Saturday, September 28, 2024

2024 read #115: Dinosaur Sanctuary: Volume 5 by Itaru Kinoshita.

Dinosaur Sanctuary: Volume 5 by Itaru Kinoshita
Research consultant: Shin-ichi Fujiwara
Translated by John Neal
194 pages
Published 2023 (English translation published 2024)
Read from September 27 to September 28
Rating: 3 out of 5 (maybe 3.5?)

I read Dinosaur Sanctuary: Volume 4 in the midst of packing up to move to New York. That was less than six months ago, yet it feels like years have passed. There was the move itself, and adjusting to our new home and our new region, then I caught COVID for (probably) the first time, then we had a lovely summer, and then… everything that’s happened just this month, which has felt like a year on its own.

Thankfully, I get to spend some time in my own home this week, a brief respite from the month or so of Long Island exile still hanging over me. As a nice bonus, my preorder of this book was waiting for me when I got home. A comfort read for a comfort break.

Dinosaur Sanctuary has always presented a mix of dinosaurs with light human drama, but I think this installment skewed too far in the direction of office drama, and skimped on the dinos. The series' main weakness — the fact that its characters are broad stereotypes (the excitable new hire, her sisterly friend, the serious hard-working supervisor, the misanthropic stickler), and none of them get any development — is especially apparent here, without as much gorgeous dinosaur art or as many interesting zookeeping dilemmas to give the manga heft. The main dino storyline, a saga of two ceratopsians that the zookeepers want to mate, seems like it drags on forever.

That said — and I say this every time I review one of these — it’s a manga about a dinosaur zoo. It’s everything we ever wanted from Jurassic World, etc. I don’t think I could ever fully get bored of this series. And this tankōbon has Sanctuary’s most interesting flashback chapter to date, giving us a glimpse of a dinosaur safari park in Australia, and the poaching problems that beset it. So that was pretty cool.

Thursday, September 26, 2024

2024 read #114: Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural, edited by Marvin Kaye.

Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural: A Treasury of Spellbinding Tales Old & New, edited by Marvin Kaye
629 pages
Published 1985
Read from August 13 to September 26
Rating: 2 out of 5

As far as I'm concerned, the prime selling-point for these 1980s Masterpieces anthologies is the spread of stories from two or more centuries of the genre. I had assumed Masterpieces of Fantasy and Enchantment and Masterpieces of Fantasy and Wonder had been the full series, but somehow I just learned about this one here, which pre-dates both of them. Its contents sample so many decades that I ran out of blog tags struggling to mark them all.

I’m a bit wary of this book, having read more than enough shitty horror short stories from the 1980s for one lifetime. Clearly, it wasn’t the decade I’d pick for its taste in horror fiction, a concern underlined by the fact that, out of all these stories, only four were written by women. But maybe it will be worthwhile, who knows?


“Dracula’s Guest” by Bram Stoker (1914). A prologue to the original Dracula that got left on the editorial floor, then subsequently published in a posthumous Stoker collection. Cutting it was the right decision. This anecdote, which follows our oblivious himbo Jonathan Harker as he ignores his German coachman in order to wander through an abandoned vampire village, in a blizzard, on Walpurgis Nacht, is remarkably inessential, a jerky string of events rather than a story, yet not without a certain silly charm. Harker’s obstinate English cluelessness wobbles between annoying and inadvertently hilarious. Maybe D+

“The Professor’s Teddy Bear” by Theodore Sturgeon (1948). Fuzzy is a sadistic teddy bear who feeds by showing the boy Jeremy his future, then egging Jeremy on to cause accidents and deaths for Fuzzy’s delectation. What’s most remarkable about this story is how perfectly it prefigures the horror of the early 1980s at such an early date. So many of the stock shock elements of the eighties are there: the child laughing at the harm he creates, the demonic toy, the pleasure the narrative takes in harming women. I’m impressed by how ahead of its time this story is, without particularly liking what it does. D

“Bubnoff and the Devil” by Ivan Turgenev (1842; translated 1975). I should read more Russian stories. This tale of a second lieutenant who meets the Devil (and the Devil’s Grandma, and the Devil’s Granddaughter) feels fresher and more modern than just about anything I’ve read from such an early date. (Perhaps it’s all in the translation.) Considering that this story is from the 1840s, I think I’ll give it a solid B

“The Quest for Blank Claveringi” by Patricia Highsmith (1967). The plot reads like a satire of 1930s weird-adventure fiction: Professor Clavering, desperate to inscribe his name in the annals of binomial nomenclature, sets out to document giant man-eating snails on a remote Polynesian island. It’s slight and silly, yet oddly charming. A respectable B-

A translation of a poem by Johann Wolfgang Von Goëthe, “The Erl-King” (1782), wavers between nicely eerie imagery and silly early modern morbidity.

