chomiji: Doa from Blade of the Immortal can read! Who knew? (Doa - books)

On a Sunbeam was first published as a webcomic and has been nominated for this year's Hugo Awards in the Graphic Novel category. Apologies to anyone who loves this: I finished it feeling more bemused than anything.

Mia is starting a new job. We see her peering through a window in a spaceship, approaching what seems to be a cathedral floating in space. Tethered to it are a variety of things: some are close to conventional depictions of SF spacecraft, but one looks like a camper bus and another looks like nothing in particular. Mia gets off her transport and is guided into an elevator, which takes her to a corridor with a tall door at the end.

No sign of an airlock.

Through the door is the spacecraft that will be her new home and her transportation to her new employer's job sites. There are high ceilings, random boxes of stuff on the floor, a cat. She's directed to sit on a bench. The pilot tells her to hold on. No seatbelts or any other restraint are in use,

The ships takes off with a slight hint of acceleration in the drawing: maybe as much as an automobile pulling away from a traffic signal.

And then we get an outside view of the ship. It looks like a cross between a goldfish and a pigeon.

So yes, this is certainly not any sort of hard science fiction. We are in science fantasy territory, and it's rather odd even for that.

As Mia gets to know her new workmates and boss, who are engaged in reconstructing and preserving historical buildings (which seem to be simply floating in space), we get flashbacks to her boarding school days. She's a difficult child without many friends at first, and then she makes friends with a bright loner named Grace. The two fall sweetly in love, and then Grace has to leave abruptly in response to a family emergency.

Mia doesn't get to say goodbye.

In the story's present, Mia becomes close to her crewmates, but she's also obsessed with her first love and the farewell she never got. Because Grace's home is a mysterious, dangerous, forbidden world, it seems impossible that Mia will ever see Grace again.

Or is it?

The story is powerful on an emotional level, but just about every other aspect of it left me thinking "... what?" I'm not talking about the fact that everyone seems to be female (except for one character who is specifically described as non-binary), which is an interesting choice (after all, many classic SF stories contain only male characters, with possibly some women as memories or prizes but not really characters). I'm talking about things like the way space itself is not nearly as hostile an environment as Grace's world. The accident with the fish-spaceship at the end, for example ... .

The artwork makes me think most of Mushishi: the same kind of apparently simple drawings that are ably grounded in anatomy and perspective. But instead of Mushishi's grey wash and textures, we have flat color, maybe one or two shades per frame.

Despite the trappings of future and space fiction, I find it easier to think of the setting for On a Sunbeam as something like Diana Wynne Jone's Multiverse. The journeys from world to world really do seem to me to be more like going from one magical dimension to another.

It's not *bad*, but it didn't really hit any of my sweet spots.

ETA: And it should have, because HELLO, families of choice, big time. But I couldn't connect.

chomiji: Doa from Blade of the Immortal can read! Who knew? (Doa - books)

So I haven't been reading much that's new. I did some intensive re-reading for a writing project, and that's mostly it.

I did read the graphic novel Abbott, by Saladin Ahmed, Sami Kivela, and Jason Wordie. It's about an African American investigative reporter in 1970s Detroit who finds herself involved with the supernatural, as well as with the prejudices of the time. I enjoyed it, but I don't really think it's Hugo reading. It's kind of rough: not surprising for a first volume.

I did a comfort re-read of The Grey Horse by R A. MacAvoy, which is a book I think ought to get recommended more often. It's set in 1880s Ireland, at a time when the Irish were making political moves that would eventually lead to their independence from Britain. Into this volatile situation comes a naive puca (horse shape-shifter), Ruairi MacEibhir, with romance and not much else on his mind. The village that attracts his attention will never be the same, and nether will Ruairi.

chomiji: Doa from Blade of the Immortal can read! Who knew? (Doa - books)

Good Lord, it's been a while since I got around to this.

After I finished the Clocktaur War duology, I felt a need to read something I already knew, so I added Diana Wynne Jones' Magids books to my Kindle and steamed through them. I love them, even when they get info-dumpy. I don't think I'd ever realized how out-of-synch Nick and Roddy are with each other, emotionally, in The Merlin Conspiracy. In fact, SPOILER I don't believe she has any idea how much he's crushing on her, and that's probably just as well. More realistic that way, too.

Now I'm doing some re-reading for a writing exchange. Contrary to my usual practice, I actually have the story outlined: I outlined it on JoCo, during a writing-time meetup.

Then I should do some more Hugo reading. I don't like reading comics electronically (unless web comics), so I bought On a Sunbeam and Abbott, and I should re-read vol. 3 of Monstress which I zipped through much too fast when I got it for Hanukkah.

After that, I guess I'll start looking for Hugo nominee short stories online, but I don't want to mess with the YA nominees untll I learn whether there's going to be a Voter's Reading Packet this year. It's a really sweet deal when they have one, especially now that I've learned how to get the files onto my Kindle.

chomiji: Doa from Blade of the Immortal can read! Who knew? (Doa - books)

What have you just finished reading?

Some more odd serial art stuff from the Small Press Expo, most of which didn't make much of an impression. The one exception was Bread & Wine: An Erotic Tale of New York, by Samuel R. Delaney and Mia Wolff. As most of you probably know, Samuel Delaney was one of the first successful African American science fiction writers. This is an actual, biographical story of how he met his life partner, Dennis, who was a homeless man living on the streets of New York. It's very explicit and frank; in parts it's very sad and in others, it's very tender and joyful.

Also, the latest National Geographic, which had a rather disturbing story of a storm chaser who was recently killed by one of the tornados he was pursuing, along with a colleague and his own adult son, an accomplished photographer.

I am all caught up with the webcomic Yellow Peril. I have made an LJ feed for it, yellowperilcomi. LJ needs longer names for the feeds. :-(

Finally, I read vol. 4 of House of Five Leaves. I think I'm starting to get used to the mangaka's drawing style. However, I can't agree with the comments I've seen online about how wonderful it is.

What are you currently reading?

Still reading Max Gladstone's Three Parts Dead, which is getting really, really good. Things have taken a massive turn for the worse in the story; I'm mentally biting my fingernails.

For some reason, I have also started a re-read of Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, which I had downloaded onto my phone sometime ago. It's a pleasant enough diversion, except when the author goes off onto a spate of Rebecca-worship.

What do you think you'll read next?

Still haven't started [personal profile] ann_leckie's Ancillary Justice. Also, I've got my Yuletide canon re-read stacked up and ready to go, plus I need to do a canon review for some beta reading.

 

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