona. He has to accept her for who she is and accept himself too.

Personally, I adore this series. The whole thing is this wonderfully brilliant metaphor of epic proportions. Whether you’re in the mood for cartoony fun, geeky references, shounen action, modern romance, or 20-something adventure, there’s something here everyone can enjoy.



“I know Im changing. Were all changing.

Just...don't forget me.”

-vol.6, pg.54





[GN]   100.   [GN]


Lumberjanes, vol. 1:
Beware the Kitten Holy

written by: Noelle Stevenson & Grace Ellis
Illustrated by: Brooke Allen


A group of friends at Lumberjane camp (think modern and badass version of the Girl Scouts) discover some supernatural things are afoot at this camp and they’re determined to get to the bottom of it.


If I had a young kid you can bet your ass I would be buying them some Lumberjanes to read. Buuuut the series plot structure is much too little kiddy for me.

And who cares! I am clearly not the demographic for this thing. It’s well suited for kids, it provides some amazing role models for them, and I say well done.



The Lumberjane Pledge

“I solemnly swear to do my best
Every day, and in all that I do,
To be brave and strong,
To be truthful and compassionate,
To be interesting and interested,
To pay attention and question
The world around me,
To think of others first,
To always help and protect my friends,
Then there’s a line about god, or whatever
And to make the world a better place
For Lumberjane scouts
and for everyone else.”





101.

Modern Romance

by. Aziz Ansari & Eric Klinenberg


How does romance differ today from our grandparents’ generation? How does technology affect our relationships? Comedian Aziz Ansari and sociologist Eric Klinenberg team up to answer these questions and more as they investigate the world of modern romance.


There’s some pretty interesting stuff in this book and also some funny jokes. But there’s also quite a lot of Aziz Ansari talking about how much he loves food and other random shit.

I mean, there is something refreshing about someone who isn’t a professional scientist doing the talking about what science has discovered in a social area they are active and interested in. But I’d say about 40% of this could be cut out without impacting the quality in the slightest.

It’s quite a light read though and the good material in it definitely made up for the doofy stuff. So if it sounds intriguing to you I say, Go for it!



“Conceptually, sexting is a timeless phenomenon. Nude photos, erotic letters, and the like have been documented throughout civilization. While something like the Anthony Weiner scandal seems unique to our time, there are precursors, such as the salacious love letters written by U.S. president Warren G. Harding to his neighbor’s wife, in which he nicknamed his penis Jerry and her vagina Mrs. Pouterson.

I wish I had been there when the historian analyzing the letters had the eureka moment: ‘Hey, wait a second. Whenever he says “Mrs. Pouterson,” I think he means...his neighbor’s wife’s vagina?’

Most strange to me is that, whereas ‘Mrs. Pouterson’ is a horrible nickname for a vagina, ‘Warren G. Harding’ is actually a great nickname for a penis.”

-pg.178

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Book List 2015: June

June

* = reread
[GN] = Graphic Novel / Comic Anthology



82.

A Blink of the Screen:
Collected Short Fiction

by. Terry Pratchett


While A Slip of the Keyboard collected Pratchett’s short non-fiction pieces, A Blink of the Screen collects his short fiction: both from the Discworld and outside of it.


“...short stories always seem to cost me blood, and I envy the people who do them for fun.”
-pg. 107, intro to “Turntables of the Night”


I feel that quote pretty accurately sums up the book. Terry Pratchett is my favorite author, but unfortunately short stories are not where his strengths lie.

That being said, “The Sea and the Little Fishes” was amazing. And it was cool reading “The High Meggas” which was the short story that would later spawn The Long Earth series he wrote with Stephen Baxter.



“Short stories, as I have said, cost me blood. I envy those people who can write one with ease, or at least what looks like ease. I doubt if I’ve done more than fifteen in my life.

‘The Sea and Little Fishes,’ though, was one of the rare story ideas that just popped up. About two weeks later Bob Silverberg popped up, too, and asked if I could write a story for the Legends anthology.