“The Bottle Imp” by Robert Louis Stevenson (1891). A Scottish colonialist gives us a South Seas-flavored retelling of a German folktale. More of a just-so story than a horror narrative. Starts off briskly enough, but it’s overlong for what it is, and full of the moralizing, and the shitty gender norms, of its day. D

“A Malady of Magicks” by Craig Shaw Gardner (1978). I first read this in Lin Carter’s The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories: 5. In that review, I opined, “Nothing to complain of here — a perfectly enjoyable, funny romp with a has-been wizard and his hapless apprentice.” Perhaps it scintillated against the backdrop of a Lin Carter anthology; I found it distinctly lackluster this time around. D?

Entering September now, after a long but rewarding summer. Hoping to finish this sometime in October, even though I haven’t reached the 100 page mark yet. 

“Lan Lung” by M. Lucie Chin (1980). A sprawling, absorbing, magnificent tale of a modern ghost adrift in ancient China, one of the best 1980s fantasies I've ever read. It reads like a couple chapters from a much longer work, as if it began a hundred pages before and could enthrall you for two hundred pages to come, yet it's perfectly self-contained. Outstanding, memorable, and seemingly well ahead of its time. A

Next is a poem that, as far as I can tell, was originally published in this book: “The Dragon Over Hackensack” by Richard L. Wexelblat (1985). It’s a pretty standard eighties urban fantasy piece, mixing an archetypal dragon with the banality of New Jersey and calling in the Air National Guard. It's more like chopped up prose than poetry. It's fine.

“The Transformation” by Mary W. Shelley (1831). Byron really did a number on poor Mary Shelley. Years after his death, here she is processing his domineering nature in a fable of a dissolute young man, consumed with pride, who agrees to swap his body with that of a demonic being. A solid enough story for its day. C+

“The Faceless Thing” by Edward D. Hoch (1963). Unobjectionable mood piece about childhood fears, aging, and letting go of survivor’s guilt. C

“The Anchor” by Jack Snow (1947). A shrug of a ghost story, horny in the Forties fashion, set on a supernally lovely lake. D+

“When the Clock Strikes” by Tanith Lee (1980). It's a lush, glossy retelling of "Cinderella" by Tanith Lee in her prime. Of course it's got vengeance and dark witchcraft and Satan-worship. No surprises, just a solid entry. B

“Oshidori” by Lafcadio Hearn (1904). Hearn, a British ex-pat, adapted or translated this tiny tale of a cruelly widowed duck, and didn't do a great job of it. D?

“Carmilla” by Sheridan Le Fanu (1872). I read and reviewed Carmilla as a standalone novella last year. Including it here in its entirety seems excessive. I didn't feel impelled to read it again.

Entering a new, unhappy phase here in the middle of September, feeling impossibly distant from the joys of summer. Family emergency stuff has unexpectedly brought me back to Long Island, a place where I’d hoped never to linger again. Things are strange and sad and anxious — and that isn’t even mentioning the dangerous election, and its associated right-wing terrorism, hanging over our heads.

“Eumenides in the Fourth Floor Lavatory” by Orson Scott Card (1979). One shouldn’t judge a writer for writing a piece of shit main character. Unless it’s a writer like Orson Scott Card, whom one should always judge, harshly, for any reason. I had little taste for this character study of a narcissistic, casually cruel office misogynist who gets afflicted by what he has done. It is firmly in the blood-shit-pus-and-exploitation school of early 1980s SFFH, that “look at what boundaries we can push!” white male self-indulgence that ultimately has little to say beyond the shock. I don’t mind a revolting horror piece, but I prefer more contemporary uses of the palette, using it to explore structures of power from the other side. Back in 1979, writers like Card were content to say “People do bad things — pretty shocking, right?” Thankfully, the genre has evolved since then. Maybe F+

“Lenore” by Gottfried August Bürger (1774; English adaptation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, ca. 1844). Influential, and thus academically interesting, old poem about a bereaved young woman, and the manner in which her sweet William comes back from war when she dares impugn Heaven. You can see the resemblance of its rhyme scheme to Poe’s “Raven,” and it shares certain phrases in common with old broadsides. I enjoyed it.

