Comics – The Last Unicorn

THE LAST UNICORN #1 (IDW)

Writer: Peter Beagle; Adapter: Peter B. Gillis; Art: Renae DeLiz; Inker/Colorist: Ray Dillon; Letterer: Robbie Robbins; Editor: Mariah Huehner

scribblerworks-last-unicorn-1From novel to animation feature to comic book, Beagle’s famous story retains its original charm. The delicate wistfulness manages to touch some vulnerable part in the audience, bringing a sweetness.

Gillis does an excellent job of adapting the story to the comic book format. The first issue does not rush, and yet moves forward at a satisfying place. He wisely sets in the key points of the Unicorn learning that her kindred are missing and the world no longer looks for or expects to see her as she is. That melancholy loss leads nicely to the issue’s cliffhanger, where sinister, shadowed figures discover the sleeping creature.

The look for the book is somewhat based on that of the animated feature. But it is not slavish, instead it has a grace of its own. DeLiz perfectly captures the wistfulness and melancholy that permeates the story. Dillon’s coloring shows an excellent touch for the story. The colors are lush, and the all-important handling of the Unicorn is perfect: she glows on the page.

I’ll look forward to seeing the rest of this adaptation.

THE LAST UNICORN #2 (IDW)

Writer: Peter S. Beagle; Adapter: Peter B. Gillis; Art: Renae De Liz; Colored & Inked: Ray Dillon; Lettered: Robbie Robbins, Edited: Mariah Huehner

I need to again compliment Gillis on his handling of the chore of adapting Beagle’s delicate classic. From Schmendrick’s regret that he is not better as a magician to the serious danger lurking in the caged harpy, Gillis makes excellent choices in the adaptation.

He is well partnered with De Liz, for the artwork continues to hold onto the charm of the prose original. But both working together achieve the special poignancy of the single page where magician and unicorn walk away from the rampage of the released harpy. In the vast dark landscape, the small figures of magician and unicorn walk toward the rising sun, while in the sky above them are hints of the cosmic web the enchanted spider thought she was weaving — with a final caption referencing “the tiny, dry sound of a spider weeping.”

That line alone, highlighted on the beautiful art is worth the cover price of the issue. It justifies adapting the tale into this format. In prose, it is a charming line in a book full of enchanting prose. In a film, there’s little way to convey it. But in the graphic form, we have conveyed all on one page the loneliness of the questers, the calm needed to face immortals, the awareness of the harsh vengeance of the harpy, and the force of shattered illusions in the sound of a weeping spider.

This adaptation is proving its worth with every page.

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Comics – Usagi Yojimbo

USAGI YOJIMBO #127 (Dark Horse Comics)

Writer & Illustrator: Stan Sakai; Editor: Diana Schutz

scribblerworks-usagi-yojimbo-127I have been aware of Stan Sakai’s ronin rabbit for a couple of years, but just had not gotten around to checking out the book. However, I recently got a copy of the March issue and gave it a try.

The story of the issue, “The Sword of Narukami,” has his hero Usagi encountering a very serious samurai battling a mob of bandits by himself. Inuyoshi is on a quest to reclaim the heirloom sword of his master’s clan.

I have long had a fascination with medieval Japanese history and particularly the Tokugawa Shogunate. I was first hooked by Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, which led to Yojimbo and Sanjuro. That also led to my becoming a huge fan of actor Toshiro Mifune. So reading Sakai’s story proved to be a delight. It may be peopled with anthropomorphic animals, but underneath it lies a wealth of knowledge of Japanese history and samurai tradition.

The thing that really interested me in reading the book was how Sakai handles the story. He does not actually downplay the violence inherent in a samurai story (they are after all fighting with swords, often to the death). And yet, the cartooning style and animal characters give a little distance to the violence. I thoroughly enjoyed the book. Sakai treats the influences of history and tradition with a light toch, which makes the story very accessible to both young readers and those who know nothing of Japanese history and culture.

Sakai’s art has expressive charm and energy. The story is solid and tightly told. Over all, a fine issue. It also did the job of selling me on the whole series. Now I want more!

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Comics – Incorruptible

INCORRUPTIBLE #1 (Boom!)

Writer: Mark Waid; Artist: Jean Diaz; Inks: Belardino Brabo; Colorist: Andrew Dalhouse; Letterer: Ed Dukeshire; Editor: Matt Gagnon.

