Thoughts, reviews, rants, laments, and general chatting about the wonderful world(s) of comic books.
Showing posts with label Mike Wolfer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Wolfer. Show all posts
Sep 24, 2019
The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1673: Yuggoth Creatures #3, July 2006 (Cthuliana Week)
I know it's not quite a week of comics. I think I have six for each theme, leaving myself the option of doing something completely random between themes. But I want to jump into my Cthuliana Week right away.
I'm calling it that, rather than "Lovecraftian" week because I'm wrestling of late with the figure of Lovecraft himself. It's no secret that Lovecraft was a horrendously racist individual. His stories revolve around old and revered white families mixing with foreign blood and literally turning into monsters. And don't even get me started on his poetry, which features a disgusting piece called "The Creation of N******s." It's awful.
So how do we go about reconciling ourselves with this if we love his stories. When I submitted an article to The Lovecraft Annual, it was accepted with the note that the editor, S.T. Joshi, wanted a section where I pondered this question removed from the paper. There are those who study or read Lovecraft who prefer to not quite ignore, but glance past, the racist overtones of the stories. I'm not sure, if we're to keep him as a canonically significant writer in the horror and American traditions, that we can do that. His work grows from a place of racism, couched in a fairly intense xenophobia. So how do we, or I, reconcile with this?
I started out thinking about Shakespeare. He's another writer whose name has become an adjective (Shakespearean; Lovecraftian), an adjective that we use with impunity. But Shakespeare doesn't exactly have a clean track record when it comes to inclusion and diversity. Shylock is not treated particularly well in The Merchant of Venice, and Catherine is little more than a prize in The Taming of the Shrew. While these two plays smack of sexism and antisemitism, Shakespeare is still lauded as one of the greatest writers in the language. The trouble is that we have few examples from Shakespeare's life to tell us if these were attitudes he held or simply things he decided to write about. Lovecraft has left us a much fuller archive.
I'm going to ponder these questions over the next few days as I read some "Cthuliana," some adapted from Lovecraft's work, some original. Today's issue is excellent, a series of strung-together narratives that tell the tale of an unfortunate researcher into the Cthulhu cult and the Old Ones. I assume that the first two issues of the series are very similar, and are part of the same story, as this definitely reads as the climax to a longer tale. The structure of the series nicely picks up on the creation of the Cthulhu Mythos through a series of smaller tales, ones woven together over the years by fans. There's also little actual dialogue in the comic, with the exception of the framing sequence, leaving the narration as text boxes, a technique that also nicely links the comic with the original prose source material. As usual, for an Avatar Press comic, it's gory and horrific, maybe a little too much to quite qualify as Lovecraftian, a word that more often means that we don't see the scary stuff, we just have to imagine it.
"He voiced terrible words, impossible sounds that I could not bear, nor shut out, no matter how I tried."
Sep 10, 2018
The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1293: True Stories of Adult Film Stars - Serenity, March 1995
Sorry. Tonight was an eat burritos and binge Outlander kind of night.
I'll say a bit about this tomorrow.
(Okay, just a bit. The second story is illustrated by Mike Wolfer. He really is very good at illustrating these kinds of tales. Tails?)
Labels:
#40YearsofComics,
1990s,
adult comics,
Carnal Comics,
Collecting,
criticism,
Jay Allen Sanford,
Larry Nadolsky,
links,
Mike Wolfer,
review,
Serenity,
True Stories of Adult Film Stars
Sep 6, 2018
The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1289: True Stories of Adult Film Stars - Alicia Rio, October 1994
Given the treatment by the administration of the United States of Mexican people in the country, this cover actually says quite a lot, even if it is 24 years old. Ms. Rio is very vocally-proud of her heritage, going so far as the base the second story in the comic on the old idea that the Mayan civilization was actually contacted by advanced alien civilizations. It's cool to see some of the beliefs and deities of that culture transformed into science fiction counterparts by someone who cherishes the heritage, rather than someone looking to mine it for ideas.
The first story is much like all of the other stories so far. The porn industry in the 80s, rather than a cesspool of drugs and disease as we are led to believe, is being shown as a place that women who didn't fit a particular mold could go to express themselves. I wonder if any of the featured stars have any other biographical material available. I'd love to compare the content of these stories with more in depth content. There's obviously things being left out of these stories.
I have to say, these are very entertaining comics. Today's second feature is really nicely done by Mike Wolfer, whose work I know from Warren Ellis's Strange Kiss series. Though the lead biographical stories are very similar, the quality of art is quite good throughout the comic. We're getting everything from the underground-inspired (Larry Nadolsky), the slicker, more mainstream (the aforementioned Wolfer), and then some art that I"m going to say is quite indicative of adult comics, though I'd have to think a bit before saying how that is. The cool thing about this art is that the artist, Fauve, is a woman, and is the artist most associated with the Carnal Comics line. She still does work under another name (Holly Golightly, I think), but you don't see much to do with this series on her site.
A pity, I think. The more I read, the more important I think these comics are. More to come...
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