“The Black Wedding” by Isaac Bashevis Singer (ca. 1940s or 1950s; English translation 1958). An examination of the demonic horrors of heterosexual marriage and pregnancy that, sadly, verges on a list of the tortures inflicted upon a young woman. Another early entry in the “men writing about harming women” school of horror. Interesting from a cultural standpoint, but it will never be a favorite. D+

“Hop-Frog” by Edgar Allen Poe (1849). Thoroughly of its time, this is an ugly fable of a crippled court jester and his vengeance upon the king and his councilors. It did little to entertain me. Maybe D

“Sardonicus” by Ray Russell (1961). A solid pastiche of the Gothic genre. Russell does an admirable job capturing the rhythms and extravagance of Victorian prose, while retaining the fluency of a mid-century literary style. A bit long for what it is, and it could have benefitted from more Victorian reticence in place of its Swinging Sixties shock, but a good effort nonetheless. C+

“Graveyard Shift” by Richard Matheson (1960). Another Sixties shocker, and another tale (like “The Professor’s Teddy Bear”) that anticipates the direction of Eighties horror. Through a series of letters, we learn of how a widow in a remote cabin came to be murdered, and how her son came to be a broken, terrified thing. Unsurprising spoiler: This is the blueprint for all the “Mommy is the real monster” flicks of the coming decades. Maybe C

“Wake Not the Dead” by Ernst Raupach (1822; English translation 1823). Thoroughly morbid fluff about a dramatic man named Walter, who, though he’s happily remarried, insists that a sorcerer resurrect his first beloved. Spoilers: The undead Brunhilda is now a vampire! Oops! With that early translation date, it’s no wonder this is so overwrought and overwritten. Yet there are glints of pure Romantic excess that are delightful in their cheesiness, such as when part of the resurrection ritual requires the sorcerer to pour blood into the grave from a human skull. Iconic. Incidentally, this is the first piece from the 1820s I’ve ever reviewed on this blog, after almost twelve full years of reading. It’s alright. C

“Night and Silence” by Maurice Level (1906; English translation 1922). A blind man, and his deaf and mute brother, sit vigil for their dead sister. An able-bodied conception of the “terrors” of sensory disability. Meh. D

“Flies” by Isaac Asimov (1953). Apparently the ultimate horror is being able to see through people's polite social pretenses and recognize the somatic patterns of their deeper emotions, in which case, I live in a horror novel. Meh. D+

“The Night Wire” by H. F. Arnold (1926). This bauble is notable for centering its action on an outmoded technology I'd never thought about before: news-wire offices. It adds a modernist crispness to an eerie tale of fog and cosmic lights overwhelming a town. Brief but interesting. C+

“Last Respects” by Dick Baldwin (1975). Brief, fairly pointless narration of two orderlies removing a dead body from a hospital bed, ending with the equivalent of yelling "Boo!" after a campfire tale. D-

“The Pool of the Stone God” by A. Merritt (1923). If I had a nickel for every time I read a weirdly racist A. Merritt pulp tale of a South Seas island with megalithic ruins clustered around an otherworldly pool, I would have two nickels. This one is much briefer than "The Moon Pool" (which I read and reviewed in a different Masterpieces anthology), so slight as to be forgettable. Maybe D-

“A Tale of the Thirteenth Floor” by Ogden Nash (1955) is an oddly charming narrative poem, mixing metered rhyme with annals of noirish murder. Quite enjoyable.

“The Tree” by Dylan Thomas (1939). It’s funny that, after all Robert Macfarlane did to promote him and talk him up, my first exposure to Dylan Thomas should be a prose piece in a horror anthology. It isn’t strictly horror so much as an achingly lucid mood piece of a country child’s first pagan understanding of the world, and the tree at its center: “At last he came to the illuminated tree at the long gravel end, older even than the marvel of light, with the woodlice asleep under the bark, with the boughs standing out from the body like the frozen arms of a woman.” It’s fascinating to see that the trope of “the Savior was just a homeless madman who went where fate took him,” which feels so thoroughly 1960s to me, reached apotheosis this early. Outstanding. A-

“Stroke of Mercy” by Parke Godwin (1981). Somehow, this overheated period piece feels more dated than the Republican France it emulates. It may have come early in the decade, but this positively screams Eighties. Godwin attempts to mix an unstuck-in-time tour of the horrors of modern war and the death of God with a tale of a young student dueling for the honor of a Parisian actress, but the two elements don’t really congeal into a new whole, despite Godwin’s attempts to tie it all into a “dueling for honor was the last individual expression of violence before slaughter became mechanized and impersonal” bow. There’s potential here, somewhere, but Godwin’s prose felt stiff and difficult to get invested in. D+

“Lazarus” by Leonid Andreyev (1906). Miracles are prime grounds for existential horror, yet I’ve rarely encountered the religious horror genre — largely because so much of it is, well, religious. (At least until recently, with the surge of queer horror that pulls from religious imagery, but I haven’t read much of that, at least not yet.) “Lazarus” takes the familiar gospel tale and uncovers a uniquely cosmic vision of undeath, achieving a distinctive disquiet, all the more remarkable for how long ago it was published. B

