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Last month, I had a lot of time to read books!

 

 

Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand by Samuel R. Delany

I started this in November but finished it on the First. I liked it less than Triton and found it harder to read, but parts of it would’ve made an incredible romantasy premise. Imagine there’s a guy who’s the only survivor of a catastrophe that destroyed his ENTIRE PLANET, and he’s your soulmate, and you’re his soulmate… This could totally work as a romantasy premise. I did enjoy the examinations of culture and imperialism and knowledge as power and gender and labor and all of those things, but it was very dense and kind of difficult to get through.

Seduction Theory by Emily Adrian

Love triangle between a grad student, her thesis advisor, and her thesis advisor’s husband. Could’ve been gayer, but I liked the meta layers of the story.

An Atlas of the Difficult World: Poems 1988-1991 by Adrienne Rich

Well, the title did include the world “difficult,” so perhaps it was on me for expecting to understand these. I ended up skimming some of the poems and then feeling guilty for skimming. Like, they’re poems! It’s not that many words to read! But I don’t think I vibe with Rich’s style. I May Be Stupid.

Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty by Patrick Radden Keefe
Insane how much evil these people got away with. I was excited to read this one because I enjoyed Say Nothing so much, and I enjoyed reading this one too, but also I just felt so… aghast, the whole time I was reading, that all of this was allowed to happen, that the pharmaceuticals industry was so corrupted from every direction, and that every single person involved in engineering the opioid crisis is convinced they did nothing wrong?? I like how PRK structured the book.

Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid

If this was a fanfiction I would have hit the back button about two paragraphs in, but since I checked it out from the library I read the whole thing and was not impressed.

Blue Nights by Joan Didion

Ashamed to admit this was actually my first Didion and since I was constantly referencing her Wikipedia page/her daughter’s Wikipedia page/googling various namedropped friends and associates, I feel like I probably should’ve started with something else. But this was the only ready to borrow Didion book at my library, so I read it and it was quite sad.

Marriage of a Thousand Lies by SJ Sindu

Reading this book felt like being trapped in a cardboard box. A closeted lesbian married to a gay man has to watch her best friend with benefits also go through an arranged marriage in the Sri Lankan immigrant community in Boston. Bleak and miserable! But good.

Leap by Simina Popescu

Graphic novel about lesbian contemporary dancers in Romania! I enjoyed it.

Workhorse by Caroline Palmer

I think this book was about twice as long and covered about twice as much time as it needed to. The pitch– Devil Wears Prada meets Talented Mr. Ripley – made me expect a lot more Intrigues and Schemes, but the protagonist presents herself as kind of an incompetent alcoholic who occasionally does something horrible for no reason whatsoever. I think she’s supposed to be an unreliable narrator, but her narrative voice is more annoying than fun to follow. The rich people subplot was extremely depressing and kind of undermined the Ripley side of things to me.

Girl Dinner by Olivie Blake

I couldn’t get through a page of The Atlas Six, so I was surprised at how much I enjoyed the narrative voice in Girl Dinner. Like, it was fun! It was a fun read! But I was also surprised that Blake called it a “satire” in the afterword, because it didn’t really feel like it was making fun of Sloane or Nina, it felt like the reader was supposed to empathize with them, not mock them. There were some lines that struck me as kind of satirical, but mostly it was just an occasionally funny book. I think it should’ve been picked up by a litfic imprint instead of Tor, though. I feel like it could’ve been a sharper and more interesting critique (or even, like, actually a satire lol), if it’d been edited by a literary editor instead of an SFF one. The SFF element (which is obvious from the title) was probably the weakest aspect overall. The ending felt kind of… unnecessary? Out of nowhere? I didn’t love that part. But I liked it more than I thought I would overall.

The Sequel by Jean Hanff Korelitz

Fine. I like the publishing inside baseball bits and the thriller bits were also fun. The chapter titles bit was very funny.

The Silent Woman by Janet Malcolm

Really interesting. Checked it out based on some post I saw on here that mentioned it, and I really enjoyed reading it. Inspired me to read more Sylvia Plath poetry.

The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith

I don’t think I like Highsmith’s writing style overall, but I did enjoy… how easily Ripley got away with so much nonsense somehow. Watched the movie with Matt Damon in it also and was amused the movie made him both gayer and more sympathetic/less of a cold-blooded freak. He is much more committed to the bit in the book.

Work Nights by Erica Peplin

Kind of boring, kind of funny, at least it’s gay I guess? Doesn’t seem to be saying anything interesting about anything, but at least it’s about lesbians!

