SC Librarian reviews mostly Fantasy, SciFi, and YA, random pop-sci and psychology, juvenile fiction, and children's picture books.
Showing posts with label Superman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Superman. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Graphic Novel Book Club: Superman Red Son, Mark Millar & Dave Johnson & Kilian Plunkett
Superman Red Son
Mark Millar
Artists:
Dave Johnson & Andrew Robinson (Red Son Rising & Red Son Ascendant)
Kilian Plunkett & Walden Wong (Red Son Ascendant & Red Son Setting)
Colorist: Paul Mounts (seriously good work here)
Letters: Ken Lopez (not so fond of the stylized capitals, but otherwise excellent)
ISBN: 9781401247119 (soft-side trade collecting all three volumes: Red Son Rising, Red Son Ascendant, Red Son Setting, with intro, marginalia, and process art)
Another month, another graphic novel for the club. This time we went with a well-regarded alt-universe Superman fan-fic: Superman Red Son. The premise (and a twist at the end) has our Kryptonian ubermensch landing in a Ukrainian communal farm instead of in cornfed central USA. The idealistic and straightforward hero absorbs and internalizes the ideals of the communist party, and sets the world down a very different path.
This is very much a alternate-universe "what if" scenario, driven almost entirely by plot gears, with only the bare minimum of characterization to flesh out our main cast: Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman (holy hand grenades, Batman!) Lex Luthor, Lois Lane Luthor (still a Pulitzer-prize-winning journalist), Bizarro, Brainiac, the Green Lantern Corps, and I'm sure I'm forgetting a few here and there. Before reading this comic, everyone should be familiar with those characters and their basic archetypes, because that's pretty much all you're going to get as they karoom around this inverted world and everyone makes pretty much uniformly bad decisions (often from good intentions) that drive the plot deliciously down an interesting path to destruction and difficult choices for all. A few well-placed heel-turns, a bit of shoe-horning in of characters (I thought especially Batman was shoveled in by main force and then tragically underutilized), and a bit of hazy plotting (was the somewhat extended Green Lantern diversion really actually necessary to the development of the plot? Discuss.) the story was overall interesting and fast-paced enough to keep me entertained. Besides, it's essentially an "elseworlds" story, so even if it was horrid, it's easy enough to fling back into the murk and forget about it.
The art was delicious, the forms and poses were classical and clear and well-defined. People had faces that aged and changed over decades of time, and even through the change of artists, the characters looked like themselves all the way through. A special shout-out to Paul Mounts for some really stellar coloring work here. There was a lot of black and a lot of grey and a lot of red, plus loads of stark contrasts that very easily could have slid into melodrama or cartoon, and he held the line excellently.
Overall, a fun excercise in "what if" that stands well clear of politics or economic realities to focus on the fun story potentials in a world only slightly different from our own.
Sunday, May 3, 2015
YA: Fallout (Lois Lane), by Gwenda Bond
Fallout (Lois Lane)
Gwenda Bond
ISBN: 9781630790059
Read April 28, 2015
Lois Lane often gets relegated to the shadows in Superman stories. Or, even worse, exists as a victim to rescue, or a sacrifice to fridge to up the angst points in our Man of Steel. It's about damn time we hear from her in her own voice, and man, what a strong vibrant voice this is.
Bond starts with a teen Lois finally landing in Metropolis, after a string of moves and a dismal career of getting into trouble at various schools, all with the best of intentions. Now tho, she has great resolutions, and she's going to be scholastic, invisible, and stay out of trouble. That lasts for the literal minute it takes before she overhears her new principal haughtily rebuffing a loquacious young lady pleading for help; she's being bullied by the school super-stars, a freaky synchronized gang of youngsters who are part of a pilot collaboration between the school and a local technical and development company.
Before Lois can even get her class schedule, she's made enemies of the principal and the gang (the ominously named Warheads), and even the bullied girl wants her to just go away and leave her to her inevitable fate. But our heroine is nothing if not tenacious, and she'll get her story, and save the girl while she's at it.
Everything about this book is lovely. The sweet but still-innocent txt relationship between her and SmallvilleGuy in Kansas, the contrast between Lois' foolhardy and courageous exterior and her worried and insecure feelings, the tentative developing friendship between the debut members of The Daily Scoop (the Planet's teen-run online offshoot).
I especially like that Lois is willing to admit that she needs help, and to accept it from people (although grudgingly) but she is also more than willing to do what needs to be done on her own, and to shield her friends and companions from her reckless actions. On that same note, it was nice to see certain super-powered persons relegated to a chatroom window, some text-messages, and a couple of instances of nerfed avatars in an online multiplayer game. Lois deserves the chance to be seen standing on her own, and in this book, she does just that, and does it ferociously.
I really hope there's a sequel.
Gwenda Bond
ISBN: 9781630790059
Read April 28, 2015
Lois Lane often gets relegated to the shadows in Superman stories. Or, even worse, exists as a victim to rescue, or a sacrifice to fridge to up the angst points in our Man of Steel. It's about damn time we hear from her in her own voice, and man, what a strong vibrant voice this is.
Bond starts with a teen Lois finally landing in Metropolis, after a string of moves and a dismal career of getting into trouble at various schools, all with the best of intentions. Now tho, she has great resolutions, and she's going to be scholastic, invisible, and stay out of trouble. That lasts for the literal minute it takes before she overhears her new principal haughtily rebuffing a loquacious young lady pleading for help; she's being bullied by the school super-stars, a freaky synchronized gang of youngsters who are part of a pilot collaboration between the school and a local technical and development company.
Before Lois can even get her class schedule, she's made enemies of the principal and the gang (the ominously named Warheads), and even the bullied girl wants her to just go away and leave her to her inevitable fate. But our heroine is nothing if not tenacious, and she'll get her story, and save the girl while she's at it.
Everything about this book is lovely. The sweet but still-innocent txt relationship between her and SmallvilleGuy in Kansas, the contrast between Lois' foolhardy and courageous exterior and her worried and insecure feelings, the tentative developing friendship between the debut members of The Daily Scoop (the Planet's teen-run online offshoot).
I especially like that Lois is willing to admit that she needs help, and to accept it from people (although grudgingly) but she is also more than willing to do what needs to be done on her own, and to shield her friends and companions from her reckless actions. On that same note, it was nice to see certain super-powered persons relegated to a chatroom window, some text-messages, and a couple of instances of nerfed avatars in an online multiplayer game. Lois deserves the chance to be seen standing on her own, and in this book, she does just that, and does it ferociously.
I really hope there's a sequel.
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