“The Waxwork” by A. M. Burrage (1931). A down-on-his-luck reporter spends the night in a waxwork museum's exhibit of murderers, hoping to sell a sensation article. Little does he know what awaits him! This feels more suited for 1891 than 1931. It begins a section of stories that promise to be all in the characters' minds, truly my least favorite story trope. Meh. D

“The Silent Couple” by Pierre Courtois (1826; English translation 1985). A brief character study, little of interest to note beyond certain updates made in the translation (such as giving the wealthy woman a motor car, which would have been unusual in 1826). D-

“Moon-Face” by Jack London (1902). Editor Kaye’s introduction calls this story “a kind of rural ‘Cask of Amontillado,’” which is accurate enough, but wrongly implies there’s some sort of interesting story here. D-

“Death in the School-Room (A Fact)” by Walt Whitman (1841). Rustic Americana about a proud but sickly orphan boy who refuses to tell his abusive tyrant of a teacher what he was doing at a neighbor’s fence in the middle of the night, even upon threat of a beating. A morbid little shrug. D-

“The Upturned Face” by Stephen Crane (1900). A vignette about burying a body in the midst of war. Fleeting impressions and not much else. D+

“One Summer Night” by Ambrose Bierce (1906). A vignette about a man buried alive, and the grave robbers who quickly correct that error. Not loving this section of the anthology. D

“The Easter Egg” by H. H. Munro (Saki) (1930). Forgettable little tale of a coward’s instincts almost (but not quite) preventing an assassination. We’ve gotten quite far from any notions of “terror” or “supernatural” — or “masterpiece” for that matter. There isn’t even enough story here for me to truly dislike it. D

“The House in Goblin Wood” by John Dickson Carr (1947). The trend continues with this limp social comedy that morphs into something of a locked-room whodunnit. Not my kind of thing, but I could see it being enjoyable to someone else, which is more than I can say about a lot of these. D

“The Vengeance of Nitocris” by Tennessee Williams (1928). Tennessee Williams’ first publication, written when he was 16 and printed in Weird Tales. It certainly reads like something a 1920s teenager would have written for Weird Tales. Cribbing its substance from Herodotus, it’s a formulaic number about a pharaoh who profanes a temple, the priests who goad the public to attack him, and the vengeance the next pharaoh, his sister, exacts upon the people. At least it’s marginally more interesting (and significantly more lurid) than anything else in this section. D+

“The Informal Execution of Soupbone Pew” by Damon Runyon (1911). I have a weakness for good pulpy patter, and got drawn into this slangy old yarn about criminals, hobos, and railway men almost in spite of myself. This feels like it could have come from the febrile heyday of Prohibition mobster pulp, which is remarkable when you look at the publication date. Some brief but shitty racism brings it down to a C-

“His Unconquerable Enemy” by W. C. Morrow (1889). Orientalist garbage. Weird how the English tutted about “Eastern cruelty,” while writing outright torture porn for the delectation of their English audience. F

“Rizpah” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1880). Narrative poem that, in full Victorian fashion, takes the biblical imagery of Rizpah and applies it to a mother mourning her son, who had been hanged as a highwayman. I felt indifferent about it.

“The Question” by Stanley Ellin (1962). I parse this one as a biting satire on the cruelty and sadism innate within political and social conservatism. More likely, though, the author intended his narrator to be the ideal red-blooded American, and meant for the story to speak to the cruelty and sadism innate within even the most upstanding citizens. Still, how little has truly changed these last sixty years, aside from the mask of civility sipping away. What I liked best about this character study was that it was the final story in this slog of a section. C-

“The Flayed Hand” by Guy de Maupassant (1875; English translation 1904). We begin the anthology’s final section with an archetypal “preserved hand of a murderer kills again” fluff, nothing special. The translation isn’t especially fluent, which knocks it down a peg. D+

“The Hospice” by Robert Aickman (1975). This one starts slow, and is considerably overlong, but it proves to be a wonderfully surreal (and ineffably British) experience. Our protagonist gets lost driving through sprawling old housing estate, and winds up in what he initially imagines to be a dining hotel, but turns out to be a suffocatingly genteel, heavily upholstered limbo, where the hosts are unfailingly polite, solicitous, and patronizing, and are most concerned that he finish his food. The closest comparisons I can draw, in my admittedly limited experience, are music videos satirizing the English middle class, or perhaps indie horror games of the YouTube playthrough era. I adore the fact that nothing is actually explained; the Hospice just is, and the rest is vibes. Weird and effective. B

“The Christmas Banquet” by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1843). Torpid and overlong blather about a holiday banquet set up, by bequest, to bring together the most miserable characters the executors can find. Absolutely nothing of interest here, yet it just keeps going. (It’s only 15 pages long, but it feels so much longer.) F

“The Hungry House” by Robert Bloch (1951). I was prepared to like (or at least not complain about) this straightforward “the house has a sinister presence” story; it has a neat motif of mirrors and things half-seen in reflections, and Bloch has a talent for building anxiety beneath a veneer of rationalization. Unfortunately, a midcentury writer with a mirror motif on his hands has to draw some weirdly gendered bullshit out of it: unlike sensible men, women spend their lives looking in mirrors, etc, etc. This could have been so much better. Oh well. C-

“The Demon of the Gibbet” by Fitz-James O’Brien (1881) is a perfectly serviceable poem about riding past a gallows tree. 