My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier

This took me an embarrassingly long amount of time to finish reading, but I did enjoy it. I mostly read it because Rebecca was not available on Libby and this was Ready to Borrow lol. Gothic romance set in the 1800s, very… moody, ambiguous. I thought it was fine.

Batman: The Long Halloween by Jeph Loeb

I really loved the art, I thought Tim Sale’s use of spot blacks was really innovative and interesting and the paneling was creative and stylish. However, as I was not inoculated into Cape Fandom as a child, I found it difficult to buy into the basic premise of the Batman rogues gallery. I am trying to be a responsible Comics Person and get Into Capes, but it’s hard, because most cape comics kinda suck in various ways.

Everybody (Else) Is Perfect: How I Survived Hypocrisy, Beauty, Clicks, and Likes by Gabrielle Korn

Kind of interesting, but I think the parts where she was talking about broader societal trends were weaker than the parts that were just about herself and her life/work.

Summer Fun by Jeanne Thornton

Maybe if I was an obsessive Beach Boys fan this would’ve worked better for me. I found the epistolary framing confusing and unnecessary. Just write the book in second person, you don’t need the letter framing!

Penitence by Kristin Koval

Unfortunately mostly felt like Beartown but worse, because Backman has a very intentional and interesting writing style and Koval does not. Backman also builds atmosphere and environments very effectively, so that it really feels like all of Beartown is telling you its story together, and Penitence develops… some characters a bit. Didn’t like how we stayed out of Nora’s head pretty much until the last page. Also I guessed the endgame reveal ten pages in, while the characters didn’t even think of it as a theory until two-thirds of the way into the book, which annoyed me.

Absolute Martian Manhunter, Vol. 1: Martian Vision by Deniz Camp

The Martian Vision pages were great and I loved the visuals and colors, but overall… I dunno. I understand why my friend who really liked it really liked it, because it’s the same friend who got me a copy of The Crying of Lot 49. I think reading this so soon after The Long Halloween made me tired of comics about men neglecting their families to fight crimes.


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November reading list! A lot of books because I’ve decided to get into poetry, and poetry books are short. I am not going to share any of my poems with the public with my name on them on account of what if they’re bad. But I started reading more poetry and reading about poetry to see if I can understand it better and if that’ll help me write it better. Anyway, the books.

More Weight: a Salem Story by Ben Wickey: This fucking ruled and I’m telling everyone I know how much I love it in real life. Second of my mad-dash Critic’s Poll reads that made me go “ooh” out loud. I got to meet the editor of this one at Jennifer Hayden’s talk and he was also very excited to talk about how good this book is. It’s a graphic novel about the Salem witch trials, and it is very, very well done. Beautiful art, great character work, works on the macro and micro levels, so well-researched?? Amazing, go read immediately.

Every single page is at this level of detail. No wonder it took ten years to make!

Happiness and Love by Zoe Dubno: I don’t know if I would have enjoyed this more or less if I’d read Woodcutters first. In any case, the Single Paragraph structure made it kind of hard to read but also kind of meditatively zen? Not as interesting as I had hoped it would be.

That’s What She Said by Eleanor Pilcher: I had this on hold at the library for like half a year and it was not worth the wait. Might have been worth a shorter wait. I liked the friendship between the two leads and how messy it ended up being, but neither love interest was like. Developed at all. The way the One Guy Beth had a crush one once just so happened to also be demisexual in the exact same way she is demisexual AND into her felt like a convenient coincidence because we don’t see them interact much between learning Beth had a crush on him and them getting together. Which is also annoying because like, being demi is about developing romantic feelings from the basis of a close friendship, but we don’t get to see them develop that friendship first or have much of that friendship on the page.
Also unfortunately tries to be funny but since this is British chicklit every joke just made me think “you will never be her (Sophie Kinsella)”. Or even Mhairi McFarlane. There’s a very high bar to funny British Women’s Fiction.

 

 

On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction by William Zinsser: While reading I went and discreetly searched my docs for the various phrases Mr. Zinsser disapproves of and was relieved to find I know better than to use most of those.
Interesting! Don’t know how useful it is for me generally, but I liked the bit about interviewing everyone possible about a subject and focusing on the intro and immediate hook because I think I need to work on that. I don’t labor over my nonfiction as much as Mr. Zinsser labors over his, but I do tinker. I could tinker harder.

