Sunday!
The problem with Free Comic Book Day is that when you go to the comic book store, so has everybody else and her sister. You yell howdy and wave to the guy behind the counter, he waves back and nods and smiles without interrupting the sentence he’s in the middle of, you make one circuit around the store and smile and nod to the other regulars there, and leave without getting in the line that snakes to the back of the store.
It’s kind of like the Mall Crawl in Boulder in the early 90’s.
In any case, the shop was less crazy this week and we were able to pick up the books we failed to get last time.
I got my latest collection of Ultimate Comics Spider-Man (the one starring Miles Morales, if you haven’t read it yet and you are in any way inclined to do so, you need to pick it up) and Vol. 12 of Garth Ennis’s complete and total deconstruction of superheroes The Boys (Trigger warnings galore: just assume all of them) and I couldn’t believe that there was anyplace to go after Volume 11. Without getting into spoilers, I’ll just say that the ring was thrown into Mount Doom and the Ewoks were dancing. Well, Volume 12 is the proverbial scouring of the shire. I’m exhausted.
Maribou picked up SuperMutant Magic Academy, Giants Beware! (the first book of The Chronicles of Claudette), and Caliban (another book by Garth Ennis… based on the author alone. We know nothing more about the book than it’s Ennis taking on deep space sci-fi).
And we then had to leave the shoppe because we both knew that we could spend another hour there and pick up another 3 or 4 books each.
So… what are you reading and/or watching?
(Photo is “Movie Night“, taken by Ginny, used under a creative commons license.)
I’m still bullsh!tting.
I have to have this bullsh!t done by Tuesday.
“Caliban” reminds me of Whipping Star by Frank Herbert.
The alien in the novel is of last of the Caliban race.
Well worth reading. Highly recommended.Report
I’m coming close to finishing Season Two of The Killing. Enjoying it greatly!
I haven’t yet had much opportunity to get back in to Daredevil.
I hate it when I save something on the Weekend! post for Sunday! and then can’t remember by Sunday! what it was I was going to mention.Report
Not much in the way of viewing pleasures this week, but I have started two great books that I highly recommend to people here.
The first is Midnight Rising by Tony Horowitz. It’s a narrative history of John Brown, his raid on Harper’s Ferry, and it’s political and cultural impact, which (at least Horowitz argues) cumulated in a Civil War that might not have happened when it did without him. It’s an amazing read, especially right now when political extremism seems to be on the rise.
The second is David Grann’s The Lost City of Z, which is absolutely riveting. It’s essentially three stories wrapped into one: The meat of the story centers on the British explorer Percy Fawcett who disappeared in the Amazon jungles looking for El Dorado in 1925; the second is the rather astounding story of an amateur scientist who tried to find his remains 70 years later; lastly, there is the story of Grann’s going into the Amazon himself to see if he could find out whatever happened to Fawcett’s expedition. It’s a combination of history and journalism, and it’s an absolute page turner.
One of the interesting things I’ve noted reading both side by side is how very culturally different things were a mere century prior to my birth, in ways that seem positively weird from a 21st century point of view.
For example, I learned in Midnight Rising that it was somewhat common in this country that if a criminal had transgressed you or your family sufficiently (murdering one of them, for example), after their execution they would cut off a chunk of the copse and send it to you. (Nat Turner, for example, was cut up into many, many pieces, each of which was delivered to different family members killed in his failed uprising.)
Meanwhile, across the Atlantic in late 19th century Victorian England, if you were a teenage boy and your parents were wealthy enough to be member of the upper class but not so much so as to be considered aristocracy, you were sent to a military academy to be made into the *right* kind of Victorian gentleman. That part didn’t surprise me, obviously — but the methods used by these military academies to mold upstanding gentlemen very much did: flogging, having hot irons held against the boys’ flesh, forcing them to stick their naked arms outside windows in sub-frezzing temperatures for hours, or instructed a boy to put a stool on top of another stool on top of a table, then stand on it until an older boy was chosen to kick it all out from underneath you. All of this, by the way, not being hazing pranks pulled by older boys, but part of the actual intended curriculum.
I know of course that every generation foolishly looks back at previous ones and thinks how very much more civilized they are than those that came before, but… sheesh.Report
I found the free comic day that was at the shop next to the theater where I saw Age of Ultron….distasteful. In this case, it had been turned into a carny-level affair of ripping off people who were going to see AOU with cheap plastic crap and a spinning wheel where, for a third of the ticket price, you had a 1 in 20 chance to win a free movie ticket. While I often discuss “follow the money” arguments, this seemed a little much.
At any rate, I just got back from the comic store. The ones that I got were:
Udon’s free comic of Street Fighter. An interesting tale of the circular nature of street fighting. Udon still does really good work with Street Fighter. Now if only they could be a little more regular….
Injustice Annual 3: A great one. The first story gives us insight into how Raven and Wonder Woman were taken out of play as well as showing us a John Constantine who is the total bastard that Garth Ennis used to write. The second story addresses what happened to the Titans as well as emphasizes the burden that helped crack Superman. Seeing Connor Kent tell Superman that he wasn’t allowed to be a man who, in his grief over the Joker tricking him into killing his wife and child, made the (arguable) mistake of killing the Joker….That brings home the impossible burden that being Superman would entail. Still, out of the two stories, I give John Constantine the LORD PIMP award for this annual.
Uncanny X-men #32: While I’ve quit the comic, the internet sold me on this one. This comic could easily be a letter from Bendis on “what the hell happened to Cyclops revolution?”. While it isn’t completely consistent, going on camera and calling a revolution as a bluff is a reasonable action. When Cyclops says:
“We fought for them and they HATE us.
We fought alongside them and they kill our children in the streets.
We pack up and move to an island and they DESTROY it.
We move to another one and the $#%&#$% Avengers storm the #$%& beaches.”
it is almost like Bendis is channeling Captain America: Truth.
(Sidenote: Before Steve Rogers handed off the mantle to Falcon because diversity, it would be nice to ask “Hey, Captain Jackbooted Thug. May I speak to the Captain America from the Bush administration who spoke of how you need to stand up for your principles even when the current administration turns everyone against you?)
To me, this will be the capstone on my brief return to non-whatif/elseworld superhero comics. I’d say that, if Bendis were to keep this up, it wouldn’t be too late for me to change my mind but, with Secret Wars finally pulling the plug on the Ultimates Universe (Two years too late) and rebooting the main Marvel Universe into a more media license friendly version, we all know that isn’t going to happen.Report
I picked up In Banks’s Player of Games again after someone here( Katharina?) recommended it. It does pick up after a slow beginning , and it’s quite fun.Report
Happy you’re liking it.
I’m just starting to read Look to Windward, another of Banks’ Culture novels. I don’t entirely like his constructed utopia – hedonism and epicureanism fall short of what I regard as the meaning and purposes of life – but the books and the worldbuilding are still interesting, especially given the current lack of utopia and the abundance of dystopia.Report