Willingham, Bill: (06) Fables: Homelands

The next volume of Bill Willingham’s Fables, Homelands, does indeed return to nice juicy plot. Well, after a two-issue excursion into Jack Horner’s life, which I suppose is cute, but I don’t particularly like Jack, so I didn’t particularly care. (I believe this is the point where he spins off into his own series, Jack of Fables, for those who do like him).

In the title story, Boy Blue is on a quest in the Homelands, and before he’s done, he’ll have learned the secret of the Adversary’s identity—and so will have the reader.

As I said previously, I’d been spoiled about the Adversary and was doubtful that the revelation could be pulled off. However, I was satisfied with it, on the whole, and it does make sense in that fractured-fairytale way. This volume also explains why all the Fables seen so far have been of European origin, though not the relationship of Fables to fables.

Miscellaneous story notes: something dire had better happen to the magical item that features so prominently in “Homelands,” because it is vastly overpowered. I’m not quite clear on the timeline; the Jack story takes five years, but I think “Homelands” might end a couple years short of that. It’s not terribly significant, except insofar as it implies minor details about how Fabletown works in the interim, but it’s the kind of thing I tend to wonder about.

The art continues to be easy to follow and rewarding of a second look. The opening part of “Homelands” (an issue and a half, roughly) is very like, well, a fairy tale, and so uses full-page backgrounds of a single color and a minimum of panels. A historical tale is rendered in a simpler, slightly faded style. And the last two issues focus more on Fabletown’s characters and so go back to the page layout that seemed to have stabilized in the last volume: scene- or character-appropriate ornaments at the top and bottom, and narrow side panels that bleed out to the paper’s edge and show context, usually a location but sometimes a symbol.

The titles of the next volumes suggest more juicy plot to come; at present the library only has the next, and so when I’m done with that I’ll probably be making a large purchase from Amazon . . .

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Willingham, Bill: (05) Fables: The Mean Seasons

The Mean Seasons, the fifth volume of Fables, is a highly transitional volume, and therefore somewhat unsatisfactory when read by itself. I have a hunch that the subsequent storylines will be such that a temporary pause to set things up was necessary; but it doesn’t much reconcile me to having set off for an overnight trip without the next volume in hand.

The Mean Seasons collects three stories: a one-issue tale of what Cinderella really does with her time; two issues about Bigby in World War II; and four issues of the title story, which spans a year. It’s this last that’s the transitional bit; the others are fine in and of themselves. Fabletown’s Mayoral election is held, and as a result, various characters start down new paths in their lives.

To the extent that there’s a uniting thread in “The Mean Seasons,” it’s Snow and Bigby’s relationship, which is another reason for my dissatisfaction with this volume. I rather liked the two of them before this, but this story feels as though it’s just tossing up obstacles to prolong the drama, like a soap opera or a bad romance novel—by making the two of them annoying. Bleh.

I have every reason to believe that more meaty plot is just around the corner, however, so watch this space.

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Willingham, Bill: (04) Fables: March of the Wooden Soldiers

Volume four of Bill Willingham’s Fables, March of the Wooden Soldiers, ramps up the action with an invasion of our world by the Adversary’s forces. I thought it was a strong, tight volume with an exciting story and some good development of secondary characters, including Boy Blue and Pinocchio. To my surprise, I continue to be amused by Prince Charming; and I liked the riffing off the Matrix‘s Agents through the wooden soldiers of the title.

I will note that I was spoiled regarding the Adversary’s identity. (Wikipedia link immediately redirects to that identity. I should’ve known better, but I really I thought I’d get an intermediate page that would have spoiler warnings. I’ve left a note proposing that.) Despite the clues in this volume, I have a healthy amount of skepticism that the eventual revelation will work.

(When it happens, I’d like to see the revelation bring some of the complexity to the political that is present in the personal. Right now it’s very black and white, which is an odd contrast to the reimaginings of the Fables.)

This volume includes an introductory one-shot, penciled by P. Craig Russell and Craig Hamilton, about the last stand in the Homelands. Hamilton’s art is not to my taste, as it has bulging anatomy and oddly garish faces. The main story’s art is by Mark Buckingham (pencils, some inking) and Steve Leialoha (some inking), and continues to have a lot of features I like, including carefully-designed page borders and numbers.

