This is a book review and science fiction blog, for the most part, with the odd convention report and travel notes. And maybe the occasional Celtic goddess, such as the Great Raven...
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Friday, December 31, 2021
To My Followers - A Brief Info Post
Comics And Me!
Fair Use |
When I was a child, my mother wouldn’t let me have comics in the house. There was something ironic about that, because she told me that she had had comics as a child, till her brother-in-law threw out her collection, sneering, “Really, people going to the moon? What nonsense!” Well. It was the 1930s… and the other day, she remarked how wonderful it was to be still around in such an amazing era as ours.
I didn’t argue with Mum, I just read some Superman comics with my best friend, Denise, whose family owned a boarding house. The boarders placed their soft drink bottles in cases at the back of the house and we took them to the local milk bar, where we exchanged them for the deposit money you got in those days for empty bottles, and used it to buy ice cream, more soft drinks and Superman comics. We took it all home and curled up with our booty to eat, drink and read.
Those comics were a treasure, and had some real information in them, apart from the stories. For example, I read in one comic the actual name of Roman Emperor Nero. In another, Superboy cheated on his school exam, by asking to go out for water and time travelling to ancient Egypt, where he saw the ancient Egyptian version of the Cinderella story(it’s in Herodotus’s Histories, in case you are curious. Her name was Rhodopis). Superboy used the information to pass his exam.
After those delightful years, I grew up without comics. It wasn’t that I had anything against them, but by the time I was an adult, comics were terribly expensive and graphic novels even more so, and my thought was that I could get a regular novel for the price of a graphic novel and have more bang for my buck.
It was different when I was buying for my library. I bought plenty of graphic novels. Admittedly they were graphic versions of actual novels and even Shakespeare, so required good readers, something many schools don’t seem to realise when they sneer at them.
Now, here I am in middle age and finally catching up with the comics I missed out on as a teen and young adult. And I’m loving it! The comics are being reprinted with stories under single covers, so you don’t have to try hunting up the originals on eBay or ABEBooks.
Reading the bios of comic book creators(see previous posts) I have discovered some of the fascinating storylines of their creations and decided to look them up.
Right now, I’m enjoying Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman, beginning from the very start, in which a crazy millionaire tries capturing Death for the power it will give him, and instead captures Morpheus, the god of sleep, Death’s younger brother. I believe this is going to be filmed for one of the streaming services. I do hope so, but must finish the stories.
I’ve downloaded other comic books, such as Agent Of Asgard and Vote Loki, both of which I’ve thoroughly enjoyed. The former I’ve been reading about in those bios, the latter I was curious about after the character known as President Loki turned up in an episode of the Loki TV series. The comic book character was a lot nicer than the one on TV, by the way.
I’ve recently discovered the TV series of Hawkeye, which is wonderful, being about a superhero who has no super powers, no magic and only as much tech as he can create. In one scene, he gets stuck in a giant Christmas tree and has to be rescued. But he does it all anyway, something admired by young Kate Bishop, his new apprentice.
Thing is, there are things I would have known if I had been a comics fan. Pretty much all the characters come from the comics, even the minor ones, as do most of the stories, though fiddled with. One character in this series is presented as a possible villain; if I’d read the comics, I’d have known they were not remotely villainous.
There is also Hawkeye’s comic book costume which he refuses to wear in the TV version, at least till near the end, when it has been made for him by a bunch of people who are into costuming and fights. I have been looking up on YouTube some of the animated shows made by Marvel in the 60s and there he is, wearing that dreadful costume!
Just before Christmas Eve I went out to buy some Jolabokaflod reading. I got that biography I mentioned in my last post, about King Oswald of Northumbria, at Dymock’s bookshop, then went to check out the newly reopened Minotaur Books, which specialises in comics, and bought two. One was a collection of short graphic stories about various Marvel characters, set during the various eras from the 1940s onwards. Captain America stuffs up, though well-meaning. Peter Parker, in the very long queue to see the original Star Wars, has to lose his place in the queue to be Spider-Man during a robbery, but gets in to see the movie after all.
Early Fantastic 4 cover. Fair use |
The other book, which I haven’t started yet, is some of the early Fantastic 4 stories which I bought because they were by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.
By the way, I finally managed to finish Michael Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures Of Kavalier And Klay, his novel about two cousins in the 1940s who create a hugely popular comic book series. Highly recommended if you haven’t read it!
Do you have some memories of comic books of your early years? Did you discover them early or late?
Friday, December 24, 2021
Jolabokaflod 2021!
A couple of years ago, I did my compulsory pre-Christmas post on the subject of Jolabokaflod, the Icelandic custom of spending Christmas Eve reading new books. Here is a link to it.
https://suebursztynski.blogspot.com/2018/12/compulsory-pre-christmas-post-happy.html
It’s such a nice custom! You get a catalogue of all the new releases for that year, in time to do your Christmas shopping. You give - and receive - new books, and settle down on Christmas Eve to read your new goodies, maybe with Maddy Prior and the Carnival Band playing Christmas themed songs, as I did the other year. What could be more perfect?
Thinking about it, it’s a great way to support the local publishing industry, though perhaps it might be a bit impractical in a country of around 26 million people - Australia - to be sending out a publisher catalogue to every household. Still, a nice idea.
I’m afraid my Jolabokaflod read this year isn’t Australian, and last time I read Miranda Kaufman’s Black Tudors, a wonderful book, but not Australian. Next time, though… perhaps Peter FitzSimon’s next Australian history book? I do love reading history books.
Here is this year’s choice. I did visit my local SF bookshop, Minotaur, which has recently reopened in another venue after the last lockdown, and am looking forward to reading some Marvel Comics, but I’m cracking this one open tonight.
