Monday, August 26, 2024

Between Books - Star Wars: The High Republic Tempation of the Force

Cover for Star Wars the High Republic Temptation of the Force showing blonde Kriss Standing next to brown haired and beared Elzar Mann with lightsabers lite.



The world has changed! Star Wars: The Acolyte has introduced scores of new eyes to the High Republic. It is rumored that the series won’t be coming back for a season 2, largely due to honestly toxic Star Wars culture and not due to story pacing or plot concerns. We’ve now seen Vernestra Rwoh in the flesh, and even rightfully I will argue been too obsessed with birthdays. So it’s a perfect time to jump back into the High Republic Between Books, and maybe even reflect on if the High Republic show changes my thoughts on the literature.

Star Wars: The High Republic Temptation of the Force by Tessa Gratton continues the epic space battle (or star war) between the Republic and the Jedi versus warlord Marchion Ro and his Nihil forces. Much of the focus of the book is Jedi Masters Avar Kriss and Elzar Mann as they seek a way to save those trapped within the Occlusion Zone ruled by the Nihil. They seek to combine technology and the Force to better understand hyperspace and how they can free the captive. Meanwhile, a new blight is visiting planets and leaving death in its wake. Marchion Ro and Jedi Knights Bell Zettifar and Burryaga seek to understand the relationship the blight has with the Force, the Jedi killing Nameless, and another almost forgotten adversary. Also, Jedi Master Porter Engle focuses on his own mission of…revenge? All of these events move forward to a stopping point that allows us to face all these problems in a future book.

First and foremost, some of these books have just exhausted me. Out of all of the High Republic books this has likely been my favorite. We have spent enough time with Avar, Elzar, Marchion Ro, and the rest of the supporting cast that we have enough knowledge to follow along with them and have some investment. I just had the feeling that this is a story that is pushing forward to conclusion. But there are so many elements that I feel many of them take from the rest of the story. This is a story laid out by a committee! I wonder if Gratton had permission to just create an Avar and Elzar story if it may have had better pacing and been a little more satisfying. We’ve seen so many characters culled from the story since Light of the Jedi, that I really wonder if less is showing to be more.

It does feel like there is so much story to serve. I thought Gratton had us on a path to a conclusion for the whole arc. But she’s not able to get there due to all of the elements. Those elements include an adversary that was introduced in the first phase of the project and then largely disappeared. Also, in this book, we begin to see the pay off to why the time jump backward was written. But even then, I don’t find that connection to matter much to me. Honestly, I think Marchion Ro is a really villainous villain. What I would like to see happening is the Jedi focussing on fighting him. I also could use a little more time with him and less with his subordinates. If we were given a High Republic arc that was basic Marchion Ro is bad, Jedi are good, Jedi need to stop him… we could have a pretty fun adventure. George Lucas is famous for “faster, more intense” and this principle could have helped the whole High Republic instead of building a lot of lore and worlds. Just give us Jedi are good, villains are bad, let's throw them against each other. I often tried to read this book in that light, which helped me as the pace seemed to slightly build up.

Gratton does give us a piece that I really enjoyed, Jedi in love! We have seen many times how love is seen by Jedi as a road to attachment. Avar and Elzar have a strong, long-standing relationship that is really complicated among the Jedi. This gives them moments to discuss love, and if it is a road to the Dark Side. They, for the first time, discuss how love can be freeing, love can be a road to the Light Side, and it does not need to be a prison. I’d agrue that Kanan Jarrus was the best of all Jedi, and he pushed into love. I appreciate that Gratton’s view of love aligns better with what I think many of us feel than the horrible tragic quality many other Star Wars books treat love as being. I love, it makes me better! It seems a few Jedi may actually agree.

So, I’ve seen Star Wars: The Acolyte which for this book likely mostly impacts my take on Vern. Vern is older, much older, and a little more cynical and political as a leader among the Jedi. So while Vern bounces around the sides of this story, I do see her less youthful and more hard-edged. I’m judging her for some of the opinions she’s expressing in glances. I think the writers would prefer I see these moments as how she got to that point on the show. But…due to recency bias, she’s already changed on the page.

