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Books 1-10.
Books 11-20.
Books 21-30.
Books 31-40.
Books 41-50.
Books 51-60.
61. Hmong in Minnesota by Chia Youyee Vang.
62. Myths and Legends of the Sioux by Marie L. McLaughlin.
63. Heir of Sea and Fire (Book Two of the Riddlemaster trilogy) by Patricia McKillip.
64. Sea, Swallow Me and Other Stories by Craig Laurance Gidney.
65. Essential Incredible Hulk Volume 1 by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, et al.

66. I Shall Destroy All the Civilized Planets: The Comics of Fletcher Hanks by Fletcher Hanks and Paul Karasik. Post-Sycamore Hill a few of us spent the afternoon in Asheville and stopped by Malaprop's Bookstore. There, glancing at their graphic novel selection, Colonel Rowe and I were looking at a volume of reprinted nuttiness from '40s comics and came across a story by Fletcher Hanks. We showed it to Alice who, in her knowing way, said that a volume of his work had been reprinted and it was even crazier all at once. And it is. At first glance Hanks' art looks unschooled, almost naive--the proportions of his figures, particularly on Stardust the Super Wizard, are elongated or distorted. But a look at Hanks' villains makes it clear that he's working in the sphere of the grotesque, and a survey of the crimes and punishments he depicts only reinforces that. A mob of criminals launches a hyperbolic assault on New York City; a madman called the Demon sends a thousand-foot wave against it. In both cases--in most of these stories, in fact--the hero waits until after a few (or a few thousand) people have died to intercede, even when they know what's being planned beforehand. Villains are punished by being frozen alive, hurled into space, changed into rats, combined into one body (!), and perhaps craziest of all, turned into a giant head, hurled at a headless space giant, and absorbed into the giant's body. Yeah. AND THEN there's the afterword, in which Karasik, who edited this collection, tells the story (in comic form) of meeting Hanks' son, who enlightens him as to the abusive and drunken nature of his father. This is seriously weird shit, people. By which I mean that you should read it, of course.
snurri: (Default)
Books 1-10.
Books 11-20.
Books 21-30.
Books 31-40.
Books 41-50.
Books 51-60.
61. Hmong in Minnesota by Chia Youyee Vang.
62. Myths and Legends of the Sioux by Marie L. McLaughlin.
63. Heir of Sea and Fire (Book Two of the Riddlemaster trilogy) by Patricia McKillip.
64. Sea, Swallow Me and Other Stories by Craig Laurance Gidney.

65. Essential Incredible Hulk Volume 1 by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, et al. I love these Essential collections that Marvel's been doing (and DC, under the Showcase Presents banner); thick black-and-white reprints of the early runs of their classic (and sometimes not-that-classic) comics. If these had been in the library when I was a kid I would have read every single one of them; as it was, I had to settle for scattered issues of the Hulk. Most of these early issues are new to me, aside from the origin story, which has of course been recapped a thousand times. What's interesting here, aside from the weird forgotten villains like the Mole-Man's rival Tyrannus and the lame forgettable villains like Boomerang, are the changes the Hulk/Banner transformations go through as Smilin' Stan tries to figure out how this power works, exactly. The Hulk goes from gray to green (which, given the black and white, you'd miss entirely if you were coming to the character cold), from a day/night Banner/Hulk cycle to changes brought on by stress (but not anger specifically, and it works both ways--if the Hulk gets upset he changes into Banner), from somewhat dull intelligence to Banner's-brain-in-Hulk's-body (and even Banner's HEAD on Hulk's body) to something like the familiar big green dummy who can't even remember that he's the same guy as Bruce the scientist. Also, the first iterations of the "Soldiers can't hurt hulk/Hulk is the strongest one there is/Why won't humans leave Hulk alone?" Hulk is like a passive-aggressive drunk guy at a sporting event where his team is losing; he can't decide if he wants to get into a fight or go cry in a corner.
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Books 1-10.
Books 11-20.
Books 21-30.
Books 31-40.
41. Jade Tiger by Jenn Reese.
42. Norse Code by Greg van Eekhout.
43. A Peculiar Imbalance: The Fall and Rise of Racial Equality in Early Minnesota by William D. Green.
44. The Carpet Makers by Andreas Eschbach, translated by Doryl Jensen.
45. The Latehomecomer: A Hmong Family Memoir by Kao Kalia Yang.
46. Sleeper: Season One by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips.
47. Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life, Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World, and Scott Pilgrim & the Infinite Sadness by Bryan Lee O'Malley.
48. Dungeon: Zenith: Volume Two: The Barbarian Princess and Dungeon: The Early Years: Volume One: The Night Shirt by Joann Sfar and Lewis Trondheim with Christophe Blain.
49. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume III: Century, Chapter 1: 1910 by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill.

50. The Darker Mask: Heroes from the Shadows, edited by Gary Phillips and Christopher Chambers. This is a themed anthology, though I'm not 100% clear on the theme; it's about superheroes (or at least super-powered individuals), but beyond that it seems like it could be about race or class or subverting the paradigm or some combination of those elements. Superheroes in prose are tricky (trust me), and this anthology is a bit uneven. My fave stories were by Naomi Hirahara (I'm going to look for her mysteries, now), Mat Johnson (ditto his stuff), and my pal Doselle Young. (Which is good, because his inclusion was the primary reason I bought this. Now we just need a complete TPB of The Monarchy!)
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Did I enjoy this film? Yes. Does it have problems? Many.

Heath Ledger = Good. )
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Probably you won't be seeing much of me for the next week or so (unless you'll be at ReaderCon Yay!), but since I haven't seen many people linking to it, it's worth pointing out that Act One of Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog is live. Neil Patrick Harris is killing me, and Felicia Day SIGH. Next installment goes up Thursday.

As a bonus, here's a link to Donald Soffritti's blog, where he posts occasional portraits of superheroes in their old age. The blog is in Italian, but the pictures--like this one of Doctor Octopus--need no translation.

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For the Superman fans among us, and you know who you are: Studio 360 has a whole mess of audio stories relating to the Big Blue Cheese, with everyone from Art Spiegelman to Michael Chabon to Bryan Singer.
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Itsy Bitsy Spider-Man! Oh man do I want this. Maybe if I buy it for every kid I know I can sneak one for myself? Make sure to watch the video.

From another region of the Internet altogether comes this review of Rabid Transit: Long Voyages, Great Lies, pointed out by Mr. Barzak. Very thoughtful (and favorable, overall) look at that publication, with some kind words about my story "Shackles."

Not much news to report. Even though I spent far too much time slacking off this weekend for my liking, I still managed to get two chapters on paper. I had a period of a week or two where I wasn't sure what was going on with the new book; it's looking like it might be long, for one thing--perhaps even more-than-one-book long. I have misgivings about this, but then I'm the one who decided to take War and Peace as one of my models. Anyway, I like how it's shaping up so far, so I guess I'll just try not to worry and see how it goes.

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