“The Owl” by Anatole Le Braz (1897). This story is nothing much, but it’s a fascinating glimpse at the old folk beliefs and traditions long since submerged under Christianity in Western Europe. Maybe C-

“No. 252 Rue M. Le Prince” by Ralph Adams Cram (1895). Mostly dull piece, going through the motions, with some gentlemen spending the night in a haunted and / or accursed house. Ends in goop, which was a nice swerve, but overall, just plain forgettable. D+

“The Music of Erich Zann” by H. P. Lovecraft (1922). I’m no fan of Lovecraft, but this brief entry is tolerable enough. No outright racism that I could see, though one wonders if his fevered imagination concocted this tale of menacing otherworldly music after hearing the Hungarian dance tune mentioned in the text. C

“Riddles in the Dark” by J. R. R. Tolkien (1938). The original Gollum chapter, edited out of subsequent editions of The Hobbit to better align with The Lord of the Rings. It’s a classic, of course, but I feel that the edited version — ever so slightly darkened by the malice of the One Ring — is better. B


Unexpectedly, I find myself at the end of this collection, and it isn’t even October yet. The last couple weeks have felt like several months, but nonetheless, this is a surprise.

All in all, while the selections in this book were often better than I had feared, they just weren’t on the same level as the stories in the two Hartwell-helmed Masterpieces. Still, a good handful of stories (“Lan Lung” prominently among them) were absolutely delightful, and made the whole thing worthwhile.

Monday, September 23, 2024

2024 read #113: Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End Volume 1 by Kanehito Yamada and Tsukasa Abe.

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End Volume 1, story by Kanehito Yamada and art by Tsukasa Abe
Translated by Misa ‘Japanese Ammo’
188 pages
Published 2020 (English translation published 2021)
Read from September 20 to September 23
Rating: 3 out of 5

I’m having a bad time in life right now.

I can’t go into specifics, because it all revolves around someone else’s mental health difficulties, but I’m sad and angry about its fallout on my teenage kid, and at having to step in to clean up that someone else’s mess. I’ve been back in Long Island for a chunk of this month — stuck in a place I never expected to have to return to like this. It won’t be permanent, but I am looking at a couple months, maybe even more, of shuttling back and forth and staying on the Island for a week or so at a time. Which wouldn’t sound like a lot, if my mental health weren’t already a fraying string.

Anyway. I need an easy read. I actually bought this tankōbon at the start of the summer, a lifetime ago, when I was fishing for replacements for the then out-of-stock volumes of Delicious in Dungeon. I got hooked on Witch Hat Atelier before I could even open this book. But now I’m all caught up on Atelier, and I can’t obtain any more Dungeon until I have money again, so this is Frieren’s time to shine.

Or at least it’s Frieren’s time to just kind of coast along. This volume didn’t grab me the same way the introductory books of Dungeon and Atelier did. I liked it, don't get me wrong, but it's a contemplative, slow-burn narrative that probably wasn't the best choice for my present moment.

The underlying concept is solid: Frieren is an elf, insulated from the realities of death thanks to her near-immortal lifespan. Before the story begins, she is the mage of an adventuring party that defeats the Demon King and returns to a heroic welcome. Taking time for granted afterward, she journeys alone for decades, honing her magic. One by one, the other members of her party die. Gradually, Frieren settles into a quest of her own: to honor her friends' memory and to better understand her attachment to them. It combines the "what happens after the adventure" trend of the 2010s with the melancholy of immortality.

While the background art is often quite lovely, the character art is flat, much more static than what we get in Dungeon and Atelier. Just about every character panel is framed in profile or head-on, with maybe an occasional three-quarter headshot to spice things up. Frieren isn't an action story, but even in this volume's sole action sequence, Frieren and her apprentice Fern just kind ot stand around with bored expressions. Some dynamic composition would have been appreciated.

By the end of this volume, I found myself moderately interested to continue. I don't know if I'll ever give it the same focus I gave the other fantasy manga that defined my summer, but maybe when I run out of Dungeon I'll give it more of my attention.

Monday, September 16, 2024

2024 read #112: A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder by James De Mille.

