The postman brought goodies today!
Lately I've been Jones-ing for some Batman/Joker stories (in the most innocent sense, I'm not quite ready to read that pairing), but alas the big two are out of print. Dave--bless him--managed to win an auction for The Killing Joke; I've just curled up in bed and read it for the first time and all I can say is, "Wow!". Great story, perfect art, and yeah... those two have a very twisted relationship. We should all gang up and make Alan Moore write more Batman arcs.
Also in the post came Batman: Gothic which I haven't cracked open yet, a hefty pile of graphic novels for Dave which I was too sleepy to investigate, and Lynn Flewelling's "The Bone Doll's Twin" which is really rather fabulous. Which reminds me, I meant to pass on this link at the time, but I forgot. Shame on me.
oracne had a discussion in her LJ back in July about Big Gay Fantasy books--her words, not mine--which is chock-full of recommendations and thoughts on why it's mainly women writing queer characters into fantasy and other genres. Slash writers are taking over the world, it seems.
While I snagged The Bone Doll's Twin from the above discussion, it isn't a gay novel. It does have it's own special quirks which I shan't spoil for you--be warned, the first review at Amazon does contain spoilers. Can't Amazon put less spoilery reviews at the top?--and somewhat amazingly, it's epic. But not in that horrible waffly Tolkein-esque way. It's all the best bits of fantasy and world-building without huge detailed meta description. It's tight. (Which is a relief to me as I was getting rather fed-up and jaded. Who wants to read pages of description about how they discovered the perfect reeds to make faux-medieval toilet-paper with? That's the sort of detailed description that makes so many fantasy novels stagnate until the reader hurls the tome against the wall.)
So far it's a fairly emotional read without being angst-ridden. It's more a churned up confusion that I'm getting from it. (Can you tell that I don't review books often, huh?) Anyway, highly enjoyable and assuming that it doesn't go downhill in the next 250 pages, I'll be ordering the rest of the trilogy this afternoon.
I love books.
Lately I've been Jones-ing for some Batman/Joker stories (in the most innocent sense, I'm not quite ready to read that pairing), but alas the big two are out of print. Dave--bless him--managed to win an auction for The Killing Joke; I've just curled up in bed and read it for the first time and all I can say is, "Wow!". Great story, perfect art, and yeah... those two have a very twisted relationship. We should all gang up and make Alan Moore write more Batman arcs.
Also in the post came Batman: Gothic which I haven't cracked open yet, a hefty pile of graphic novels for Dave which I was too sleepy to investigate, and Lynn Flewelling's "The Bone Doll's Twin" which is really rather fabulous. Which reminds me, I meant to pass on this link at the time, but I forgot. Shame on me.
While I snagged The Bone Doll's Twin from the above discussion, it isn't a gay novel. It does have it's own special quirks which I shan't spoil for you--be warned, the first review at Amazon does contain spoilers. Can't Amazon put less spoilery reviews at the top?--and somewhat amazingly, it's epic. But not in that horrible waffly Tolkein-esque way. It's all the best bits of fantasy and world-building without huge detailed meta description. It's tight. (Which is a relief to me as I was getting rather fed-up and jaded. Who wants to read pages of description about how they discovered the perfect reeds to make faux-medieval toilet-paper with? That's the sort of detailed description that makes so many fantasy novels stagnate until the reader hurls the tome against the wall.)
So far it's a fairly emotional read without being angst-ridden. It's more a churned up confusion that I'm getting from it. (Can you tell that I don't review books often, huh?) Anyway, highly enjoyable and assuming that it doesn't go downhill in the next 250 pages, I'll be ordering the rest of the trilogy this afternoon.
I love books.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-17 12:00 pm (UTC)I love that graphic novel. I think I've got it somewhere... must dig it out...
no subject
Date: 2005-09-17 12:46 pm (UTC)It's a fantastic book, from the silent beginning to the not-so-silent ending. And the colour palette!! (After listening to the new Comic Geek Speak podcasts, I'm so much more interested in the detail and work put into the colouring.)
*snogs back*