cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (Default)
At this post, I've read 108 books/graphic novels/etc since my semester ended in May and I started keeping track. Graphic novels go fast! But right now, it's so hot, I can barely bring myself to read, and the library is closed for a couple of days because their air conditioning is busted and the second-floor stacks are a health hazard. Ugh.


Graphic novels:

Various: Japan as Viewed by 17 Creators
(I'm glad I didn't read this right after it came out. I knew none of these creators at the time, and virtually nothing about the French comics market. Since then, I've had the chance to read or at least look at the work of eight or nine of the seventeen creators, which adds something to the reading experience. It's a nifty concept, and I enjoyed it.

I mostly prefer the Japanese creators' pieces, I think because so many of the French ones end up feeling unimaginative: the French creator feels alienated by Japan, writes a short, probably autobiographical, about how alien Japan feels; most likely also describes and depicts Japanese women entirely in sexual terms. They each have their own styles, and they're cool and talented creators, but the repetitiveness of some of the contributions to this anthology bored me. So did the incessant sexualization of all the Japanese women.

I have to single out Aurelia Aurita as my favorite French author here--she's funnier and earthier than most of her peers in this anthology, much more lively and joyful and humble about her experiences; I found her story delightful. I've got to keep an eye peeled for any other work by her in English! Come to think of it, she's the only non-Japanese female creator in the book, which probably has something to do with how different her story feels...

The Aurita story is neck in neck with the Anno Moyoco piece for my favorite. Anno's is short, spare of words, and more of a mood piece than a narrative; it is utterly gorgeous in both art and feeling, and very different than anything else I've seen by her.

I also very much enjoyed the Matsumoto Taiyo and Igarashi Daisuke stories; Etienne Davodeau gets props for originality and for making me laugh. Twin brother indeed.

This is highly recommended; it is really worth tracking it down for a look, and I think it deserves a place in a good graphic novel collection).


Manga:

Nakazawa Keiji: Barefoot Gen vols. 3-4
(human beings are amazing...).
cerusee: a white redheaded girl in a classroom sitting by the window chewing on a pencil and looking bored (Default)
Novels/prose books:

Heyer, Georgette: Footsteps in the Dark
(English. Mystery. Witty! Georgette Heyer. This one reads a bit like a Nancy Drew or a Hardy Boys novel for adults, and I think I mean that in a good way).


Graphic novels:

Spiegelman, Art: Maus II: And Here My Troubles Began
(Spiegelman really knows his way around a visual metaphor).

Various: Graphic Classics: Mark Twain
(it's good and it's fun, and Rick Geary always rocks my socks, but the main thing I get from this book is a renewed desire to read Twain as prose. Also, I felt that some of these adaptations were a little short on illustration. As I can read Twain's prose whenever I want to, I felt a bit cheated on that score).

Geary, Rick: A Treasury of Victorian Murder: The Mystery of Mary Rogers
(Geary does not fail to rock my socks with this.

I am unsatisfied over not having an answer to the mystery, but unsolved mysteries are par for the course here--it's not a fault of Geary's presentation of the material. It just so happens that I hadn't heard of this mystery before reading the book, so I had no existing sense of the mythology that sprang up around Mary Rogers' murder. I did already know some of mythologies of Lizzie Borden and of Jack the Ripper when I read Geary's books on them, so I was already anticipating those non-resolutions.

I really don't know why I can enjoy graphic novel true crime stories when the prose kind generally leave me loathing every part of the process. I think maybe because the kinds of true crime stories that make it into contemporary comics tend to be historical, and often the stuff of legend? To me, writing stories based on enduring cultural lore does not feel so sickeningly dehumanizing as what crowds the true crime shelves in bookstores...some of the motivation is the same (we thrill to the gruesome details of the crime, the intense emotion, the extremes of personality), but it's a little more...I don't know...processed. Passed off to history, with the families no longer around to be injured. Like fiction, there's no longer anything really at stake, and no one to be hurt. It's why historical fiction doesn't bug me when RPF does.

And a great deal of the appeal specifically of these Geary works is that the murders ARE unsolved and can almost certainly never BE solved, making them a sort of intellectual exercise, like mental chewing gum).


Manga:

Mashima Hiro: Fairy Tail vol. 2.

Kanari Yozaburo, author, Sato Fumiya, artist: The Kindaichi Case Files: Treasure Isle
(called it. Sort of).

Nakazawa Keiji: Barefoot Gen vols. 1-2
(the introduction is by Art Spiegelman. You know, it's hard to say which of these WWII-related works is more depressing, Maus or this.

I strongly recommend this manga to anyone feeling dissatisfied with works like Grave of the Fireflies or Town of Evening Calm, Country of Cherry Blossoms for not discussing Japanese culpability in WWII. The author's father was anti-war, and the manga is a fictionalized version of the author's own life--by pure chance, he survived the atomic blast at Hiroshima, lost most of his family at that time, and struggled to survive afterwards--and his father's (and presumably the family's as a whole) anti-war stance is laid out loud and clear, as are the dire social consequences of not supporting the war (among other unpleasant things, not being able to borrow food from neighbors when your pregnant wife and five children are slowly starving to death). The manga also firmly acknowledges Japanese racism and mistreatment of Korean and Chinese laborers; this is discussed in the context of the family's friendship with a Korean neighbor, who repays their open support and friendship with food he can barely spare.

Reading this is like a reading a weird hybrid of The Drifting Classroom and something by Tezuka: unrelenting horror and death in a blasted landscape, as written by a humanist who over and over and over again calls for peace and human friendship, infused with childlike optimism, energy, and the moral depth and clarity that only a wise adult can really possess. It's humanism from someone who has literally seen with his own eyes absolutely the worst that people can do to each other, and who still believes that we can be better than that, and who can show you both.

Highly recommended, but expect it to hurt).


Taniguchi Tomo: Aquarium
(I am slowly working my way through all the works reviewed in the shoujo issue of The Comics Journal!).

September 2012

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