A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder by James De Mille
Illustrated by Gilbert Gaul
291 pages
Published 1888
Read from September 14 to September 16
Rating: 1 out of 5

Published posthumously, perhaps a decade or two after it was written, this is a Victorian social satire dressed in a guise of antipodean adventure. It’s chiefly notable as an early example of a prehistoric lost world novel, written long before the publication of Doyle’s own The Lost World.

Sadly, instead of dinosaurs, Manuscript’s primary focus is its clumsy satire, depicting a topsy-turvy land where Victorian mores are turned on their head. Poverty is esteemed! People compete to give their riches away! Death is joyously sought after! Darkness is embraced and light is shunned! To be cannibalized is an honor! Women can do things!

It’s never a question of whether an old adventure novel will be horribly racist, but of how horribly racist. A Strange Manuscript is pretty damn racist. Maybe not The Land that Time Forgot levels of racist, but still bad. Our narrator dwells at length on the horror and revulsion he feels upon meeting some brown people in Antarctica. He flees from them, and finds himself among the Kosekin, a vaguely Mesopotamian civilization at the South Pole. Yet even there, in the midst of bird-drawn carriages, tree-fern-lined streets, and majestic pyramids, he’s magnetized by a random white girl he meets in a cave. De Mille proceeds to heap up vile Victorian antisemitism in his profile of the Kosekin.

As for the prehistoric aspect of De Mille’s lost world — the sole reason I read this antiquated volume — it’s incidental at best, a mere curiosity to add flavor to the setting. (To be fair, when this book was written, even scientists weren’t acquainted with many dinosaurs, and even those were fragmentary beasts, poorly understood.) There are a couple ceremonial saurian hunts, one at sea, one on land, which serve only to demonstrate the Kosekin’s eagerness to die.

There is a cool scene where our hero rides on a giant pterodactyl under the light of the aurora australis, which, while it doesn’t erase any of the book’s bigotry, at least makes for a memorable moment. Manuscript has long since been in the public domain, so maybe James Gurney could repurpose the scene for another Dinotopia book.

Friday, September 13, 2024

2024 read #111: This World Is Not Yours by Kemi Ashing-Giwa.

This World Is Not Yours by Kemi Ashing-Giwa
167 pages
Published 2024
Read from September 12 to September 13
Rating: 4 out of 5

An astonishing story of planetary colonization in a hostile universe.

This World uses the backdrop of social frailty in a precarious settlement to build an allegory of how uncertain times lead to social and sexual authoritarianism, the total disregard for individual autonomy. It also serves as a cutting indictment of capitalism, examining how poorly suited the profit motive is to make decisions affecting human lives. In short, it's about how women always become livestock in any social structure oriented toward profit and control, and how rapidly social liberties can erode when not everyone is invested in maintaining the liberal social contract.

For all its allegorical heft, This World is, first and foremost, a brilliantly written human-scale story of relationships, codependency, jealousy, insecurity, heartbreak, and rage. Rage at the social structures that switch to authoritarian control the second it becomes convenient, the second it becomes profitable. Rage at those who go along with it because it seems the safer or easier option.

The planet is beautiful in a classic sci-fi way. I would've liked more pages to encounter its flora and fauna, but that's not how books this size get constructed.

A major plot point on the jacket summary, how the world exudes a substance to clean itself of ecological threats, plays a central role in This World's marketing, so I think it's safe to say it isn't a spoiler. Ashing-Giwa pulls an adept horror novel pacing trick by getting you so invested in the characters, and the horrors they face in the colony, that you almost forget about the Gray until it abruptly insinuates itself into the meat of the story. 

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

2024 read #110: Witch Hat Atelier: Volume 12 by Kamome Shirahama.

Witch Hat Atelier: Volume 12 by Kamome Shirahama
Translated by Stephen Kohler
179 pages
Published 2023 (English translation published 2024)
Read September 11
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

This is it. I’m now caught up with the current English language tankōbon run of Witch Hat Atelier, with no more until January. Hard to believe I hadn’t even heard of this series when I googled for manga to sate my Delicious in Dungeon hunger this spring.

And what a stunning volume this is. After two fairly quiet, understated books, Shirahama unleashes magical violence in intricate panels, jaw-dropping splash pages, and adroit compositions. Action shots and moments of introspection are staged with equal finesse.

In the midst of the action, all the character development of the last two volumes amply pays off. Characters have climactic moments of trust, of doubt, of rising to the occasion. Tears sprang to my eyes more than once.

Witch Hat has dominated my summer the way few, if any, series ever have. I could have used these books when I was a kid, yet Shirahama is the rare author who pulls together a story just as compelling and comforting for adults as it is for younger readers. I’m sad to part from Atelier these next few months, but I’m so happy it’s become part of my life.

2024 read #109: Witch Hat Atelier: Volume 11 by Kamome Shirahama.

