Apr. 1st, 2024

queenslayerbee: Isabelle Adjany as Lucy Harker in 1979's "Nosferatu the Vampire". She's surrounded by darkness, looking over her shoulder while she wears a white nightgown and a cross as a necklace. A hand with long nails like a claw is reaching for her neck from the darkness behind her. (batcat (batman returns))
Three book covers.  -A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle. It shows someone writing in a blackboard. It's a Beeton's Christmas Annual edition, from Ward, Lock & Co (in London, New York, and Melbourne). It contains other stories: Food for Powder by R. André and The Four Leaved Shamrock by C.J. Hamilton, and it says it's engraved by D.H. Friston, Matt Stretch and R. André. -Investigating Lois Lane: The Turbulent History of the Daily Planet's Ace Reporter, by Tim Hanley (author of Wonder Woman Unbound). IT shows the blue silouette of a woman using a typewriter, with various skyscrappers, one with a planet on top of it, in the background. -A Spanish edition of the Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri by Alianza editorial. It shows golden drawings of Beatrice and Dante, as well as various small cherubs and flowers, over a light background. It's a poetic version by Abilio Echeverría translating, and there's a blurb by Alberto Manguel that translated says "Of all the translations of the Comedy I know in Spanish, this is, to me, the best one."
Three book covers. -Batman: The Ultimate Evil, by Andrew Vachss, author of Footsteps of the Hawk. It shows Batman's figured from the chest up, partially shadowed, looking down, with a red background. -Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata. It shows a drawing of geisha, dressed in white, standing in the snow next to a white three. -The Lady Astronaut of Mars by Mary Robinette Kowal. It shows a drawing of a female, aging astronaut, wearing an orange suit. Her faced is completely shadowed, adorned with drawings of stars, resembling the night sky.
Three comic book covers. -Secret Origins 80-Page Giant. Beneath the title it says "Sssh! Don't tell anyone the real deal with Superboy, Robin, and Impulse", putting those three characters (with Tim Drake as Robin) in the cover. To the side it shows small circles dedicated to the characters of Spoiler, Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandmark) and Arrowette, and at the bottom it says "plus: a little Secret", referring to Greta Hayes. -Lois Lane (1986) by Mindy Newell and Gray Morrow, 1st issue of 2. Inside a square, it shows Lois shocked, seeing the corpse of a child being pulled out of the water. An inspector has his arms on her shoulders, comforting her or holding her back. An uniformed officer is holding back some reporters and photographers. -DC First: Batgirl/Joker. The cover shows Batgirl (then Barbara) cautiously pressed against a wall, and Joker ready on the other side of the corner with a large hammer.
 

BOOKS

  • A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle. Letters from Watson sent this from January to March, alongside a couple of other shorts ("The Field Bazaar" and "The Man with the Watches"). An interesting thing about it is that Sherlock was portrayed as somewhat bitter on the issue of credit (he does all the work, subpar investigators take underserved glory), while he's usually, in both ACD's later works and adaptations, portrayed as ~above such feelings. "The Field Bazaar" was interesting in that, in describing why Watson is a good "foil" for Sherlock's smarts in the books, actually illuminates why I think the smart investigator/fumbling idiot dynamic just. Fucking sucks for me lol. I don't get a kick out of it, I much prefer when they pair two investigator of different talents and portray those as both interesting and helpful in their investigations.
  • Investigating Lois Lane: The Turbulent History of the Daily Planet's Ace Reporter by Tim Hanley. Amazing read. It takes you through the history of the character, often looking at it through the lense of real-life issues and movements, getting into the different eras, adaptations, etc. It's giving me a lot to think about, both within the dc fandom and outside it.
  • Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri. This one I also read in substack newsletters, going for about a year, the last one being sent in March. It was a reread, and I maintain it's a book everyone should at least try to read. Inferno is by far my favourite part (the theology lessons in Paradise grate on me, in comparison).
  • Batman: The Ultimate Evil by Andrew Vachss. This book was written by a crime fiction author and attorney that specialices in representing children and in child abuse cases, who was approached by DC to write a book featuring Batman facing child sex trafficking. In the book, Bruce ends up discovering that his mother, Martha Wayne, was a sociologist who was investigating a child molester ring, and that's what caused their deaths. That's what caught my eye first, because really, how many canons give any weight and importance to Martha? If they opt to make the Wayne murders a conspiracy, it's always about Thomas's actions. I also appreciated that, even though the author clearly had to follow some dc-mandated lines (fictional country, individual villain), he practically hits you with a hammer when it comes to dispel a lot of the myths we have about child molesters and how they operate, specifically to challenge those dc-mandated lines. I wish we'd seen more of the social worker character, but I liked her as it was.
  • Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata. I picked this novella exclusively for vibes and not plot, and it's what it gave me. It's also made me think a lot about how men see women, and how through their eyes our selves are twisted. Komako and Yoko are fascinating characters in part for how inescrutable the male lead finds them and how he might be misunderstanding them. There's so, so much hinted under the surface, about their persons and about their relationship.
  • The Lady Astronaut of Mars by Mary Robinette Kowal. Short novelette I picked on a whim. A 60+ yo astronaut is offered a chance to travel to space again, her dream come true. She has to choose between taking it, or staying with her ailing husband, who has little time left. The story apparently later expanded on some novels/prequels, I might pick them up.

COMICS

  • Secret Origins 80-Page Giant. I picked this one up for Steph's story (I'm going through her comic arcs), but ended up reading all the others. It's cemented my desire to pick up the Young Justice comics. These teens are sooooo chaotic and fun lmao, all of them (back then) with such weird and interesting backstories.
  • Lois Lane (1986). A two-part issue that shows Lois getting in deep in an investigation about child abductions. It's gets gruesome and heavy at times, but it's a great read, specially for her character. It shows Lois at a moment that the mainline comics seem to have ignored (she missed out on a great professional opportunity due to Superman), and it shows how obsessive she gets and how that is what makes her a great investigator and reporter. I also liked the glimpse at the dynamic between her and her sister Lucy there, how dismissive Lois was of Lucy's stewardess' job, for example.
  • DC First: Batgirl/Joker. I don't like it as much as the early-Batgirl (2000) run but it's kind of on that vein. Barbara tells Cass about her first encounter with the Joker, and Cass is determined to prove herself against him. I loved the art as well (very different than in the cover).

Profile

queenslayerbee: Isabelle Adjany as Lucy Harker in 1979's "Nosferatu the Vampire". She's surrounded by darkness, looking over her shoulder while she wears a white nightgown and a cross as a necklace. A hand with long nails like a claw is reaching for her neck from the darkness behind her. (Default)
escritorzuela

August 2025

S M T W T F S
     12
34 56789
10 111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 15th, 2025 09:44 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios