Sunday, May 25, 2014

38.
Title: [Daytripper]
Author: Gabriel Ba
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Paperback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 21, 2014
Rating: ****

The colleague who recommended this novel to me loves using Ba's text in class, but says that students often complain about it, saying it's too depressing.  In this case I'm inclined to agree with the students.  The protagonist of the episodic novel works as an obituary author, while working on his own attempt to write a "great novel," the likes of which his father has already achieved. At the conclusion of each episode, the protagonist dies, leaving curious and often sympathetic obituaries of his own.  On one level I hated the text: it is immensely depressing, and forces one to consider their own mortality in often uncomfortable ways. It asks the reader to think about their own final moments, and what they would leave behind if this is it.  The protagonist is, in many ways, an everyman, both preventing sympathy on the part of the reader and allowing him to project himself into these very real moments.

So, if I hated the book, why did I give it four stars? For its relentless and successful pursuit of raw emotion - even though I disliked the book it managed to make me feel at every turn. 

39.
Title: [Persepolis II]
Author: Marjane Satrapi
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Paperback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 21, 2014
Rating: ***

I've come to Persepolis II by a rather circuitous route: I read Persepolis I years ago, saw the film weeks ago, and I've now read the second installment.  What I found did not quite live up to my expectations. Ultimately, I preferred the text to the film, which significantly alters the tone of the text (notably withdrawing any sense of sympathy the narrator shows for her antagonists), but found the introspection less moving than the first book. 

40.
Title: [The Three Incestuous Sisters]
Author: Audrey Niffenegger
Genre: Graphic Novel, of a different sort
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 22, 2014
Rating: ****

The Three Incestuous Sisters shows the history of three sisters who find themselves in a complicated conflict of love with a single man, with occasionally disastrous consequences.  Niffenegger manages to craft an elaborate and significant story with minimalist text and sophomoric yet alluring images reminiscent of Edward Gorey.  It is concise and enthralling, showing complex relationships in a single sentence and single illustration.  I found it disturbing and moving and captivating. 

41. 
Title: [A Death in the Family]
Author: Jim Starlin
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Paperback
Acquisition: Borrowed from a true Batman fanatic
Date Completed: May 24, 2014
Rating: **

I am horrified: I am left searching for something significant to say about this text that means so much to a very dear friend.  But the reality is that I found the book lackluster; the development is nothing like what I've come to expect of graphic novels, and the continuous internal dialogue is utterly ridiculous.  The conflict seems to be a stream of Bruce Wayne saying to himself, "Lucky for me I have a compact helicopter in my back pocket," and otherwise fabricating ridiculous solutions to present conflict. As this is my first foray into comic books proper, I am willing to accept that this may be an aspect of the genre that readers accept, but as an outsider it was more than I was willing to swallow. 

I did find two things of particular interest.  I greatly enjoyed the portrayal of the Joker, who is far more malignant in text that I've found him to be in film (confirming that Ledger's most recent portrayal is closest to the canon, although even he isn't quite as sociopath as his drawn counterpart).  The character exists externally to all sense of right, wrong, and reason, and is compelling for his own absurdity.

Of similar interest, although critically, I found the visual representation of Robin to be of interest.  Supposedly a young man, he is almost grotesquely developed, with his Olympian legs drawing as much attention as the costume which bares them.  In a culture which is now warring against the unrealistic expectations placed on young women, I find it interesting that this similarly-exaggerated model of youthful masculinity is not also facing static (or, if it is, I just haven't yet been exposed).  Robin is a representative figure of physical "perfection," trained to obey the every command of an older (and more modestly clad) male role model.  I think there is much to be said here, but perhaps I am coming 50 years too late to this party - it has probably already been said. 

Monday, May 19, 2014

35.
Title: [Princesses Behaving Badly]
Author: Linda Rodriguez McRobbie
Genre: Nonfiction
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 16, 2014
Rating: ***1/2

This book is just what it appears to be: a collection of brief snippets from the lives of women who do not always behave as various societies expect.  As with most books of this type, the content is extremely limited, and offers little depth.  However, McRobbie's narrative voice and sense of humor is appealing, offering a contemporary perspective on the often ludicrous and occasionally outrageous treatment these women have faced. 