Yoda appears in a fancy robe! I mean, Yoda is sprinkled lightly into the story.

Star Wars: The High Republic Temptation of the Force by Tessa Gratton is a fast-paced mostly adventure novel that moves quickly to the conclusion of this battle. The best portions of the story focus on Jedi seeking to defeat the villain. But sadly, the weight of the entire High Republic and the lore has slowed the pace. And overall, for a Star Wars project that I have been somewhat critical of…for story reasons…Temptation of the Force is likely my favorite offering yet. There is a nice little adventure in here. 

 

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Monday, August 19, 2024

Caps Comics - What If...? Donald Duck Became Wolverine

What if Donald Duck became Wolverin Cover showing Donald in a yellow and blue wolverine costume with marshwellows on the three extended claws.

Regular Giada Perissinotto Cover



Shared birthday parties…I’m not a fan. Someone gets less attention than they should! In sharing a party between 90-year-old Donald Duck and the 50-year-old Wolverine, who will get less love. 


What If Donald Duck Became Wolverine Cover showing Donald Duck in a yellow and blue wolverine cover grilling in the backyard with his extended claws holding hotdogs

 Phil Noto Donald Duck Wolverine Cover


“What If…? Donald Duck Became Wolverine” is a fun mashup of Donald Duck and Wolverine written by Luca Barbieri with art by Giada Perissanotto. The story is pretty simple all-ages Marvel fun. Pete-Skull has taken control of Duckburg, including Uncle Scrooge’s Money Bin. There’s only one hero who can save us from this evil. Sleeping on Grandma Duck’s Farm is that duck hero…Donald-Wolverine. Another hero comes to the farm to recruit the reluctant angry clawed duck. The duo, then trio, go on a voyage to face Pete-Skull, where we discover Wolverine-Duck’s real superpower.


What id donald Duck Becaem

Peach Momoko Cover


Alright, I had to hide some secrets. Perissanotto’s art gives us some really fun Marvel-Disney crossovers. It’s too giddy joy to spill the beans on these images. The combo of Disney characters and Marvel costuming is just fun. I will reveal, that there is a wonderful splash page of Donald in Wolverine variant costumes that is super fun and I would love to frame on my wall. Donald’s feathers/hair is just so on-model for Wolverine and makes me giggle whenever he is in the frame. These images are more fun than the Disney 100 variant covers, which always were on the wrong comic. 


What if Donald Duck Became Wolverine Cover showing Donald Duck with a yellow and blue wolverine custome charging at us with claws out.
Ron Lim  Cover


This is written for Marvel fans. The story elements to me are a Marvel tale with Donald’s world and supporting cast tipping the hat to Marvel and not the other way around. I think the biggest gap among the cameos is no Watcher. “The What If…?” brand is really led by the Watcher, and we need an introduction from the Watcher to really setup the story and the world we are visiting within the multiverse. Oh geez, if only Donald-Wolverine had appeared in Deadpool & Wolverine with his perfectly styled feathers that would have made this all over-the-top. 


What If Donald Duck became Wolverine showing a cute angry version of Donald Duck in a yellow and blue Wolverine costime with symbols representing cursing around his head.
Skottie Young Variant Cover


“What If…? Donald Duck Became Wolverine” is Luca Barbieri’s first Marvel comic. He is an Italian writer who we should not be shocked to see wrote a few issues of Topolino, you know Mickey Mouse, and Wizards of Mickey. This is also Perissanotto’s first Marvel comic, though Perissanotto has provided Marvel variant covers. We should not be shocked that Perissanotto is also Italian and shares in the deep Mickey Mouse Italian comics tradition. I think it is brilliant that with this batch of recent Mice and Ducks Marvel is leaning into the Italian expertise instead of grabbing American Marvel artists and writers, other than Jason Aaron


Two copies side by side of What if Donald Duck Became Wolverine with one cover showing Donald and friends bringing Wolverine a Birthday Cake and the other showing Wolverine and the X-Men bringing Donald a cake.
D23 Variant Comic Set


“What If…? Donald Duck Became Wolverine” is an all-ages comic that is fun for kids and adult Marvel fans. I have enjoyed this recent wave of Marvel Disney comics and love there is more to come. It sounds like collectors are also enjoying these waves, with variant covers fetching big money on eBay. We also know that in the party between a Duck and the Canuck…the Duck wins as this is a Duck party from page one.

