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Book Review: The Straw King 1. The Pharaoh’s Daughter by Isabelle Dethan

Book Review: The Straw King 1. The Pharaoh’s Daughter by Isabelle Dethan

The Straw King

  1. The Pharaoh’s Daughter by Isabelle Dethan
    Europe Comics

Pub Date 22 Apr 2020

Description
Egypt, 7th century BCE. Neith and Sennedjem are two of many royal children too far down the inheritance ladder to matter. Facing limited prospects—she’s likely to wind up in her own father’s bed, and he won’t even wind up an advisor—they set out instead to see the world. But the ancient world is full of dangers, and soon enough, the royal pair find themselves sold off to the court of Babylon by slave traders. As a lady-in-waiting, Neith becomes entangled in another royal family’s power struggles, while her brother falls victim to a bizarre religious ritual: the Straw King…

This is an adventure story set in the ancient world. Dethan’s art is well done, and, it does a great job of building tension and drama. However, I struggled to connect with the characters. It is a bit of a shame that the art is not in service of a better story. This is sold B-movie style stuff and was a pleasant way to spend an evening. I think it is telling that it ends on a cliff hanger and that I wasn’t too fussed about knowing when the next book will come out. I did enjoy the book and it is worth a read. Unfortunately, it isn’t a book that will linger with you but it is a solid story told through good artwork.

15/30

14: S2E14 -Marcus Mckenzie answers my weird questions

14: S2E14 -Marcus Mckenzie answers my weird questions

Episode Notes

I chat with Marcus Mckenzie.
Marcus, aka the ronin, is a Judo & BJJ practitioner which he took up in 2016. He loves the philosophies of martial arts. But more than anything loves the thrill of competing.

Marcus is a photographer that has a start-up media company (No Labels Required) with two of his friends that do videography. Recently Marcus has stepped into the world of organising martial arts events.

You can find Marcus on social media via @theronin88 or @nolabelsrequired

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Book Review :Invisible Differences: A Story of Asperger’s, Adulting, and Living a Life in Full Color by Julie Dachez (Author), Mademoiselle Caroline (Artist)

Book Review :Invisible Differences: A Story of Asperger’s, Adulting, and Living a Life in Full Color by Julie Dachez (Author), Mademoiselle Caroline (Artist)

We’re only going to understand neurodiversity when more stories like Invisible Differences are told.

Invisible Differences is a warm story. Too often in the media people with neurodiverse conditions are either the butt of a joke or people with strange super-powers. Community and the A-word are the only two depictions of the neurodiverse experience that I think treat people on the spectrum with the respect that they deserve.

I can now add to that list Invisible Differences. Marguerite our heroine goes on a journey of personal discovery and acceptance. The struggles that she faces both at work and in her personal life are brought into sharp focus early on in the story. For example, she finds noise at her office distracting to the point that it leaves her exhausted and hiding in the toilets. Or, how the prospect of attending a party gives her excruciating social anxiety.
Life for neurodiverse people is hard. It is harder still when those around you don’t or won’t understand. Being comfortable with oneself is sometimes very difficult. It is even more so when you feel you can’t meet the demands that society makes of you.

The translation of the dialogue is charming. The art in Invisible Differences is clean and lovely. Colours are used cleverly to show the build-up Marguerite’s anxiety or to show things that stimulate her. Neurodiverse people are often seen as somewhat inflexible to the point of being unreasonable. Marguerite is often asked to do things which for most people would find straight forward but for her require a Herculean effort. This is a tale about self-acceptance and at every beat, the art and text work together tremendously. It avoids cloying sentimentality or many of the other feel-good traps a story like this might fall into. The highest compliment I can give the book is that it left me questioning some of my own attitudes which I think is a sign of story well told.

I highly recommend Invisible Differences.
20/30

13: S2E13 -Circe by Madeline Miller with Yusuf Goolam-Hossen

13: S2E13 -Circe by Madeline Miller with Yusuf Goolam-Hossen

Episode Notes

This episode is a discussion of Circe by Madeline Miller. We cover Greek Myths, Feminism, Donald Trump, and, ask if Odysseus is a dick.

