Feb. 16th, 2009

meganbmoore: (too many books)

Rightstuf currently has all NetComics books at 30% off.  Sale ends 2/18.

I must spend the next few hours pondering whether or not I'm ignoring them until they bother to give me another volume of Dokebi Bride.  OTOH, Operation: Liberate Men beckons.  (I think I also have the first volume or two each of Click and In the Starlight waiting.)
meganbmoore: (sorata and arashi)
Several years ago, Haine’s prestigious family sold her to the Otomiya family for a loan of 50 million yen. Though her new family seems to have treated her well, Haine rebelled and became a yanki (gangster) when her adopted father married a widow with a son and made him his heir. That came to an end, however, when she met Toga Shizumasa once and talked to him the entire night. This caused Haine to reform and enter the exclusive imperial Academy, which has a ranking system based on precious metals that creates a heirachy. Haine, of course, is bronze, the “commoner” equivalent but wants to earn enough points to gain a silver ranking so that she’ll be able to be close to Shizumasa, the school’s emperor. She gets her chance when a student council member makes her a member of the student council and Shizumasa’s bodyguard after she “saves” him from a kidnapping.

It starts with a typical shoujo plot combining both “girl chases after boy and devotes life to it” and “annoying high school hierarchy,” but soon descends into complete insanity. I mean, it starts of with Haine working part time at the school (the Otomiya family now faces financial difficulties) in a maid uniform and her stoic and blunt best friend, Ushio, chasing them off. Ushio, of course, is in love with Haine and buys her way into the student council to stay close to Haine. Shizumasa alternates between appearing to hate and be irritated by Haine and being sweet and supportive. He pretends to have a boyfriend so that the girls won’t fight over him. Except said boyfriend actually is in love with him. And is yakuza. And is regularly in competition with-and loses to-Maora, the other member of the student council who is frighteningly smart and has a brain like a computer. There are secret societies and rebellions and attempted coups at the school.  Haine’s adopted brother is possibly in love with her.

And did I mention that our former yanki heroine who was sold as a child also kicks snakes and is the hero’s bodyguard? Actually, while I wish Arina Tanemura’s heroine’s weren’t always (in what I’ve read, at least) so dim, I’m glad they’re pretty gutsy, and seem to always be able to back up their claims.

I still die from the EYES and how overwhelmingly busy the artwork is (Calm down! Whites and blacks are not bad things!) but there’s a certain insanity to Arina Tanemura’s stuff that I don’t seem to be able to resist.
meganbmoore: (jo is better than you)

This is a collection of essays that covers the first three seasons of the series. I will restate my disclaimer from when I started season 3 so that I would have seen all the material covered in the book, which is that I used to be a fan of Supernatural but no longer am, largely due to issues regarding the show and gender. As such, I read the book with an established critical bias regarding the subject matter.

My central problem with this collection is that most essays are completely devoid of any critical analysis. In fact, it took me just over a week to read roughly the first half, as most essays were defenses and praises of the show and characters with almost no acknowledgement of the possibility of flaws. I have never encountered a perfect piece of fiction, and believe that anything claiming to analyze or examine something-fiction or otherwise-should address the flaws as well as the positive aspects. Therefore, roughly 120 pages of nothing but praises of something that I view as being extremely flawed bored me.

This is a personal problem. If you think the show is flawed but want to see people talk about the better aspects, or if you think too big a deal is made out of things, I doubts this will be a problem for you.

As for the essays that interested me, there were two regarding the Trickster and his role and one about the colt that I found interesting, as well as several regarding the approach to folkore in the show, including modern influence on folklore, and then one on blue collar demonhunting. There were also two regarding the Impala that I wanted to like, but between them, it basically went “the Impala is home and mother and here’s how it’s a symbol of manly bonding.” Which, really, is something of a statement about how a lot of fiction tends to handle female presence, and the two essays had very valid points, but ended up depressing me a bit.

Regarding essays on gender…well, I’ve already posted my thought on Jacob Clifton’s “Spreading Disaster: Gender in the Supernatural Universe.” We will not speak of it again. (Ok, I’m sure we will. Just not now.) Much better is Mary Borsellino’s “Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Jo the Monster Killer: Supernatural’s Excluded Heroines.” While Borsellino’s stance and opinion is pretty clear, the essay itself does not rely on those opinions for the most part, and instead directly addresses how women are portrayed and given (or not given) agency in the show, especially in terms of the argument of Supernatural being a reaction to Buffy’s perceived emasculation of the horror genre. The title of Carol Poole’s “Who Threw Momma on the Ceiling? Analyzing Supernatural’s Primal Scene of Trauma filled me with dread, but was actually quite good, with a focus on why women who normally wouldn’t would watch a show whose first episode begins with a blonde woman pinned to a ceiling and bursting into flames, and ends with the same happening to another blonde woman. Actually, I’m glad I read it, as that was something I wondered about back when I still really liked the show.

One essay that I suspect many readers will be interested in is Emily Turner’s “Scary Just Got Sexy: Trangression in Supernatural and It’s Fanfiction.” It’s essentially an explanation of fanfic in layman’s terms, with a focus on Supernatural and especially Wincest. Sadly, I’m not a huge fan of Wincest or fanfic, so a lot of it was lost on me.

In general, I think the collection’s individual success will depend on how much you like the show, and how favorable/critical you think fanwork collections should be. And now I shall resume being broken up with the show until it figures out how to keep a non-evil vagina around for more than a few episodes without killing it.

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