I’m not sure what would have happened if he hadn’t; it would probably have become the start of a novel, or a thread in one. It was originally about a thousand words longer, containing a scene that did nothing but slow it down, according to Bob. He was right. It was quite a good scene, nevertheless, and turned up later in Carpe Jugulum.

The title? Totally made up, but it sounded right. For reasons I can’t quite remember now, some years ago I invented the ‘ancient’ saying, ‘The big sea does not care which way the little fishes swim,’ and put it in the mouth of a character. It sounded wise, in a slightly stupid kind [end of 189] of way, and I thought it also sounded like the kind of title you got on an award-winning story, in which surmise I turned out to be entirely wrong.”

-pg189-190, intro to “The Sea and Little Fishes”





* [GN]   83.  [GN] *

X-Men:
Days of Future Past

written by. Christ Claremont & John Byrne
pencils by. John Byrne


A collection of The Uncanny X-Men issues 138-143 & the Uncanny X-Men Annual#4, including the famous “Days of Future Past” storyline wherein the X-Men get a glimpse of the future and must do everything they can to prevent it from coming to be.


You know, these old comics are pretty wonderful in their own way.

I always forget that the actual “Days of Future Past” story is really short! It’s had such a huge impact on the franchise and yet it was originally just a normal two-issue story.

And yet I will argue that the real gem of this collection isn’t that story, it’s the Annual issue titled “Nightcrawler’s Inferno!” It tells the story of the gang throwing a surprise birthday party for Nightcrawler and how it results in them all getting dragged down into hell and fighting off demon attacks and the unwanted advances of Satan!

Also issue 143 “Demon” is great as well! It’s about how Kitty Pride is left alone in the mansion on Christmas Eve and has to single-handedly fight off a demonic intruder. And *Spoiler Alert* ends in a wonderfully Home Alone style “Kevin! What did you do to my room!” moment. Glorious.

You know what? All the issues in here are pretty great. Great volume all around!



“‘Wolverine, call me “Professor,” “Professor X,” “Professor Xavier,” or even, if you must, “Charles.” But not “Charley.” Is that understood?’

‘Sure, Chuck.’”





84.

Trigger Warning:
Short Fictions and Disturbances

by. Neil Gaiman

A collection of short stories, tales, and scripts from Neil Gaiman.


Personally, I feel like shorter pieces are where Gaiman truly excels. Like with any short story collection some are much better than others, but there’s some real gems in here. If you’re in the mood for a great collection of lightly spooky / fantastical short stories then look no further.



“There are things that wait for us, patiently, in the dark corridors of our lives. We think we have moved on, put them out of mind, left them to desiccate and shrivel and blow away; but we are wrong. They have been waiting there in the darkness, working out, practicing their most vicious blows, their sharp hard thoughtless punches into the gut, killing time until we came back that way.”





[GN]   85.   [GN]

Wolverine and the X-Men, vol. 1:
Tomorrow Never Learns

written by. Jason Latour
pencils by. Mahmud Asrar

The story of the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning continues.


As you’ll recall from last month, I finished up Jason Aaron’s run on Wolverine and the X-Men. I decided to keep reading and see if they found the series a worthy successor.

Answer: it does not & I’m not gonna fish in these waters anymore, because this one was not at all enjoyable.





86.

To Kill a Mockingbird

by. Harper Lee

In a small Southern town a young girl's life is turned upside down when her father (a prominent lawyer) is chosen to defend a black man against egregious charges.


I know this book is super famous, but I had never read it up until now. And it is amazing! No wonder its considered a classic.

If you’ve never read it I highly recommend you go out and rectify that. It definitely lives up to the hype and its message is just as poignant now as it was then.



