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Novels/prose books:

Gillespie, Tarleton: Wired Shut: copyright and the shape of digital culture
(I read this for a paper, but it's worth reading for its own sake: this is the most insightful book about DRM, aka Digital Rights Management, that I've ever read, and I've read a few. Gillespie's a scholar of communications, which means the whole model is right up my alley, but I think it's quite readable even if you didn't major in communications).


Graphic novels/comics:

Bechdel, Alison: The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For
(the fantastic review in the NYT that prompted me to go out and buy this the very day I read it, described this as "Doonesbury with more references to sex toys." I think that this is not inaccurate. I'm at a loss as how to expand on that review, so I'll settle for endorsing this as an excellent trade for $25. Every single time I read something--anything--by Bechdel, I'm ever more impressed with her as a creator).

Cooke, Darwyn: The Spirit, vol. 1
(Cooke is one of the only comics creators around right now who evidently gets it. Cooke's distinctive retro style--in both tone and art--is the perfect match for Eisner's creation, without being any kind of aping of Eisner.).

Simmonds, Posy: Tamara Drewe
(this has a lot in common with Gemma Bovary, and that's not a complaint. I love Simmonds' books; they're beautifully written, and she really makes that prose/illustration/comics panels mix work. It's so smooth that it never even occurs to me how easily it could go awry).

Towle, Ben: Midnight Sun
(unspectacular, but a good read).


Manga:

Hayashi Seiichi: Red-Colored Elegy
(Dammit, I was all set to lift my eyebrows at this being considered a classic work of its era, but somewhere after page 85 or so, it got to me. Semi-coherent, yes, dated, yes, but oh my god, those double-page spreads stunned me, and I had to stop and stare at them. I didn't entirely connect with it, but I want prints of those pages on my wall anyway.).

Mizushiro Setona: After School Nightmare vols. 5-7
(captivating, as usual. The gorgeous art, the weird atmosphere, the premise, which feels strange and unsettling even for manga--yes, manga, the holy source of pure cracktastic oddity--the touching moments of human connection).

Takahashi Rumiko: One Pound Gospel vols. 3-4
(this must be the most concise romance Takahashi's ever written. There's nothing particularly about the formula that begs a quick resolution--she could easily have stretched this out for another eight or twelve volumes, and it would have been no worse the wear for it than my beloved Maison Ikkoku--so I'm guessing that it just got canceled. I would have been happy to read more, but this is fine, too; it doesn't come across as unduly rushed).

Tezuka Osamu: Black Jack vol. 1
(Christ, this is awesome. I knew it would be, because Shaenon Garrity said so, and she's always right about this kind of thing.).

on 2008-12-17 05:52 am (UTC)
octopedingenue: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] octopedingenue
IIRC volume 4 of One-Pound Gospel came out relatively recently, with a hiatus of like a decade in between, so I think she was just working on it really slowly or similar. I'm not sure Japan's allowed to cancel a Takahashi series anymore.

on 2008-12-17 03:36 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cerusee.livejournal.com
Ahh, good to know. American manga publishers are frustratingly inconsistent about citing the copyright date for the original, untranslated work their edition is based on, so it can be hard to figure out the actual timeline on work without doing more research than I'm generally up for. I'd assumed that this was old enough to predate Takahashi's status as one of the best-selling, most popular comics artists in the world, or that she decided to concentrate on something else, and ended it early for that, or something. Maybe that's what she did? It's not a bad ending, but it didn't have to come this early.

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