Jan. 7th, 2013

starlady: Aang with fire (aang can be asian & still save the world)
Yang, Gene Luen. Art by Gurihiru. Avatar: The Promise, Parts Two and Three. New York: Dark Horse Comics, 2012.

I really liked the first of Gene Yang's Avatar comics, and I really thought that these last two volumes, and in particular the third one, brought the trilogy home in a deft and wonderful way. Between the art and the writing, it feels like an extended episode of the show, and I really don't think we can ask for more than that. I also thought that the ending of this trilogy (spoilers: Iroh invents bubble tea) pointed the way toward Korra in an interesting way, where you can see the seeds for what has grown up in Republic City, but not the exact way things will go. And Zukoooooo. And Aaaaaang. Their FACES and their aaaaaaangst, OMG. The final interaction between Aang and Roku was heartbreaking, but obviously necessary.

I said after the first volume that Yang's handling of issues of colonialism and imperialism was interesting, and I think that he continued to do a pretty good job throughout. Obviously in a comic aimed at the middle grade age bracket he has to take a pretty light touch to the matter, which he does, and in particular this best-of-all-possible worlds spin on the end of empire presumes perfect economic equality between all parties involved, which doesn't match the way things turned out in our world, for certain. But all those caveats aside, I still agree with Yang's points and the way he makes them, and I love that he made them in the first place. My one real complaint is that I wish the comics were longer--Aang's dealing with the appropriation of his cultural heritage by his fangirls is brought up and put to bed entirely in the third volume, and again, I really liked what Yang said and the way he handled the issue, but it could have been even better done if it could have been done at greater length. As an expansion of the cartoon and a thoughtful engagement with some of the issues it raised, however, this series really couldn't be better.

But! There is another trilogy! With Zuko and Azula and their mother! I AM EXCITE.
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)
I am discarding some books and figured I'd put the list up here on the off-chance that anyone might want them. $5 each within the United States, s&h included, except for two hardcovers that are $6. Should anyone outside the U.S. be interested, that can probably be arranged.

Michelle Sagara's Cast books
Cast in Courtlight
Cast in Secret
Cast in Fury
Cast in Silence
Cast in Chaos


William Joyce, The Man in the Moon
Ursula K. LeGuin, The Eye of the Heron (Mary GrandPré cover)

Jacques Barzun, A Jacques Barzun Reader
Yo'av Karny, Highlanders

Luis de Camões, The Lusiads, ed. and trans. Leonard Bacon
J.M. Coetzee, Disgrace
Michael Faber, The Crimson Petal and the White (Hardcover, $6)
Jonathan Franzen, The Corrections (Hardcover, $6)
Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude
Cormac McCarthy, The Crossing
Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance
Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient
Thomas Love Peacock, Nightmare Abbey & Crotchet Castle
Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things
Thucydides, On Justice, Power, and Human Nature (ed. and trans. Paul Woodruff)

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starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)
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