“Aunt Alexandra was fanatical on the subject of my attire. I could not possibly hope to be a lady if I wore breeches; when I said I could do nothing in a dress, she said I wasn’t supposed to be doing things that required pants. Aunt Alexandra’s vision of my deportment involved playing with small stoves, tea sets, and wearing the Add-A-Pearl necklace she gave me when I was born; furthermore, I should be a ray of sunshine in my father’s lonely life. I suggested that one could be a ray of sunshine in pants just as well, but Aunty said that one had to behave like a sunbeam, that I was born good but had grown progressively worse every year. She hurt my feelings and set my teeth permanently on edge, but when I asked Atticus about it, he said there were already enough sunbeams in the family and to go about my business, he didn’t mind me much the way I was.”
-pg. 92-93





[GN]   87.   [GN]

Ms. Marvel, vol.3:
Crushed

written by. G. Willow Wilson & Mark Waid
pencils by. Elmo Bondoc, Takeshi Miyazawa, & Humberto Ramos

Kamala Khan’s adventures as Ms. Marvel continue as she is forced to curb Loki’s antics, assist S.H.I.E.L.D. with lunch-room clean-up duty, and learn how to deal with inappropriate advances from young men.


Three volumes in and I’m still loving this series! Seriously, it is so great. & it makes me so happy that the new generation of kids has something like this to introduce them to the mythology of superheroes.

My only complaint with this volume is that a couple of the artists in it gave Kamala a button nose instead of the beautifully hawkish nose Adrian Alphona established her with. And it irks me! Her nose was such a great part of her character’s design!

*harumph*

(still an amazing series though)



“‘What do you want me to say, Kamran? You won? You outsmarted me? You’re right about everything? Fine, whatever. You won. Now let me leave.’

‘No, that’s not what I want. I want you to turn around, walk back the way you came, stand in front of Lineage, and apologize for making me look like an idiot.’

He’s going to hit me. He’s actually going to hit me.

‘But since I know you’re not going to do that, we can settle it right here instead.’

Suddenly, I feel calm. I don’t feel ashamed anymore, or guilty. I realize something very important.

He might look like a handsome prince, but he’s actually a total BUTTWIPE.

‘You want a showdown? You want to pretend this is the big climatic battle of your own personal action film?

Fine with me.’”

-issue 15

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Book List 2015: May

May

* = reread
[GN] = Graphic novel or comic anthology



[GN]   59 & 60   [GN]

X-Men:

Prelude to Schism
written by. Paul Jenkins
pencils by. Will Conrad, Roberto de la Torre, Clay Mann, & Andrea Mutti

Schism
written by. Jason Aaron & Kieron Gillen
pencils by. Daniel Acuna, Frank Cho, Alan Davis, Adam Kubert, Carlos Pacheco, & Billy Tan


Scott Summers (aka Cyclops) has finally created a home for mutant kind on the island of Utopia. But when a newly reformed Hellfire Club stirs up anti-mutant hysteria Summers gets backed into a corner and is forced to make a decision in which there are no right answers...one that could break apart the X-Men for good.



So in Ms. Marvel theres a story where Wolverine has a cameo by and he briefly mentions the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning and I was like, What? Theres a Jean Grey school? When did that happen? So I read Jason Aarons Wolverine and the X-Men in order to see what that was about. And then Wolverine and the X-Men talks about how the school was started after Wolverine quit the X-Men due to the events of the Schism storyline. So my curiosity then forced me to find out what happened here!

[as you can tell superhero comics are a rabbit hole of intertwining stories]

Prelude to Schism:
This one is kind of stupid actually. Its a collection of 4 comics, each one taking a look at a different mutant leader (Professor X, Magneto, Cyclops, and Wolverine) and looking at how their past and personality effects how they lead. While I imagine it would be great for newer X-Men fans, it kind of seemed like a glorified clip show to me.

Schism:
This oneon the other hand—is quite exciting. My only problem is that the artists in this book cant draw young adults to save their life. The young adults all look like weird skinny adults? Something like that. In Wolverine and the X-men comics theyre generally pretty good at drawing young people, so seeing those characters looking all crazy was especially unsettling.

In other news: F*#% Cyclops. Now that I know why the split happened I am totally on team Wolverine here. I mean, Cyclops was always a dull character, but now he is officially the worst.





[GN] *  61.  * [GN]

Yotsuba&
volumes 1-5

by. Kiyohiko Azuma

The light-hearted tales of an endlessly energetic and fun-loving little kid named Yotsuba and the many little adventures she has with her father and her next-door neighbors.


Perhaps the cutest comic series ever? Quite possibly!