Witch Hat Atelier: Volume 11 by Kamome Shirahama
Translated by Stephen Kohler
158 pages
Published 2022 (English translation published 2023)
Read September 11
Rating: 4 out of 5

Creative block, and the pressures of deadlines, are significant themes in this volume. Which feels particularly apt this time around.

Much like Volume 10, this tankōbon largely feels like a plateau in between major plot movements, setting the pieces for what's to come. The Silver Eve procession is delightful, and this volume sees significant growth for Agott, the character I relate to the most. But, aside from a handful of flashy panels, and of course the gorgeous, monstrous menace of the cliffhanger sequence, the art and storytelling are muted, utilitarian. I assume Shirahama was pacing herself, saving her energies for more intricate pieces to come.

That's part of the manga business, or so I assume. I cannot imagine the pressures, the workload, the stress of deadlines involved in authoring an ongoing serial like this. I'd happily wait longer for volumes if it meant the artist is less stressed and has more time. But clearly, I'm not a capitalist.

2024 read #108: Gathering the Tribes by Carolyn Forché.

Gathering the Tribes by Carolyn Forché
Foreword by Stanley Kunitz
63 pages
Published 1976
Read September 11
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

My main exposure to poetry is contemporary (published within the last ten years or so), with a definite lean toward SFF poetry. I want to expand my poetry education, so when someone I follow shared a poem from this book, it was a quick purchase.

I don’t have the education, or the vocabulary, to pinpoint the differences between 2020s poetry and 1970s poetry. Forché returns again and again to evergreen topics: family, ethnic heritage, displacement, childhood, trauma, loss, sexuality, the intimacy of food, the land. She unspools gorgeous images, and breathes out heartbreak like frost on a Michigan morning. Her poems are often lovely, delicate things, grounded unshakably in the Midwestern earth. Yet something about her cadence, perhaps, or her word choice, feels unfamiliar, the dialect of the past.

Inevitably, I’m reminded of the only other 1970s poetry collection I’ve read, Ursula K. Le Guin’s Wild Angels — not that they have much in common, otherwise, beyond a similar ineffable resonance with their decade, and how they demand a slower reading pace, sounding out connections between lines: “Seventeen years of solitude is seventeen / years. Quiet.”

Another difference: in our age of poetry-as-memoir, of confessional CNF with line breaks, Forché’s well of third-person character studies feels oddly uncomfortable. There’s an edge of concern for a modern reader, a wincing Wait, you’re construing someone else’s story? Forché gravitates toward portraits of impoverished Indigenous folks, which adds an extra frisson of possible exploitation. Perhaps it isn’t necessarily unethical, no more so than writing fiction based on the people you meet, but it’s an adjustment.

The book finishes strong with the section titled “The Place That Is Feared I Inhabit,” especially the poem “Kalaloch.”

2024 read #107: Red Moon and Black Mountain by Joy Chant.

Red Moon and Black Mountain by Joy Chant
244 pages
Published 1970
Read from September 8 to September 11
Rating: 2.5 out of 5

I don’t know if I’ve ever read anything that so perfectly distills the early 1970s “adult fantasy” movement as this book. Three English children, lured off the path in the Essex countryside, find themselves transported to a world of swords and sorcery, noble mounted warriors and antiquated gender norms, martial eagles and a war of darkness against light. It’s Narnia meets the Hyborian Age.

The best part of this book is Chant’s prose, which would still be solid for a fantasy novel today, and would’ve seemed astonishing in 1970. In Chant’s hands, the rote phrases typical of Seventies fantasy — your “grim sable crags,” your “shimmering silver aureole,” and so forth — mostly add charm rather than gumming up the works. It’s a tricky balancing act, one not even Patricia A. McKillip landed on her first try. I’m impressed.

Charming in a different way, the worldbuilding, which Chant refined over the years from a childhood game of make-believe, feels like true outsider art, a dash of Henry Darger to season the mash of Tolkien and Howard. The world of Vanderei feels lived in, its corners well-thumbed, despite its reliance on archetypes. There’s even a very 1970 attempt to ground the setting’s gratuitous misogyny in something like anthropology, which — while I didn’t care much for it — is very in keeping with the spirit of the enterprise.

The plot is less interesting. It’s the kind of book where one of the siblings is already proclaimed the Chosen One by page 38. Generously, one could say it’s the junior reader prototype of the Fionavar Tapestry, complete with climactic human sacrifice. If it had been published ten years earlier, or ten years later, it would have been marketed as juvenile fiction, but Ballantine was determined to create “adult fantasy” as a genre, and if the main characters are kids who’ve gone through a portal into a fantasy world to meet princesses and unicorns, well, that’s just what adult fantasy is in 1970, and it’s all very grown up, thank you.