The Writing Retreat by Julia Bartz: Ughhhghghgh. Bad girlboss writing retreat toxic friendship thriller novel. The most detached and robotic sex scenes I’ve read since “then he put his thingy in my you-know-what and we did it for the first time” in the fanfiction masterpiece My Immortal. Two paragraphs of the pov character being weird about introducing herself with her pronouns. Not one, not two, but THREE stupid end game plot twists! Why did I even bother reading this. I finished it in line for the Burnout Syndromes concert lol.

Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith: Okay, I don’t think Highsmith is for me. I was expecting more schemes and plots, but this felt very slow-paced, and it was mostly just being in a very stressed-out and miserable guy’s head, which was not fun. I did not really enjoy reading this one, but I will still check out Mr. Ripley just to see if I like that one better.

Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld: This one was also pretty slow, and almost… too realistic to be fun? Brought me back to the worst bits of high school and college, lol. But it was easier to read than Strangers on a Train, and I finished it pretty quickly. Reminded me of The Idiot by Elif Batuman. I wonder if it inspired Batuman.
I liked it much more than Romantic Comedy by Sittenfeld, that’s for sure. No one in Romantic Comedy felt like a person, but everyone in Prep felt like people, even if many of them had very fake-sounding names.

Where There’s Smoke There’s Dinner by Jennifer Hayden: I read this because Hayden was doing an author talk in town with Summer Pierre, and their author talk was very fun. I love watching longtime friends talk about each other’s work. I actually have not read Hayden’s famous Story of My Tits yet, sorry! But I liked this one, because it illuminated a very different relationship to food and cooking than I or anyone in my family has. It’s a little bleak and depressing, but she makes it funny. And I like the watercolors!

Possession : A Romance by A.S. Byatt: Long! But I liked it. I can see its influence on certain more recent cozy academic-setting romantasy books like the Emily Wilde trilogy. I skimmed through some of the 19th century parts and some of the poetry parts, but I liked the kooky academics all scrambling to get ahold of The Evidence, especially in the endgame.

The Hurting Kind by Ada Limón: I really liked this collection! I like how specific Limón is with her descriptions and references, and how she uses line breaks. It felt very deliberate and structured.

В конце ноября by Tove Jansson: I noticed it was the end of November so I was like “I gotta reread The End of November” and since I had the book in Russian I read it in Russian. I forgot it was the last Moominstory and also forgot everything about every character in it, but man, Jansson’s illustrations are so perfect. I should reread the other Moominbooks also. I actually learned to read Russian on Moomin when I was a kid! My grandma read them out loud to me and made me try and read a paragraph first before she’d read the rest of the chapter. So, lots of fond childhood memories.

I love the hatching… I wish I was good at nib pens lol

 

The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger: I’d never read this in school actually so I was surprised to learn I had osmosed absolutely none of the actual plot or events of the story besides the scene referencing the title and that Holden meets a prostitute. Maybe I would’ve liked it more if I read it in high school. I found Holden vaguely annoying, probably because I am no longer in high school.

The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo: No one told me Ms. Kondo sincerely believes in the healing power of crystals. Otherwise it was fairly motivating and I am totally for real going to Deep Clean next week after the JLPT exam I promise.

Moscow in the Plague Year by Marina Tsvetaeva: I read this in English while also looking up the originals of some of the poems in parallel to see what kinds of choices the translator made and whether or not I agreed with them. Mostly I didn’t, but also translating poetry seems like a horrible idea I would not want to do for fun. Tsvetaeva had such a sad life, but she wrote a lot of happy, sweet poems despite it all, somehow. She wrote a lot of poems in general, which was also weirdly motivating.

Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur: I’m trying to understand the state of internet poetry and also my library’s poetry ebook selection is very limited. Kaur’s work is… not good. But there’s something about it that makes me want to keep reading, and I think it’s the same kind of like car-crash voyeurism that makes me click on Twitter vent comics from strangers. I don’t want to hear about how much you love having straight sex, but also… I can’t look away for some reason? I do think a lot of these probably sound better read out loud than on the page, but whenever she throws in One Rhyme at random I get annoyed lol.
Some of the poems could be good with a few more editing passes. Some of the drawings are quite good, some of them look like notesapp scribbles, but all of them have an uncanny vectorized line quality that makes them look more artificial and less appealing. Her persistent anti-intellectualism is infuriating though and I hate that she’s so popular without even reading poetry by other people ever. Still, better her than fuckin’ Atticus I guess.

I liked this drawing a lot! I have cropped out the eyeroll-inducing words on the same page though.

Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slamet-Ries: Really nice, I’m glad I read it. I loved Witchy when I was in high school, but haven’t caught up with Slamet-Ries’s work in a while. Strange Bedfellows follows a guy who’s suddenly developed the power to manifest objects from his dreams, and a guy he manifested from his dreams (who happens to strongly resemble his high school crush). But he can’t actually fall in love with someone who’s just a figment of his own mind, right? Oberon, Kon, and Oberon’s family and friends were pretty well-realized, though I had some trouble keeping track of who was who exactly in Oberon’s large family. I love the colors and the aesthetics of both the real world and the dream world. The way the plot was resolved made sense to me. It was fun! This one I also had on hold since June and it felt worth the wait.

Erotica Romana by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Project Gutenberg ebook. I think a lot of it went over my head, I don’t have the classical background to understand all the allusions. But the words sounded nice! I preferred the shorter ones.

The Sun and Her Flowers by Rupi Kaur: I think I felt like if I just read enough of her poems I’ll suddenly Get It. I do not Get It. Some of the poems in this one were more interesting than the Milk & Honey ones, but most of the drawings were less interesting because she was clearly copying other artists (captioning a drawing riffing on Matisse’s dancers as Ode to Matisse for example) or photos. Sometimes there’s unnecessary wobbly borders around pages that add absolutely nothing whatsoever. She uses simple words, but it feels like it’s because she does not know more specific words exist. She says “flowers” where Limón, for example, would name a specific flower and describe it precisely. I wish she was more specific and less trying to be universal, but I guess the universality is how you get 4 million Instagram followers.

Anyway, I’ve written 37 poems in the last couple of weeks but if I start posting them online it’ll be on a secret side account under a pen name. Because What If They’re Bad (and not in a 4 million follower way).


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General announcement: succumbed to the siren call of a cash prize and started posting a Webtoon in this year’s contest, please read it and like share subscribe (there will be 5 more episodes, updating every Monday)

I read 16 books in March but it felt like less because each book seemed to take me forever to finish. At least most of them were good this time!

The Books! )

 

Tsuge review here.
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So I binged all of Blue Lock in about three days, after turning my nose up at the very premise when it first dropped in 2018. And like... I like it. But not the way I like Haikyuu!!, which is also a sports manga that occupies a lot of my brainspace. Blue Lock doesn't make me want to draw fanart or write fanfiction. I don't even have a favorite character in it. I guess I like Bachira and Chigiri if I really had to pick, but I don't think about any of them often enough to do that. But it gets me fired up in a way Haikyuu!! rarely did, because its pace was a lot more...slow and steady?
Blue Lock is operating at 200% intensity, all the time. Every soccer game is accompanied by characters burning with symbolic fire, usually fire with skulls in it. Every single soccer player wants to be the bestest in the world at all costs, unlike Haikyuu!! where for most of the characters high school volleyball really was just a school club they didn't continue with after high school. They're all doing crazy soccer things at all times, and even though I know basically nothing about soccer and have no interest in it, seeing them doing their crazy soccer things illustrated with sharp, graphic visual metaphors like disintegrating puzzle pieces, fire, lions and tigers and snakes (oh my!) makes me feel excited.
But not about soccer. No, it makes me excited because my first thought is, "Oh, I can draw people fencing like this. I can make fencing look cool if I draw it like this. I want to draw my fencing comic again."


I've drawn at least 4 different comics about high school girls fencing, the quality slowly improving with each attempt. I've finally landed on a group of characters I think could really work for a longform story, but my art still has a ways to go before it's publication ready. So I'm practicing!


There's a lot of manga about baseball (obviously), and more than a few series about volleyball and soccer (Farewell, My Dear Cramer is honestly slept on even though it got cancelled before its time. The anime was a very sad excuse for an adaptation. Feral girl rights!), but as far as comics about fencing that are available in English in any capacity go, we've got the webtoon Infinity (genuinely slaps hard, art style's an acquired taste but the writing is smart, characters fun and they do make an effort to make fencing look cool while taking advantage of the vertical scroll format.) And the Boom! series Fence!, which I liked when it first dropped and then slowly realized it was in fact falling apart at the seams. And each new issue just makes the holes bigger. One of its biggest failings is, quite honestly, the art: the fact that it makes fencing look boring.

Fencing is not actually as visually interesting a sport as swashbuckling swordfights in movies make it seem: everyone wears white, faces are totally obscured by black wire mesh masks, and you can't even move from side to side in it, just back and forth! You have to use visual metaphors and, if working in color, emotionally expressive color to make fencing look interesting in a comic. But Fence! doesn't even differentiate the fencing uniforms from different schools realistically: it's impossible to keep track of who's from where when they're standing around. Infinity manages that and more. Like, okay, just look at this.



panel from fence rivals depicting characters standing and other characters yelling fencing terminology over them.