Normally I dont put manga on here unless Ive read the entire series, because listing becomes very complicated when you’re reading 30+ volumes of something over a long period. But unfortunately that also means that some beloved series of mine dont always get included, because Ill jump in and out of them at different storylines, instead of reading through the whole thing straight.

But these lists subtly change over the years and its time I started working in the manga Im re-reading.

And nothing puts a smile on my face faster than Yotsuba&! It is just the sweetest thing. Its like everything you love about little kids distilled into comic form. It is one of my all time favorite comics.




62.

Machine Man

by. Max Barry

After an engineer loses a leg in a lab accident he starts to realize just how inefficient flesh is and starts down a road of trying to build himself a better body. However, the people around him all have their own plans for his designs.


It was an enjoyable read, but Im really at a loss about what the point of it was. It seemed to be advocating for people to embrace technology over biology, while simultaneously making that seem like a really horrible idea.

So who knows. I will say this though: Max Barrys novels are not always brilliantly plotted, but they are always incredibly interesting. They never fail to make you look at a part of our world in a different way.



“Oh. I didn’t try to kill myself. I’ve been saying this over and over. I don’t want to kill myself. I just want to replace my legs.”
-pg. 70





*   63.   *

Hogfather

by. Terry Pratchett

When an assassin is hired to do away with the jolly gift-giving winter deity known as the Hogfather, Death must fill in for him while his granddaughter Susan tries to save his life.


I think that after Night Watch this is the next Discworld story Im most familiar with (although that probably has a lot to do with the fact that I watch the movie adaptation every Christmas).

The book is a bit of an odd one in that parts of it are just phenomenal and other parts fall a bit flat.

As far as Christmas satire goes it doesnt get any better than this. Not to mention that it stars the wonderful character Susan Sto Helit & provides some of the most philosophically brilliant passages of the entire series.

Yet, Ive gotta say that the plot is far from streamline. It tends to meander all over the place.

Its sad, there are only 3 novels starring Susan and Im already through 2 of them! ;___;




“After tea she read them a story. They liked her stories. The one in the book was pretty awful, but the Susan version was well received. She translated as she read.

‘...and then Jack chopped down the beanstalk, adding murder and ecological vandalism to the theft, enticement and trespass charges already mentioned, but he got away with it and lived happily ever after without so much as a guilty twinge about what he had done. Which proves that you can be excused just about anything if youre a hero, because no one asks inconvenient questions. And now,’ she closed the book with a snap, ‘its time for bed.’”
-pg. 24-25





[GN]   64. & 65.   [GN]

Wolverine and the X-Men:

Volume 5
written by. Jason Aaron
pencils by. Nick Bradshaw, David Lopez, & Steve Sanders

Volume 6
written by. Jason Aaron
pencils by. Ramon K. Perez


These comics continue to be thoroughly enjoyable. Especially because these ones dont have any of the continuity/crossover madness the last couple did AND they start introducing some fun new characters in these two volumes. Plus all the usual silly-good-fun adventures continue.

The only real negative I have with the series is that I think they could do with a little less superhero-y action and a little more character-development drama overall. Don’t get me wrong, I love action, but theyve got such fun and compelling characters and thats the part that really makes the series interesting.





66.

The Drunken Botanist:
The Plants That Create the Worlds Great Drinks

by. Amy Stewart
design by. Tract Sunrize Johnson

A guide to all the plants that go into the creation of alcohol.


I know its really obvious when you think about it, but I had never really stopped to consider how all our alcohol comes from plants. Think about it! Its all plants. Barley, hops, corn, rye, rice, grapes, and on and on.

Its very fun book that really gives you an idea of how these various alcoholic drinks are created and what theyre created from. The only downside is that it has a guidebook type format, that makes it ill-suited for sitting down and reading it at any length.



