Why I’m Not Too Excited About the New Runaways

Now, I can say that I am not the type of person who is averse to change. Oh, I’ll have my opinion about any changes that come into my life, but I’m not the type of person who is upset with a simple change. Especially when it comes to comics. I understand that certain things must, and should, change if we are ever to move forward. But there are some things I have a problem with, in comics or otherwise.

Have you ever read a series of books with several main characters you love and then all of a sudden a new book in that series is introduced, but it’s with entirely new characters that you never met before and know nothing about? Yeah, I hate that. Even if the book is good, I have such a tough time getting into it because the whole time I’m just wondering who these new fuckers are and where the hell my old characters are. Well, that’s kind of how I’m feeling right now about the Runaways comics.

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You Should Read Lumberjanes (If You Can Find It)

I have a confession to make: although I was excited to hear that the wonderful Noelle Stevenson (Tumblr’s gingerhaze) was going to be writing a comic about a bunch of girls at summer camp getting into paranormal mischief, for some reason I made a conscious decision not to preorder it. I think at the time I had just dropped Kelly Sue DeConnick’s Pretty Deadly (I found the concept cool but the comic itself incomprehensible) and I was anxious about picking up another lady-created book solely on the merits of its lady-createdness. Anyway, Lumberjanes finally hit shelves a few weeks ago, and when I went into my comics store early Wednesday afternoon, I discovered that there was only one copy left. On a whim, I grabbed it. No harm in giving the first issue a try, right?

Lumberjanes02Well, let me tell you what: it was awesome. I didn’t realize I was missing a comic that encapsulated the concept “Girl Scouts meets Gravity Falls” from my life until I had that very book in my hands.

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Magical Mondays: Magic and Science

Magic and science are generally considered antithetical. You have one or the other, and never the twain shall meet. That’s why one of them is the realm of fantasy and one is the realm of science fiction. Even within science fiction, powers like telepathy are explained using science, and in fantasy, technology like long-distance communication or transport is the stuff of magic. And while there’s nothing wrong with that, I think that a society where magic and science exist in some sort of relationship with each other is much more interesting.

Via mimiskelie on deviantArt.

via mimiskelie on deviantArt.

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Fangirling Over Fangirl

Do you know what I’m tired of?

Well, there are a lot of things, but one of the things I’ve gotten particularly tired of is the demonization of both fanfiction and the shipping fangirl as perverted, evil, plaigiaristic, or just plain wrong.

Case in point.

Exhibit A: Becky from Supernatural.

That’s where Rainbow Rowell’s new novel Fangirl comes in. Fangirl’s main character is a dedicated slash fangirl named Cather with an online following of thousands. Cather is just starting college, and while her twin sister Wren seems to have put aside her ‘childish’ obsession with the Harry Potter-esque Simon Snow series now that she’s at school, Cather remains devoted to her stories.

FANGIRL_CoverDec2012In a world where family, classes, boys, and roommates are hopelessly confusing and stressful, Cath finds comfort in writing stories about Simon falling in love with his rival and roommate Baz.

Vague spoilers below the cut.

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Web Crush Wednesdays: Nimona & Necropolis

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If you know me (or if you have read, like, any of my posts) you know that I am obsessed with comics. I spend most of my time ranting and raving about more classic media, like the standard comic book, trade paperbacks and hardbacks, and graphic novels. I can often be found defending the notion that comics are as deserving a form of art as any other, and that they serve as a sort of folktale medium in our modern culture.

In fact, I believe that comics popularize literary concepts, like hubris and dramatic irony, can advance a social agenda like any other art form, and that they can influence other art (film is a good example of this). Perhaps more importantly than any of that, sometimes they are just stupid freaking cool. Some comics are brilliantly witty, or written absurdly well. Others have brilliant art, or have excellent backstories and others combine these  elements.

nimona_noelle_stevenson_gingerhazeI have two Web Crushes this week, both of which are things that I sadly discovered only recently. The first is the webcomic Nimona, by Noelle Stevenson, whose fantastic Tumblr is here. Nimona, tells the story of a dark knight mad scientist supervillain who reluctantly employs a plucky and diabolical redheaded shapeshifter as his sidekick. She quickly 1) becomes as much the protagonist as her employer, Ballister Blackheart, and 2) guides him to a supervillainous ascendancy with her considerable powers and her willingness to flaunt the rules. Part of what makes Nimona so much fun to read is that she holds on to her clever and rebellious style whether she becomes a small child, a kitten, or a fire-breathing dragon. Watch them team up against a corrupt government and an Aryan poster boy hero who is occasionally more annoying than early Jaime Lannister.

dragon_nimona_ballister_noelle_stevensonNimona’s art is lovely, and I’m rather certain that you will recognize Stevenson’s art style on sight. The design and layout work is good, and the dialogue is witty, well-done, and consistent. The comic is receiving more and more critical acclaim, being named “one of io9’s top ten Best New and Short Webcomics of 2012, and having been awarded the Cartoonist Studio Prize for Best Webcomic of 2012 by Slate Magazine and the Center for Cartoon Studies.” I read all of it today, and reaching the newest comic made me very sad.

Moving on, Jake Wyatt’s upcoming work, Necropolis. I stumbled upon this on my Facebook feed, and promptly fell in love, first with the art, and secondly with the apparent protagonist. “The Third Sword,” as is her title, is a swordswoman with no shortage of either talent or bravery, who strolls into a necropolis filled withed horrors armed, it seems, with only her “useful steel” and full confidence in her abilities.

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wyatt_creepy_necropolis_thirdswordI can’t say enough good things about what little I’ve gleaned from Wyatt’s Tumblr. I am fully enamored with the art work, and the creepy atmosphere against which he’s set his badass female lead. He has a brilliant, color-rich style and a just-soft-enough touch in terms of attention to detail. If you’re interested in his other work (of course you are!), take a look at this short he did back in 2012. If the test panels were enough to make you want more (of course they were!), then you’ll be happy to know that there will be a webcomic, beginning in August.

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What really brings these two together for me is their use of female leads who seem to be possessed of power, self-assuredness, and complexity. The complexity of Nimona becomes apparent as you read that webcomic, and even though we have no back story on “The Third Sword,” I’m betting she’s more than just a sharp sword.

I’m hoping that this is a trend in independent comics: well done, female-led comics whose art and characters are genuinely compelling. There’s so much potential here, with characters that are fresh and aren’t subject to the weight of the forty other interpretations that have come before. They’re not overdone, they don’t fall victim to the stereotypes which often plague female leads, especially in comics. That’s fantastic, frankly. I’ll leave you with this, from Wyatt’s Tumblr:

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