AAAAAAAAAAA.
Anyway, the other thing I realized is that the last few comics I've felt insane about, Blue Lock and Pyramid Game, have both been... unhinged. Lots of people behaving in ways normal people would never. Hand in unlovable hand toxic female friendships and singleminded homoerotic soccer obsession. But when I write original stories/make original comics, I tend towards things that people call "cute" and "sweet" and "nice." I don't think my work is cutesy or anything, and I'd like to believe I make things with at least some bite to them. At least a little darkness. But why am I so scared of writing the over-the-top intensity and character drama I love reading about so much? Why am I so afraid of writing failgirls, and totally unhinged girls? How do I channel the energy Blue Lock awakens in me, or the spite Fence! makes me feel?
Anyway, Blue Lock should've been a yuri manga.

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but I am doing something new and scary and need validation that no one is giving me for it :(

So basically, I'm WWAC (the website I write/edit for)'s new Artist In Residence, which means I'll be doing a comic for their patreon for the next 6 months. I already drew all of the pages for said comic. It's an autobiographical comic about my dating life that turns into (spoilers) how I met my girlfriend. The first 3 pages are now up on the WWAC patreon if you want to read them. The cover looks like this.
'A pink line drawing of a girl leaping through a carousel of dating app windows, framed by handwritten cursive text reading "like wind in a field".'
I drew it with a pink pen in a sketchbook and then scanned it and cleaned it up. The title is from a song I like (and if you've been following my main Tumblr for a long time you might remember seeing it there), the full line being "to search for love like wind in a field" And that's what my comic is about! Searching for love like wind in a field. I hope you like it. I hope people read it. I am, frankly, terrified.
Thank you!


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 I wrote up a long post and then DW deleted it. I am furious. But not so furious that I will not rewrite the post to the best of my memory. Because I have good content here.

The biggest award in comics, the Eisners, always seem to nominate webtoons to spite me personally. The year before last, they nominated Lavender Jack by Dan Schkade, my beloved, but also Let's Play, my beloathed. Last year, it was Third Shift Society, whose crime was being boring. This year, it's The Kiss Bet, whose crime is being unlikeable and having awkward art and characters that do not behave like people or even approximations of people. 

And what's most baffling about this is there are plenty of good comics with similar basic concepts on that same platform that didn't get that acknowledgement! Why!

One of these comics is The Four of Them by Mai Hirschfeld, about four friends and their romantic entanglements, but mostly their friendship. It's a satisfyingly slow burn with really great characterization. Also, gay people exist in it! Amazing!

I also love the newer comic Seasons of Blossom by Hongduck and Nemone, also about four high school students, but mostly about the romance between them. The plot twists in ways I don't expect, and you end up really rooting for these hets!

Odd Girl Out by Morangji also has awkward art, but the growth and development its characters go through keeps readers invested for hundreds of episodes. I couldn't put it down. It's another school dramedy with romance in its second season, but the focus is on how the protagonist Nari comes into her own as a confident, capable leader. I love her and want the best for her.

If you want something completely different, Yuna & Kawachan by Lauren Schmidt is ending soon, and it's got a really unique and appealing art style and concept. A schoolgirl and a mascot with PTSD try to make their way to a safe zone in the middle of a monster apocalypse. 

Also completely different: Heir's Game by Suspu. The Three Musketeers for gays. Although with more graphic violence than the Soviet live-action miniseries of The Three Musketeers (the definitive version of the story, naturally.)

Both The Makeup Remover and Surviving Romance by Lee Yone are incredible, intelligent webtoons. The Makeup Remover is a deconstruction and critical reflection on how makeup and beauty culture affect all kinds of people in our society, while Surviving Romance is a fun mashup of "reincarnated into a romance novel" + "zombie apocalypse" + "time loop." Their character writing is really compelling, and they make such good, thought-provoking points.

I recently caught up to How to Become a Dragon by eon and it's so good. Do you like exam arcs? Fantasy/distant past characters having to adapt to the modern world? Reigen Arataka? This is the webtoon for you. It's hilarious and has such a unique premise. I'm into it.

Romance 101 by Namsoo is a cute romcom with a really appealing art style and a really relatable nerd of a protagonist. It's funny and I like it.

I hope you enjoy these recommendations I have made!

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