“Before we left, we stood in the doorway for a minute and looked around us. There wasn’t a bottle in the store that we couldn’t assign a genus and species to. Bourbon? Zea mays, an overgrown grass. Absinthe? Artemisia absinthium, a much-misunderstood Mediterranean herb. Polish vodka? Solanum tuberosum—a nightshade, which is a weird family of plants if ever there was one. Beer? Humulus lupulus, a sticky climbing vine that happens to be a close cousin to cannabis. Suddenly we weren’t in a liquor store anymore. We were in a fantastical greenhouse, the world’s most exotic botanical garden, the sort of strange and overgrown conservatory we only encounter in our dreams.”
-pg.xi





67.

Nation

by. Terry Pratchett

A storm of awesome proportions wrecks havok upon a an island in the Pacific and leaves a young boy and a ship-wrecked girl as the islands sole survivors. Together they manage to overcome their differences, set aside what they thought they knew, and build a new kind of world.


In A Slip of the Keyboard Terry Pratchett mentions that he considers this book to be the greatest thing he has ever written. It was actually one of the few Pratchett books Id never read, so I figured I needed to rectify that.

Overall its a very good book and I can understand why he felt such a personal love for it.

But in the end, I found the whole thing to be too much of an act of wish-fulfillment for my tastes. Definitely worth the read though.



“‘It is not all about you! I envy your rage, demon boy. It fills you up! It feeds you, gives you strength. But the rest of us listen for the certainty, and there is nothing. Yet in our heads we know there must be...something, some reason, some pattern, some order, so we call upon silent gods, because they are better than the darkness. That is it, boy. I have no answers you.’”
-pg. 235





68.

Hard-boiled Wonderland and
the End of the World

by. Haruki Murakami
translated by. Alfred Birnbaum

A mental cryptographer uses his own subconscious to turn data into codes and back again. However, when a rogue scientist tricks him into coding a program into his brain it creates a time bomb in his mind. And if he cant reverse what was done to him in time it will mean the end of him.

&

A wanderer trades his shadow to enter a strange town encircled by a massive wall wherein he takes a job as a dream reader. However, as he talks with the townsfolk he begins to realize that things arent quite what they seem and if he doesnt get his shadow back hes going to slowly become just like all the other townsfolk.


I love this book! However, it is so far from normal that I have a hard time getting anyone else to read it. It takes place through two parallel storylines that alternate chapters: The Hard-boiled Wonderland (a slightly fantastic/cyber-punk version of our reality) and The End of the World (a strange fantasy town inhabited only by unicorns and people with no spark). As both stories progress we begin to see how exactly they are connected and what it all means for the main character.

The novel is this wonderful blend of science-fiction and fantasy. Of reality and dream. Murakami masterfully weaves together a story unlike anything Ive read before. Its wonderfully different and intricate. He is able to do that wonderful thing of writing words that tell his story, but writing them in a way that instills a specific mindset into you and you dont even realize he did it to you until later.



“I left the apartment wide open—as if I had any other option—and took the elevator down. I waited for the cab behind the hedge by the entranceway. It was one-thirty by my watch. Two and a half hours since the demolition derby had begun. A very long two-and-a-half hours ago.

Housewives filed past, leek and daikon radish tops sticking up from supermarket bags. I found myself envying them. They hadn’t had their refrigerators raped or their bellies slashed. Leeks and daikon and the kids’ grades—all was right with the world. No unicorn skulls or secret codes or consciousness transfers. This was normal, everyday life.”
-pg. 161





69.

Battle Royale

by. Koushun Takami
translated by. Yuji Oniki

In a world much like our own a wicked event is held in the area we know of as Japan. Every year a highschool class is chosen to participate in the Battle Royale: a game wherein everyone is taken to a remote location and forced to kill or be killed. The last person standing is the winner. This is the story of Trial#12 and the Ninth Grade Class B of Shiroiwa Junior High.


I heard that the movie Battle Royale was based on a novel and I had to see what exactly the source material for such a movie was like.

And you know what? The book is much, MUCH better than the movie! If you liked the movie you should really check out the book. If youve never seen the movie? Well, then perhaps you should read the book first then lord it over your cinephile friends.

It very much has the feel of a modern day successor to Lord of the Flies. Except wherein the Lord of the Flies dealt with a group of kids going nutty due to a lack of adult-instilled order, Battle Royale is about adults being the root source of kids madness.