For those who celebrate it, a happy Yuletide, with plenty of books!
Monday, December 13, 2021
Just Been To See…Dune!
Film poster. Fair use |
I have been to see the latest version of Dune, at my local cinema, and I have to say, I enjoyed it very much. The film only covered a small part of the novel and the next film won’t be out till 2023, but I had been warned and accepted it. It’s a long book, and you really can’t fit it all into a single film.
I read the book many years ago, and my copy is signed by the author, Frank Herbert, who came to Australia for a Perth SF convention and dropped into Melbourne, where I live, on his way home. There was a science fiction bookshop, Space Age, in the Melbourne CBD, and after 5.00 pm, when the shop closed, we got to meet Frank Herbert, who signed books and answered questions. He looked like Santa Claus at the time(later he shaved) and was just as jovial.
He was very much a plotter rather than a pantser, and said he had done a huge stack of research before he wrote a word. It really shows in his writing; the world building is brilliant.
I confess I have never read any of the sequels, but this novel is a classic. If anything can be compared to Tolkien’s work, just for the world building, it’s Dune.
It is thick as a brick, and if you want to read it, you need to focus. Dune is not something you can read in a sitting or two. If you haven’t read the book, you can just go and see the movie to get the flavour. Really. Don’t try reading it before the movie if you haven’t already.
It is about the adventures of a boy called Paul Atreides, son of a Duke, whose family are ordered to go and take over the planet Arrakis, aka Dune. Arrakis is a desert world where people wear stillsuits that recycle any water you sweat or pee out. On Arrakis, which has local tribes called the Fremen, if someone spits at you, it’s a compliment, because they are sharing their body’s water. That’s how dry it is! But it is also the only place in the universe that produces this stuff called the spice, which makes space navigation possible. Spice is produced by the giant sandworms. As you can imagine, anyone who runs this world is going to make a fortune, and the family leaving is not pleased.
I won’t go any further, to avoid spoilers, especially because it ends about a third of the way through the novel, but it certainly, in my opinion, is true to the spirit of the book. The visuals are stunning, as is the music. The sandworm that shot up out of the desert sands was truly scary.
The role of Paul is played by Timothee Chalamet, whom you have probably seen in other roles, such as Laurie in Little Women, and Henry V. He is a bit old for the role(Paul is 15), but convinces, and I guess Paul really has to be played by someone older than 15; there is too much he has to do to give the role to a teenager. On the other hand, his father, Duke Leto Atreides, is played by Oscar Isaac, whom you will have seen in Star Wars as Poe Dameron, the dashing rebel pilot. He is maybe a bit young for the role, but they did a good job of making him look somewhat older.
There are some familiar faces here. Duncan Idaho, working for the Duke, was played by Jason Momoa, whom you may have seen in Game Of Thrones as the Dothraki leader, or the title role in Aquaman. Another character, Gurney Halleck, was played by Josh Brolin(Thanos in the Avengers films), though without his musical instrument, the baliset. Dave Bautista, of Guardians Of The Galaxy fame, is Beast Raban, one of the baddies.
I have to admit, I had forgotten how much of the story was dominated by men until I watched this film. There are strong female characters, but not many women in general. There is the Reverend Mother of the order of the Bene Gesserit, who are a lot more than a bunch of space nuns. There is Paul’s mother Lady Jessica, trained by the Bene Gesserit, who is passing on her skills to her son. There is the (future) love interest, Chani(played by Zendaya), who is a tough Fremen fighter. (Liet Kynes, the scientist, was a male character in the book). Apart from these, I can’t think of any women who get more than a line or two.
Still, whether you have read the novel or not, it’s well worth seeing. Get your ice cream and popcorn and settle down for a great ride!
Thursday, December 02, 2021
Just Finished Reading…Amazing Fantastic Incredible: A Marvelous Memoir by Stan Lee, Peter David And Colleen Doran
Stan Lee, born Stanley Leiber, started life in a very poor Jewish family in New York and ended it hugely famous, a major part of the comics and comic films industry. He did a cameo in every film, right to the end. He even made a brief appearance in an episode of Agent Carter, a TV show about Peggy Carter, a British- born agent working in the US after losing her beloved Steve Rogers (aka Captain America). Lee was in one scene where he was at a shoe shine stand and asked for a newspaper.
I discovered this book at my local library and couldn’t resist. And very good it was, too, artwork by Colleen Doran and co-written with Peter David. Peter David started as a novelist, and I have read two of his fantasy books. He went on to write an early episode of Babylon 5 and many comics. This is very suitable for the memoir of a comic book writer, and the book is, also appropriately, in the form of a graphic novel, and I have to say the artwork by Colleen Doreen is great, reflecting the humour of the story.
And what a delightful graphic novel it is! It’s presented as a talk by Stan Lee to a crowded auditorium, in which he shows his life as a sort of PowerPoint, from his childhood through his first job writing comics and the war years when his writing skills were used for army films warning about VD, his first meeting with his beloved wife(love at first site - he was supposed to go on a blind date with someone else!) and his career that followed. The book was written just about the time when The Avengers: Age Of Ultron was about to be released.
At one point he visits his child self to inform him that he will never achieve his dream of becoming President…
My favourite scene was when his daughter and a friend are passing his study where he is dramatising a scene from a comic aloud. The friend asks what’s going on. The daughter says that’s her Daddy and he is working. The friend says her father is an accountant and much quieter!
I’m guessing this is written for younger readers as he has written a regular memoir. That’s fine with me!
It’s available, along with many of his other books and comics, in all the usual places. It’s even available in audiobook.