Altogether, I felt this was more of a curiosity than a lost classic. And as the story went on, Chant’s female characters — even the badass princess skilled in star magic, who gives up her powers for her man — became much too meek and submissive. Still, if you’re interested in the evolution of modern fantasy as a genre, this one’s worth a read.

Sunday, September 8, 2024

2024 read #106: Desert Creatures by Kay Chronister.

Desert Creatures by Kay Chronister
272 pages
Published 2022
Read from September 4 to September 8
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

A long time ago, back when I ran a little online sci-fi magazine called Scareship, I published a short story by Kay Chronister. Now that she's "made it," to an extent, I feel weirdly proud to have been adjacent to an early step, however tiny, of her career.

This book is a lush, violent, inventive, repulsive, irresistible eco-horror, set generations into an apocalypse of poison rain and strange, ambling chimeras. Time and perspective alike are elastic; everyone has their own story of the collapse, whether visited upon the world by gods or the inevitable outcome of the hungry greed of capitalism. Las Vegas is a holy city, its saints marketed by a dispossessed upper class who, bored of mere survival, want the poor to lavish them with luxury again. Salvation itself is a con.

The parasitism of the upper classes, and the readiness with which men sell out girls and women in order to find community with each other, are the true horrors underlying this desert of beasts and madness. Chronister relays atrocities and monstrosities with prose of hallucinatory clarity, unflinching yet never pitiless, spilling mirages truer than anything shouted from a pulpit.

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

2024 read #105: Mexicans on the Moon by Pedro Iniguez.

Mexicans on the Moon: Speculative Poetry from a Possible Future by Pedro Iniguez
75 pages
Published 2024
Read September 4
Rating: 4 out of 5

A delicate and powerful collection of science fiction poetry, at turns funny and heartbreaking, inspiring and grim, rich with hope and community and connection in spite of the exploitation of white-supremacist capitalism destroying the world around us.

Imbalances of power shape the poetry of this collection. Class, race, ethnicity, age -- Iniguez uses sci-fi and poetry to explore these present marginizations, future hopes, and repeating patterns of exploitation. Topics range from Iniguez's classic poem "The Epidemic of Shrink-Ray-Gun Violence in Our Schools Must End" to the Latine generation ship in "Forever Elusive," which, having learned hard lessons from colonizers, avoid repeating their iniquities.

Unrelated, I highly recommend reading poetry in a tent in the morning sun while the birds sing.

Monday, September 2, 2024

2024 read #104: Delicious in Dungeon: Volume 6 by Ryoko Kui.

Delicious in Dungeon: Volume 6 by Ryoko Kui
Translated by Taylor Engel
207 pages
Published 2018 (English translation published 2018)
Read from September 1 to September 2
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Extensive spoilers ahead. Don't read if you aren't familiar with Delicious in Dungeon's storylines after the red dragon encounter.

An outstanding volume, this one packs in so many all-time highlights. There's the stunningly drawn and laid out fight against the Falin-chimera. There's the emotional heartbreak of Shuro's fight with Laios, and Shuro releasing his pent-up frustrations about our boy Laios's autistic social miscues. As a bit of an emotional breather, there's the delightful switcheroo with the shapeshifter, and the resulting cookoff competition. Then we get the full introduction of Izutsumi, one of my favorite characters from the anime.

I'm trying to pace my purchases; the plan is to hold off on any further Dungeon tankōbon until October. That's going to be tough, after I inhaled these two volumes so early in the month. At least I have two volumes of Witch Hat Atelier

Sunday, September 1, 2024

2024 read #103: Delicious in Dungeon: Volume 5 by Ryoko Kui.

Delicious in Dungeon: Volume 5 by Ryoko Kui
Translated by Taylor Engel
199 pages
Published 2017 (English translation published 2018)
Read September 1
Rating: 4 out of 5

A new month, a new batch of manga to enjoy! This time, I’m hoping to limit myself to just a couple tankōbon each from Delicious in Dungeon and Witch Hat Atelier; my bank account has not been enjoying this new-to-me medium as much as I have.

I don’t know whether it’s because I’m already familiar with the story thanks to watching the anime, or if it’s because the manga is genuinely better at pacing and character development than the anime was, but I feel drawn in so much more to even the secondary and tertiary characters here. It took me a while to warm up to Kabru and his party in the anime. At least at first, I felt impatient whenever they were onscreen, like they were a distraction from the main story. In the manga, they already feel more fleshed out, and their role in the overarching narrative seems more significant.

Anime and manga alike, one of my favorite aspects of Dungeon is how Kui puts so much thought and effort into the ecology of different monsters, and how the dungeon functions as a cohesive ecosystem. Fuck magic systems — this is the kind of fantasy worldbuilding that gets me hooked.