This series is spun out from Mark Waid’s Irredeemable (which, dang it all, I will now have to catch up on!). You don’t need to know the previous title, since you get a sufficient recap in this issue, but trust me, you are going to want it. Mark Waid is at the top of his game here.

The story starts iscribblerworks-incorruptible-1n this issue with the question: what happens when a super-powered criminal sees the Best of the Best of superheroes go off the deep end and kill most of the other superheroes? Max Damage is wanted by the FBI for “manslaughter, terrorism, armed robbery, conspiracy, and interstate flight.” But, it becomes apparent in this issue, flat-out murder is not his thing and he doesn’t intend to stand for it.

This reformation comes as a shock to his teen-aged gal sidekick, Jailbait (and yes, she’s everything that name implies), and to the lead FBI investigator after Max. Nevermind his former gang, who he sets up to be captured by law-enforcement.

Brabo has a nice clean style to the art here, keeping the pencils uncluttered. Dalhouse’s colors work quite well. This issue takes place at night, so it is saturated with blue tones. But Dalhouse makes sharp use of the yellows for explosions and gunfire. It’s a great look.

I’m hooked. And I’m a pusher. Come on, give it a try! You’ll like it.

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Books – The Big Over-Easy


by Jasper Fforde (Viking: New York, 2005)

This is the first of Fforde’s books that I’ve read. I do own a copy of The Eyre Affair, but I haven’t read it yet.

Jasper Fforde

Jasper Fforde

What does one call this work, genre-wise? It’s a mystery. It’s contemporary urban in setting. But with its literary conceit of treating nursery rhyme & tale characters as part of society, it could be called a fantasy. And considering the way the author skewers the whole matter of true-crime writing, fictionalizing and dramatizing, it could certainly be categorized as satire. Whatever you end up calling it, I call it a romping fun read.

Detective Inspector Jack Spratt of Reading, England investigates crimes involving nursery tale characters. He gets no respect, and is continually being upstaged in the public eye by a flamboyant rival detective. So, when Humpty Dumpty has a great fall, Jack plods his way through the investigation. He gradually pieces together the plot that led to the egg’s demise, assisted by his contrary Detective Sergeant. (Okay, nowhere in the book is she actually called “contrary,” but since she bears the name “Mary Mary,” what else is one to think?)

To talk about the plot would be to give away half the fun. So I won’t do that.

But as I neared the end of the book, I did start thinking how fun a movie adaptation of this would be. Not a kid’s movie, though they might enjoy it, but also not a bitter, cynical “adult” film either. Kenneth Branaugh, I thought, would be great to cast – either as Jack’s rival Friedland Chymes (a very Gilderoy Lockhart type role) or (in a counter-casting move) as Jack himself. What fun it would be to see up on the screen a world where ordinary humans mix with antrhopmorphized pigs, five foot something walking eggs, blue aliens, and a magic beanstalk? A lot of fun. In the meantime, here’s this book. GO ENJOY IT!

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Books – Cordelia’s Honor


by Lois McMaster Bujold

This compilation volume contains the “beginning” of the Miles Volkosigan Saga. The qualification comes from the fact that the various stories of the Saga were not written in chronological order. But the contents here deal with how the parents of Miles met and established their relationship.

Lois McMaster Bujold

Lois McMaster Bujold

Cordelia meets Aral at a time when they are on opposite sides of an interplanetary conflict. But in spite of that political context, the pair achieve a meeting of minds and respect that was more powerful than the elements which tried to separate them. And yes, there was also a sexual attraction.

Cordelia takes her fate into her own hands and strikes out to reach what she desires: to be with Aral. Her matter-of-fact, no-nonsense character makes her very appealing to read about. She doesn’t care for convention and isn’t particularly concerned about the opinions of others. She works at being just and fair to all, but has a ruthlessness about matters that alarms those who love social rules and rituals.

I like her.

Bujold seems to have an affection for writing about intrigues and manouverings. But she keeps the reader engaged in the whole activity.

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Graphic Novels – Lions, Tigers and Bears


by Mike Bullock & Jack Lawrence

scribblerworks-mike-bullock

Mike Bullock

Bullock launches into a series for the young and the young at heart with Volume 1: “Fear and Pride”. Perhaps there is nothing new in the concept of children drawn into the fantasy world of their toys. Yet Bullock makes it fresh and engaging.

From the beginning, when young Joey is given a set of special stuffed toys by his grandmother, any reader can understand his feelings. Everyone has felt those insecurities that cause us to cling to the special toy, if only for a moment. Bullock accesses that immediacy easily,and Lawrence’s art captures the situations and characters with a delightful and unthreatening grace.

This first volume brings Joey (and the Reader) the lessons of dealing with fear and learning to work with others. You will love the Pride and be charmed by at least one of the quartet – Minerva, Venus, Pallo and Ares. There may be monsters and demons under the bed, coming to get you. But the Pride is watching and guarding.

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Graphic Novels – The Iron Ghost


written by Chuck Dixon, art by Sergio Cariello & Flint Henry

In this graphic novel, we’re plunged into a mystery during the fall of Nazi Germany. It’s Berlin in 1945, as the city crumbles under air assaults & the Nazi regime collapses. Two German police detectives try to solve a string of murders.

Chuck Dixon

Chuck Dixon

Dixon pulls out an unusual setting for his story, and challenges the usual practice of making all WW II Germans “evil.” The detectives are not invested in the survival of the Nazi party; they are just trying to do their job, like good cops the world over. Cariello & Henry deliver the goods in showing us the war-torn Berlin – crumbling, with the occasional spurts of explosions. Nazi officers scrambling to save their hides from the advancing Allies, a vengeful figure stalking those he has judged worthy of destruction, and a rumpled detective doggedly pursuing evidence of murders in the worst of circumstances, all these circle round about as Berlin falls to pieces.

It’s a fine, unusual read, with engaging and striking artwork. Check it out.

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Graphic Novels – Birds of Prey: Old Friends, New Enemies


by Chuck Dixon, Greg Land, Drew Geraci

This volume contains the stories (the original one-shot and a mini-series, with some additional stories) that launched the monthly title that passed its 100 issues mark, was cancelled, and then rebooted with great success (in 2010).

Black Canary, crimefighter, was at loose ends, without direction, when Oracle (Barbara Gordon, former Batgirl) contacted her with an offer of activity. The partnership and friendship that grows between the two women can be found in subsequent volumes of the series. But this volume gives you their beginnings as a team.

Chuck Dixon

Chuck Dixon

Chuck Dixon writes women with the different voices and attitudes that real women have. These two women do not exist to gratify male expectations: they are forces in their own right. A refreshing change in a field where many female characters seem to exist only for a cheesecake factor.

The stories are filled with plenty of action and adventure. Anyone who is bored by this title isn’t really paying attention.

(Also check out the volumes written by Gail Simone. She expands the team, bringing additional variety to the adventures. Her stories continue the great storytelling tradition Dixon began.)

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Non-Fiction – What Will Harry Do?


by Janet Scott Batchler

While readers waited on J.K. Rowling to deliver the last book of her Harry Potter series, it was fun to speculate about what would be revealed, what twists the story might take. It speaks to the power of Rowling’s storytelling skills that the audience was engaged enough to pursue the speculations.

Janet Scott Batchler

Janet Scott Batchler

But what Janet Batchler does in this book goes beyond “mere” speculation. She published this book before Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows was released.

Batchler, a screenwriter, applied her practical knowledge of storytelling to what we had already been given in the series. Set-ups and pay-offs are very important in writing for film. So Batchler takes her skills from that arena and shows how well Rowling had been preparing things from the very beginning of the series. Batchler examines those things in the story that have all the appearance of being set-ups, but which, as of that time, have not been paid off.

Some of her speculations were spot on, while others were not. But even so, I think her analysis of how Rowling laid her set-ups into the story will be useful as instruction on “how to do it”. It’s a masterful discussion of the art of set-up and pay-off.

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Non-Fiction – The Sociopath Next Door


by Martha Stout

Most material available to the general public which deals with sociopaths tends to cover killers. Stout’s book does not. And by doing that, she opens up a whole landscape that most of us avoid looking at. Far more people dwell amongst us who are sociopaths and yet are not murderers (serial or otherwise). They are people we try to excuse for various reasons, because we dislike acknowledging that some people have no conscience, who take pleasure in doing harm to others.

Martha Stout

Martha Stout

Stout leads the reader through examples of sociopathic behavior that stays below the level of homicide. But reading this book can open your eyes to the reality that can lie behind certain personalities. When you find yourself saying of someone’s bad behavior, “I can’t believe he did that! Again! Won’t he ever learn?” you might consider the factors Stout illuminates in this book.

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