36.
Title: [Cress]
Author: Marissa Meyer
Genre: Science Fiction
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 17, 2014
Rating: *****

After a lukewarm reading of Scarlet, which too greatly forces elements fairy tales into a bit of a slapdash story, I was wary of Cress. My hesitancy was completely unfounded, as the third book in the Lunar Chronicles is stellar (I couldn't avoid the pun).  Cress as a figure is sympathetic and interesting, and Meyers does well to weave her story into the narrative she has established over Cinder and Scarlet. Here, the allusions to the story of Rapunzel are well-integrated, flowing naturally into the whole as opposed to being forced by expectations. The further development of the previously-introduced characters is enthralling, with strong development and the promise of an exceptional crescendo.  I am won-over again, and cannot wait for the next (and perhaps final?) installment. 

37.
Title: [American Born Chinese]
Author: Gene Luen Yang
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Paperback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 19, 2014
Rating: ***

I picked up American Born Chinese on the recommendation of a colleague; unfortunately, I did not find it as appealing as he.  The novel offers several strong messages, and promotes interest through three separate story lines that converge in the end. The artwork is very well suited to the story, and the episodic nature of the organization will keep readers engaged. So why just three stars?  Personal taste - it just wasn't for me. 

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

34.
Title: [The Lost Boy]
Author: Greg Ruth
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 13, 2014
Rating: ***1/2

The artwork of Greg Ruth's The Lost Boy is breathtaking; the drawings are rich in texture and detail, with a strong sense of realism that allows for the supernatural to be thus more believable.  The story, however, is not what I needed it to be. Beginning the book was a bit like walking into a movie twenty minutes late: I could find the strings of the story enough to piece things together, but can't help feeling that I've missed something greatly significant. Major plot points are left unexplained in what I assume is meant to be a cliffhanger, but instead feels like incomplete writing. I wouldn't be surprised to find that The Lost Boy is the second story of a trilogy, such is the level of development.  Overall, it's worth a look, if only to lose yourself in Ruth's vision. 

Monday, May 12, 2014

Embroideries

33.
Title: [Embroideries]
Author: Marjane Satrapi
Genre: Graphic Novel
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 12, 2014
Rating: ****

Embroideries by Marjane Satrapi is an after-dinner conversation between women in a time and place that demands separate spheres, and therefore separate conversations. The product is blunt honesty, crude humor, and pure humanity. Other reviews have berated the subject for being shallow and have dismissed the frequently catty personalities, but I would argue that this is just what makes the text seem honest.  This is not the grandmother I would have expected from Persepolis, but rather an opium-addicted woman with a handful of former husbands, and stories to go with each one.  There are changing attitudes towards marriage and partnership, men, sex, and virginity.  The topic of conversation is not new, and not entirely enlightened, but it is honest and human, and strongly reflects a time and place when things are changing.  It made me smile and it made me cringe and it made me consider a life very different from the one I've had the pleasure of knowing.  An added bonus is the humor of the title, and all of its implications.
31.
Title: [The Ghost Bride]
Author: Yangsze Choo
Genre: Fiction
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 9, 2014
Rating: ***

Yangsze Choo's The Ghost Bride offers an intriguing narrative, but fails to develop the story to its potential.  Li Lan, a young woman whose dreams are plagued by a repugnant posthumous suitor, is often obtuse, trusting where it's obvious she shouldn't, and almost exclusively seeking others to save her from her choices.  It is difficult to remain engaged in the slow plot, despite a predisposition to such otherworldly stories; if not for the final developments (and, really, the final line), the story would not rate even three stars, but the final twist redeems an otherwise lackluster folktale. 

32.

Title: [Raven Girl]
Author: Audrey Niffenegger
Genre: Fable
Medium: Hardback
Acquisition: Library Book
Date Completed: May 12, 2014
Rating: *****

Audrey Niffenegger's Raven Girl, about a young woman whose parents are a raven and a postman, recalls the tradition of fables and folktales, with an acceptance of the absurd, and no predisposition to explain or elaborate on the surreal.  That a postman would fall in love with a raven is of no question, and that the two could wed and produce a daughter goes unchallenged, even when the daughter becomes engaged in the world beyond their small home.  The plight of the Raven Girl is suggestive of transgendered children, as she feels wrong in the form in which she is born, and longs to be other.  She eventually meets a doctor willing to help her seek her better form, with complicated and beautiful consequences.  The tale is wonderfully disturbing on some levels, and highly sympathetic on every level.  This is a beautiful book and a beautiful story for readers young and old.