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Willingham, Bill: (01-03) Fables: Legends In Exile; Animal Farm; Storybook Love

Fables is a comic series written by Bill Willingham and drawn by various people, mostly Mark Buckingham and Lan Medina (pencillers) and Steve Leialoha (inker). Its premise: fairy tales are real, but happened in a number of different worlds (how they got into our stories isn’t clear yet). Hundreds of years ago, those worlds were overrun by the Adversary, and the surviving Fables escaped into our world [*] and eventually set up two underground communities: for the human-appearing members, Fabletown in New York City; and for those who can’t pass, the Farm upstate.

[*] There’s a suggestion that they arrived in Europe specifically, which may be why all the characters are of European origin, but I can’t sort this out either until the relationship of Fables to fables is clarified.

Generally speaking, there are two intertwined things at work in the first three volumes. First, there’s the now-usual application of modern patterns of thought to the fairy tales themselves—Goldilocks continues to unhesitatingly break whatever rules and norms stand in the way of her desires, for instance, and Prince Charming is divorced from Snow White, Briar Rose, and Cinderella. Second, there are the tensions suggested by the premise, people having been forced into a world where their true natures must remain hidden.

Volume 1, Legends in Exile, is structured as a murder mystery, which is a handy way to introduce a bunch of characters and their tensions. In the second volume, Animal Farm, a revolution is brewing at the Farm. Most of the third volume, Storybook Love, is taken up by an arc of the same name, playing out repercussions of the first two volumes. (It also has two standalone stories, and a two-issue arc about how the Fables deal with a reporter who’s discovered their existence.) Chad felt that these volumes were too ad hoc for his tastes. I can see how he got that impression, but to me the looseness feels more fun and energetic than sloppy; and I’m interested enough by the characters to keep reading, even if an ongoing plot didn’t apparently start next volume.

I had wrongly gotten the impression that the art was really static in this series; I may have seen pages from Animal Farm, which is the volume that’s the most boxes-in-regular-rows. The first and third depart from that, with things like panels laid over full-page bleeds, or pages shaped like shields that show Prince Charming taking a more active role (I particularly like these), or a sword fight across the bottom of several pages, to show that it’s running parallel in time with events shown at the top of the pages. (Boo to Vertigo, by the way, for not preserving the even-odd arrangement of pages in the trade paperbacks. This is especially bad in part four of “Storybook Love,” as pages 163 and 164 were obviously designed to face each other; but the pages tend to be united by color themes, which also get broken up in a sometimes-disruptive fashion.) There are also nice little touches like ornamented panel borders, and the location of the page numbers in parts two-four of “Storybook Love.”

ETA: you can get the first issue in PDF format from Vertigo.

I had sufficient fun reading these that the next day I went to the library and got the next five volumes, and I fully expect to end up buying them all. I don’t expect it will have the focus of Sandman, as it’s not a fixed-length series, but if you like this kind of playing with stories, you might see if your own library has it.

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Rowling, J.K.: (03) Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (audio)

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban is certainly better than its predecessor and may well be the best of the lot, though I’ll leave that assessment until I finish my re-listening/re-read. Based on listening to the audiobook, I think there are a number of reasons why I liked it more. First and least objectively, there’s much less “woe is Harry.” Second and perhaps more useful, however, is that the plot fills out the structure much better. The combination of a school story structure and a mystery plot tends to leave the middle of the book very open, and here the Dementors and what they make Harry hear are a much better way of filling that space. Also, the denouement is quite lengthy, and so the various bits of mystery-solving and action don’t feel like an anti-climax. Third, the core story of this book is a lot meatier, more textured, and more interesting.

Other notes: Ron really needs to work on anger management. Hermione is not actually Supergirl, despite the movie’s changes. Plot holes (ROT-13): jul qvq gur gvzr gheare zbir gurz sebz gur ubfcvgny jvat gb gur ragenapr unyy? fubhyqa’g fancr, nf n grnpure, xabj gung urezvbar unq n gvzr gheare (rvgure bssvpvnyyl be guebhtu tbffvc)? jul jnfa’g untevq chavfurq sbe ohpxornx’f rfpncr, vs gur boivbhf rkcynangvba vf gung ur qvqa’g gvr ohpxornx cebcreyl? naq, abg ernyyl n cybg ubyr, ohg v abgvpr gung uneel jnf nobhg gb nfx untevq jul ur arire gbyq uvz nobhg oynpx naq gura jnf qvfgenpgrq ol ohpxornx’f cyvtug, orpnhfr gur nafjre jnf “gur nhgube qvqa’g jnag uvz gb xabj lrg.”