And yes, the whole thing is bloody and violent and over-the-top, but its also such an engaging story. While the movie just featured the bloodshed, the book is able to really develop all the characters. No one dies without you knowing who they were, what they were like, and what their murderer was like, how they felt about it, and why they did what they did. Almost no one is overlooked. The author makes sure that anytime someone dies it matters. It forces you to acknowledge the humanity of not only the victims, but also the murderers.



[On a side note: there is a new translation done by Nathan Collins recently released. I checked it out from the library and compared to it the old version I had read and Ive gotta say that although the new one has a much cooler cover, the Yuji Oniki version felt far superior to me. The Collins translation is quite similar, but his verb choices often felt rather flat to me. So, if you have a choice Id personally recommend you go with the Yuji Oniki version.]



“Without any warning Kyoichi shot at Shogo. Shuya saw Shogo quickly duck. As he heard the explosion from the shotgun that Shogo still held in his kneeling position, sparks flew from the muzzle like a flamethrower, and the next moment Kyoichi’s right arm was gone. Bloody mist filled the air. Kyoichi gazed blankly at the half-sleeve of his school-uniform. The rest of his sleeve, from his elbow to the hand that was holding the gun, was now lying on the grass. Shogo quickly pumped the shotgun and loaded the next shot. A red plastic shell flew out to the side after spitting out its pellets.

‘AIEEEE!’ Kyoichi screamed like an animal as he suddenly realized what had happened. Shuya thought he would fall to his knees.

But he didn’t. The representative instead ran for his arm. He pried the gun loose from his right hand with his left hand. Like a one-man baton relay. Great. Shuya once again felt like he was watching a bad horror flick. Or better yet, reading a bad horror novel.

Damn, this was bad.”
-pg. 117





[GN]   79, 70*,71, 80, 81.   [GN]

Batwoman:
volumes 0-4

Kate Kane is many things. She is the daughter of an elite soldier, a twin to a sister she thought was long dead, a protector of those who cant protect themselves, an award-winning gymnast, the head of her class, a Westpoint academy exile, a lesbian, a former alcoholic, and a vigilante known as the Batwoman. Now shes attracted the attentions of a murderous cult, a succeed-at-any-cost government agency, the beautiful head detective of the Gotham PD, and the legendary Batman himself. Kate Kanes life is about to get intense.



Volume 0: Elegy
written by. Greg Rucka
pencils by. J.H.Williams III

Id say this book is 3/5ths Phenomenal and 2/5ths Just Alright. The backstory on Kate Kane is really intriguing, but her modern-day mission wasnt as riveting.


vol. 1: Hydrology
written by. J.H.Williams III & W.Haden Blackman
pencils by. J.H.Williams III & Amy Reeder

I cant say enough nice things about this volume. It is brilliant. 5/5. A+. I stumbled into it at a comic shop and after glancing through it I bought it immediately The style, the artwork, the story, the plotting, everything is firing on all cylinders. Even if youre not a Batwoman fan Id recommend giving this one a try for the pure aesthetic of it all.


vol. 2: To Drown the World
written by. J.H.Williams III & W.Haden Blackman
pencils by. Amy Reeder, Trevor McCarthy, Rob Hunter, Pere Perez, & Richard Friend

The story becomes much more superhero-y here. Not that that is a bad thing necessarily, but it is definitely much more campy than before.


vol. 3: Worlds Finest
written by. J.H.Williams III & W.Haden Blackman
pencils by. Trevor McCarthy & J.H.Williams III

While some it suffers from a disjointed artistic flow and a slightly over-the-top story, the rest provides a really satisfying end to the Weeping Woman storyline established in Vol.1 and some really fantastic character development for Batwoman.


vol. 4: This Blood is Thick
written by. J.H.Williams III & W.Haden Blackman
pencils by. Trevor McCarthy, Francesco Francavilla, Walden Wong, Sandu Florea, & Derek Fridolfs

A new storyline is established and it is a doozy! Im really excited to see how it plays out. I love how Kate Kane is given a such a solid support network. It is a refreshing change from the usual brooding-lone-wolf angle that everyone uses and no one but Batman has mastered.