My guest is Yusuf Goolam-Hossen is a Mill Hill jiujitsu brown belt, primary school teacher, massage therapist, skateboarder and all-round unicorn on the hot/crazy matrix

You can find Yusuf on social media here @yusuf.g_bjj

You can watch his reading of The Odyssey here:
https://www.youtube.com/user/ygh1973

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Book Review : Titan by François Vigneault

Book Review : Titan by François Vigneault

Book Review : Titan by François Vigneault

Oni Press

Release Date 15 Sep 2020

Blurb:

When MNGR First Class João da Silva arrives on the moon of Titan to take charge of Homestead Station, he finds the massive mining colony plagued by tensions between the giant, genetically-engineered Titan workers and the Terran management. As anger mounts, what began as a routine posting quickly turns into something far more dangerous.

Phoebe Mackintosh thought she left her fighting days behind her when she turned her back on the “mixing” circuit. Now, she finds herself caught between a past she’d rather forget and a future she can’t predict.

Together, they must find a way to pull Homestead back from the brink of disaster… Or Titan might be the spark that sets the entire solar system ablaze.

The Review:

Back when I was a teenager, I read Strikebreaker by Issac Asimov. It is a story that stayed with me partly because it dealt with industrial relations in a way I hadn’t up to that point seen before in a sci-fi story, and, partly because in reinforced my rather un-nuanced view at the time that scabs in the end always made things worse for their fellow workers. Titan like Strikebreaker is a sci-fi story about industrial relations. It explores the corrupting power of unions to further the conditions of their members, the constant drive that corporations have to grow profits at the cost of their workers, and, what happens when these two forces come into conflict. It also has at its heart a rather tender love story.

Worldbuilding in science fiction stories is as critical as the plot and the characters. Vigneault’s art is impressive. Everything is wonderfully rendered in a palette of reds, whites, and, blacks. Everything from the spacesuit designs to the living quarters seems believable. Despite its somewhat cartoony stylings, this is one of the most realistic sci-fi depictions of what life on an extra-planetary body might be like that I have seen since Ad Astra.

As impressive as Vigneault’s art is it matched by his plotting and dialogue. The story is gripping and to its credit took off in a direction that I found unexpected. Everybody loves a plot twist.

The hardest trick for a writer to pull off is to make you care about an unlikeable character. João da Silva brings to mind Ryan Bingham from Up in the Air (as played by George Clooney). He is either going to turn things around or recommend that the station be closed. Yet early on I began to warm to him. Though getting the mine back to profitably was his main concern, he wanted to learn as much about the plant before making any decisions. In Phoebe Mackintosh we have I think we have found yet another great sci-fi heroine. Equal parts brave, kind, and, driven, she is both likeable and spikey. She does the things one wishes they would have the courage to do when the stakes are high.

I thought Titan was brilliant. A shining example of a sci-fi story exploring the way humans treat each other. It is one of those books that make you want to read the creators other works and look forward to their future stories. Highly recommended.

28/30

Buy Titan from All Good Books

12: S2E12 -The Forsaken Inn: A Novel by Anna Katharine Green

12: S2E12 -The Forsaken Inn: A Novel by Anna Katharine Green

Episode Notes

I read the opening passage from The Forsaken Inn: A Novel by Anna Katharine Green.

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/23641/23641-h/23641-h.htm

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11: S2E11 -Launching a new podcast SeeThroughPanel !

11: S2E11 -Launching a new podcast SeeThroughPanel !

Episode Notes

I’m co-hosting a new podcast along with Cole Harvey. We review comic books and graphic novels. It’ll be available on all podcast apps soon but in the meantime subscribe to our Youtube channel.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCK9UYdXPIrK3AuCVz_Ce2FA

This time we keep it short and sweet, discussing 6 books each that we think are worth checking out. We covered a wide variety of genres, so hopefully, there’s something for everyone.

  1. The New World by Ales Kot (Author), Tradd Moore (Artist), Tom Muller (Artist), Heather Moore (Artist)
  2. Bone by Jeff Smith
  3. Batman: Universe by Brian Michael Bendis (Author), Nick Derington (Illustrator, Artist)
  4. Astro City by Kurt Busiek
  5. Orc Stain by James Stokoe
  6. Blossoms in Autumn by Zidrou (Author), Aimée de Jongh (Illustrator)
  7. The River at Night by Kevin Huizenga (Author)
  8. Pyongyang by Guy Delisle
  9. H.G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds by Ian Edginton and D’Israeli
  10. Logicomix by writers Apostolos Doxiadis & Christos Papadimitriou Artist Alecos Papadatos
  11. Supercrash by Darryl Cunningham
  12. Anything that was written by Junji Ito
  13. Essex County by Jeff Lemire

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