(I am definitely not listening to the next two, but will re-read them sometime in the nearish future.)

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O’Malley, Bryan Lee: Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Life

I so rarely actively decide to not finish a book, that I don’t have any policy on whether that book appears on the booklog. I’m putting Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Life, by Bryan Lee O’Malley, here mostly because I’ve heard a lot about it and if I ever need to decline a recommendation for it, I’ll be able to copy-and-paste my reasons from this entry.

This is a graphic novel, the first in a series. It looks like manga, being of the same physical size and in black and white, but was written in English (the author lives in Toronto, where the story is set). I have no idea whether this makes it “original English-language manga” or not. Scott Pilgrim is an unemployed 23-year-old who plays in a band and has a girlfriend in high school. I got about a third of the way into this volume, just after he becomes fascinated by a woman who is not his girlfriend, when I said the Eight Deadly Words — “I don’t care what happens to these people” — and put it down. Chad tells me it gets considerably weirder later on, but, well, I just don’t care. I don’t like Scott, I have no reason to like his high school girlfriend, and I wasn’t getting a good feeling about the fascinating non-girlfriend either—but the not liking Scott would, of course, be more than sufficient.

The art is energetic, often cluttered, makes heavy use of solid black, and very stylized in a strange sort of way; you can see five pages of the first volume at the publisher’s website, or a short standalone story at Newsarama.

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Rowling, J.K.: (01-02) Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone; Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (audio)

If I’ve done my math right, I should be able to listen to all of the Harry Potter book on audio before the last one is released in July; so I started with the first two, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.

Listening to these was an interesting and revealing experience. I was glad to be reacquainted with the charm of Rowling’s prose, the humor and the small touches that get lost for me in the big picture. And I got a better sense of the major characters’ personalities than I had before, again because of the slower nature of audiobooks. So those were definite benefits.

Of course, the slower nature also gives more time for flaws to become apparent. With the first book, this is mostly limited to a realization that the mythic nature of the ending doesn’t quite come together; some of it fails to resonate (ROT-13 spoilers (decrypt at a webpage or via a browser bookmarklet): jul dhveery pbhyqa’g gbhpu uneel). The second book, however, I just found more work to listen to. It takes a long time to get started, and tying the books to the school year does odd things to the pacing and tension; the “woe is Harry” sections are a slog; and the structure of the book is neither fish nor fowl (a spoiler-filled post on this is over at my LiveJournal). Also, small plot holes are more apparent, like the contortions required to get a teacher-free confrontation at the end, or (more ROT-13 spoilers) jul yhpvhf oebhtug qbool gb ubtjnegf jvgu uvz va gur svefg cynpr. At any rate, I didn’t enjoy it as much, though I will say that Lockhart is so much more fun when performed (as the movie already showed).

I intend to listen to at least the third book, but I may permit myself to just read the fourth and fifth, as they are monstrously long and seem very likely to suffer in the audio format. (Not sure about the sixth.) I continue to be anxious about the final book: I think there are a number of things being set up by existing books, that I’m not sure if there’s going to be enough room to satisfactorily resolve. These two books, for instance, are built around the fact that things often aren’t as black and white as they first appear: but there are still a lot of received truths in the universe that I’m not sure have been thoroughly debunked. (The one that immediately comes to mind is “all Slytherins are nasty”; somehow this seems implausible to me, and yet all I recall getting so far is “there are bad people in other houses,” which you’ll note does not, actually, negate the prior sentence.) I’ll leave the rest for another time, since they become more explicit in later books.

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Robb, J.D.: (24) Innocent in Death; [meta] 2007-03 commenting notes

Another late winter, another J.D. Robb book, this time Innocent in Death. An entirely harmless school teacher has been poisoned, and while the solution seems to be at his exclusive private school, Eve has a hard time getting a handle on the case. It doesn’t help that she’s gotten tied in knots over an ex-lover of Roarke’s, for the first time.