“The move she uses doesn’t exist in any fighting styles I’ve studied. It’s something she invented herself. Almost got the best of me.

It’s not just the moves that gives her away…

...it’s the way her eyes burn.

Those eyes tell me she won’t ever be a victim again.

I’m not sure what she’s after…

...but this is far from over.” 
-from Batwoman, vol1: Hydrology





[GN]   72. & 74.   [GN]

Wolverine and the X-Men:

Volume 7
written by. Jason Aaron
pencils by. Nick Bradshaw, Salvador Espin, Pasqual Ferry, Pepe Larraz, & Walden Wong

Volume 8
written by. Jason Aaron
pencils by. Nuno Alves, Chris Bachalo, Nick Bradshaw, Shawn Crystal, Karl Kesel, Pepe Larraz, Todd Nauck, Victor Olazaba, Ramon K. Perez, Steve Sanders, Tim Townsend, Walden Wong


The end of Jason Aarons run on Wolverine and the X-Men.


Alas! While superhero stories never truly end, this is certainly the end of this particular storyline. And it goes out in high form. Id say that these last two volumes are some of the best ones of the series.

Not only is there plenty of crazy mutant high-school shenanigans, but they also have some fun character development, and add some really interesting layers to Wolverines character.

Despite the fact that a couple volumes in Aarons run went off the tracks with Marvel continuity madness, I think this was a really great series. Just all sorts of good ol fashioned X-Men fun.



Fun is not a dirty word.

That was my mantra coming into this series.

The X-Men had just gone through an ideological split, a Schism, which prompted Wolverine to head back to Westchester, to the X-Mens old home base, where he reopened the school for young mutants. I was given the chance by my esteemed editors, Nick Lowe and Axel Alonso, to create that new school.

I knew right away, I wanted it to be the wildest, craziest school the Marvel Universe had ever seen.

I wanted to reclaim the tag line that once ran above the title of the original X-Men series: The Strangest Teens of All!

Above all else, I wanted it to be fun.

...

I didnt want to write about dark and serious X-Men. I wanted to write something that was full of joy and laughs but was more than just a series of jokes. Something that was about growing up, about what it means to be an oddball kid in school, to be a parent.
-from Jason Aarons Afterward




[GN]  *  73, 77, 75, 78.  *  [GN]

A Softer World:

vol.1: Truth and Beauty Bombs
vol.3: Everybody Get Got
vol.2: Second Best Isnt So Bad
vol.4: Lets Do Something Wrong

by. Joey Comeau & Emily Horne

The collections of the webcomic A Softer World (aka my favorite strip of all time.)


A Softer World was not only one of my favorite comics, but it was also one of my all-around favorite things. Joey Comeau and Emily Hornes work spoke to me in a way that few things ever have.

Sadly, this month they decided to end the series on a high-note and ride off into the sunset. So as a kudos to them I went back and reread all of my ASW collections.

My love for A Softer World is the personal kind you cant really properly put into words. The comic is touching and yet funny. It holds up the darker parts of life and shows you how to see the lightness in them.

I think Ill save the rest of my thoughts about for when I read the final Best-of volume they just successfully Kickstartered, but suffice it to say that I highly recommend you take a journey through their archives. You wont regret it.







[GN]   76.   [GN]

Pretty Deadly
vol.1: The Shrike

written by. Kelly Sue Deconnick
art by. Emma Rios

The tale of a monster, a disgraced father/husband, Death, the woman he loves, & Deathface Ginny: a woman who is neither dead or alive, mortal or god.


First off, I feel obliged to mention that this is a mainstream comic wherein the creation team was 4/5ths female! What!? Amazing.

As for the comic itself: pretty amazing as well. Personally I would have liked if it had taken a slower pace and gone in depth into all its wonderful characters, but alas, Ill take what I can get.

The whole thing is an enjoyable tale that combines fairy tales/legends into the Western genre.



“Attend the song of Deathface Ginny, and how she came to be
A wrath of rage for men who’d cage
And harm what should be free.”

-Pretty Deadly, issue 1