I do like that Robb continues to explore Eve & Roarke’s marriage, putting stresses on it and exploring how they react. This particular situation also has a nice thematic relationship to the main mystery—which is perhaps a touch over the top, but still good fun. One of the better installments in the series, I’m inclined to say at the moment.

Administrative notes: you can now get new comments on entries of your choice by subscribing to RSS feeds; look for the link below the “post a comment” form. And OpenID commenting works again, so LiveJournalers can just enter the URL for their journal to sign in.

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King, Stephen: The Dark Tower series

The problem with talking about Stephen King’s Dark Tower series is the ending. Personally, I hate it, so much so that I’ve finally acknowledged to myself that I can’t bear to re-read the series (I finished it nearly two years ago, and for several months was planning a re-read so I could write it up properly). This opinion is not universal, however, so I can’t just say “it sucks, stay away”; but I also can’t just broadcast indiscriminate spoilers to help people decide whether they want to read it. (If you want my spoilery takes on things, see these LiveJournal posts (reverse-chronological order).) Nevertheless, I should say something about the series, so I will do my best here.

The series is made up of seven books [*] written over more than thirty years. In very brief, the Dark Tower is the nexus of all universes—and it is failing. Roland of Gilead is the last of his world’s gunslingers; he is on a quest to save the Tower, traveling through a world that has moved on.

[*] There is also a prequel novella called “The Little Sisters of Eluria,” first published in the anthology Legends and reprinted in King’s collection Everything’s Eventual. To the best of my recollection, it is entirely skippable.

Roland and his quest are introduced in The Gunslinger, which was originally a fixup of five stories published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (King substantially re-wrote the book to bring it into line with later books. I haven’t read the revised version, because I regard it as a (melodrama alert #1!) betrayal of the reader.) Its fairly famous opening sentence, “The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed,” gives a sense of the book as a whole: strange, spare, dark, compelling but not precisely welcoming—much like its title character, in other words. Though it has elements of Westerns, horror, and epic fantasy, this book feels most like a Western to me—or, to be precise, least like a horror novel or an epic fantasy novel. (I don’t read Westerns.)

The next two books, The Drawing of the Three and The Waste Lands, describe the formation of a new ka-tet, or group bound together by destiny. As such, these three books form a natural unit—despite the fact that The Waste Lands ends on an appalling cliffhanger. The books get longer and more like King’s usual style, opening up from their tight focus on Roland as he, himself, opens up.

(These three books are also a unit because I read them together, more or less—I don’t remember when I started, but it wasn’t very long before I bought the third new when I was fourteen. As a result, I first fell in love with the series during my “indiscriminate” phase—while I’ve re-read them since, and they’ve held up for me, I can’t claim to be objective.)

The fourth book, Wizard and Glass, was published five years later. The bulk of it is a flashback to Roland’s original ka-tet, his first love, and the roots of his quest. There’s much good about this story, but it has always felt over-long to me; and the present-day framing material is unfortunately slight. Structurally speaking, it is a pause between the first and last three books, clearing away the old now that the new has been established.

The last three books were released at intervals of six months in 2003 and 2004, after King’s serious accident in 1999. I mention the accident here because I found myself wondering whether some of the issues I had were attributable to King’s having rushed to finish. This is mostly in reference to the last book, which I will come to in turn.

The fifth book, The Wolves of the Calla, is faster and tighter than the fourth, though it still spends a fair bit of time on backstory, this time of a newly-introduced character. There’s nothing wrong with this thread, but it didn’t particularly grab me. Perhaps it was just the character, or perhaps there isn’t room in my heart given how thoroughly it’s filled by the ka-tet as established in The Waste Lands. The other threads are a variation on Seven Samurai and a return to our world (or something very close to it) as significant in the larger picture—because, after all, what’s the point of having a multiverse if you can’t play with it?

Song of Susannah, the sixth book, is noticeably shorter than its predecessor in both length and time: I believe it covers just a single day. It also ends on a cliffhanger, and the level of metafictionality rises rather a lot. I don’t have a problem with how the metafiction works in the series, but if you are allergic to the concept, you should very definitely give the series a miss. (Ditto if you hate authors tying all their books together into one big universe.) By the end of the book, I was filled with fierce love for the ka-tet and was pretty well dreading the next one: I’d run headlong into unmarked spoilers for the last book, you see, as part of a conversation in a general forum, and I just couldn’t see how that would work.

(I believe Song of Susannah is the book with an allusion to the fall of the World Trade Center, which I found in jarringly bad taste and kind of a cheat, to boot.)

And now to try and figure out what to say about the last volume, The Dark Tower. I think my issues with the book fall into two categories: everything before the Coda at the very end, and the Coda itself.

The Dark Tower series is almost defiantly cross-genre: the underlying quest is high fantasy, while the characters and plots are from Westerns, horror, and fantasy (in roughly that order of frequency, I would guess). This works surprisingly well until the last volume. The genres of problems and their solutions are mismatched; there are unnecessary single-genre bits; and the overall effect is lumpy, puzzling, and frequently anti-climactic. It’s still affecting and effective in points, but much more towards the beginning, as I recall.

And then there’s the Coda. It’s the very last thing in the book, and it opens with the author telling the reader that, no, really, you probably don’t want to read this. And indeed, I wish I hadn’t, but I’d been spoiled—though the warning is itself annoying, as the general effect (melodrama alert #2!) was of the Coda tearing out my heart and stomping on it, while telling me smugly that it was all my fault. But melodrama aside, I think there are genuine logistical problems with the Coda, that the book makes no attempt to resolve or even acknowledge. So the Coda ran afoul of two of my major reading characteristics: fervent partisanship on behalf of beloved characters, and a perpetual desire for plot elements to make sense. Conversely, at least some people who like the Coda seem to do so for its thematic and symbolic elements. That’s about all the guidance I can give as to whether someone might like it; I realize it’s not much, but even as it is I worry that I’ve come too close to spoiling things.

I genuinely thought I would never see this series finished, even before King’s accident; and I’ve been reading it for so long, and have such an emotional reaction to it, it’s hard for me to assess the series overall. There’s certainly much that’s good in it: outstanding characters; careful use of its central themes of addiction and division; successfully pulling off a very tricky type of metafictionality; and a kind of fundamental conviction or passion behind it all that makes a lot of objectively-corny things work (though YMMV as always). The cross-genre stuff is really interesting as well, at least until it breaks down in the last volume. But as I’ve suggested above, the pacing is often problematic, and I don’t think I’ve talked to anyone who found all of the resolutions in the last volume satisfactory (not counting the Coda). Given all that, and what I suspect are highly personal reactions to the Coda, I can’t really recommend it or not recommend it. It’s a great big ambitious piece of work, possibly King’s life work, and I expect it to be the subject of debate and analysis for years to come.

(Need I say it? No unprotected spoilers in comments, please. If you must, either ROT-13 them or put them between <span style=”color: #000; background-color: #000;”> and </span>.)

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Smith, Alexander McCall: (02) Tears of the Giraffe (audio)

Tears of the Giraffe, by Alexander McCall Smith, is the sequel to The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency. As with the first book, I listened to an audio recording narrated by Lisette Lecat.

This book is somewhat more focused that the last, with two major threads and two minor. In Mma Ramotswe’s professional life, she investigates the ten-year-old disappearance of a young American man, at the plea of his mother. (Lecat’s American accent is imperfect, but does not hurt my ears too much.) To keep that investigation from being over too soon, there’s also an adultery investigation, conducted by Mma Ramotswe’s new assistant, that raises unexpected ethical questions. In Mma Ramotswe’s personal life, she and Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni adjust to their new status as an affianced couple and find that their new lives take an unexpected turn (to them; it’s entirely predictable to the reader). Relatedly, Mr. J.L.B. Matekoni’s maid also has some adjusting to do, in a subplot that felt to me like it had barged in from some other book.

Lecat does a beautiful job of narrating, as before, and the very leisurely pace of the story was restful for part of the time I was listening—but only part. As with the first book, I didn’t find the mystery portion satisfying (too easy, both as a puzzle and in its outcome), and I have no reason to think that any subsequent books will be different. I should probably just check them out of the library and skim them to see what happens to the recurring characters (rather than trying out our library’s downloadable audiobooks for the third one). However, if you like the books already, do try the audiobooks.

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