Monday, August 12, 2024

Between Books - George Pérez


Book cover for Geroge Perez showing a drawing of George Perez looking foward.



We’re Disney Adults…we’re used to our favorite art not being taken seriously!

I’ve long been a fan of the late George Pérez. If anything, I thought he may have packed too much into his comic pages. But to me, he was a master comic book artist who helped inspire the look and storytelling of two of the most important comic book movies of all time, Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. Apparently, there was more criticism of Pérez than I believed.

George Pérez
by Patrick L. Hamilton is a biographical monograph that takes comic book art and the work of George Pérez seriously. The text opens with a discussion of who Pérez was as an artist and criticisms of his work. This includes the fact that he was often considered slow as an artist and did not complete to the end all of his comic assignments. Additionally, Hamilton points out the primary of writers over artists in praise of comic book work. Let’s be honest, Stan Lee jumps to the top of more minds than Jack Kirby. Hamilton next outlines artistic visual choices that Pérez took in order to populate a full world around his characters and use the page to create vibrant action. The final two chapters discuss how Pérez depicted disabled characters such as the Teen Titans Cyborg and Jericho along with female characters like Wonder Woman and Scarlet Witch. Hamiltons shows his readers a common thread in his depictions! Pérez looked to draw reality into his characters and sought to avoid comic book troupes. Along with the discussion of the artist’s life, Hamilton includes a number of color and black-and-white images that demonstrate Pérez’’s artist endeavors.

Really the opening, with it’s criticism, was eye opening to me. As a comic fan, I know all about the obstacles that slower artists, often many of them the best, face in reaching deadlines. Pérez was one of those artists. But I think as shown in the visual examples found on the page, that his lack of speed was a tradeoff to realism. Pérez drew people and places that were vibrant and full. His backgrounds were filled with the clutter we find in our own homes. And his characters acted out like we would expect them to behave in the real world. Hamilton shows how Pérez grew to bind his reality to our real world. And I think it was all for the better, knowing how the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which is bound to reality, has used Pérez art as one of the guides to put comic pages into live action.

George Pérez by Patrick L. Hamilton is a trend I love. Academics are taking pop culture seriously as part of culture. This text is a serious academic work that can be used, and likely will be used, in college courses on art and sociology. It is published by an academic press! This is not a silly book about silly books. And you will feel like someone is taking beloved pop culture seriously.

For Disney fans, you will need to expect some discussion of DC comics, as comic creators often do shift from one company to another. For those who want to understand the evolution of an artist or get to know George Pérez and his legacy better, this is a short yet serious read that can challenge one about what they believe about silly comic art. I wish that when I was an undergraduate, or when I taught, that I had monographs like this available to better connect students to material they were familiar with while making serious points about culture and society. 

 

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Review Copy Provided for Review

 

 

Monday, August 5, 2024

Between Books - Disneyland: the Nickel Tour

 




$683 used! I get it. This book cannot land in everyone’s Between Books library. It’s $683 (today) used. I am being dramatic, there is a copy listed for only $295.99! It is acceptable condition, so it’s acceptable! When I got my copy, they typically ran for about $400. I got lucky. I purchased my copy off Amazon from a Friends of a Library group. I had a pile of gift cards, but still under $100. I reached out and said, this is what I have, I will cherish this book. I will respect this book. And I know what this book is. There is no other owner who will love this volume as much as me! And the friendly friends struck me a deal.

It’s 1995 and Disney fans and postcards hobbyists Bruce Gordon and David Mumford gave other fans a look into their extensive postcard collections in Disneyland: The Nickel Tour. From there, this book became mythical to Disney books fans as it has been cited in numerous Between Books sitting on the shelf. The flow is simple, and one we have seen many times since. Gordon and Mumford work through the park and provide the history of the park and its evolution using primarily postcards purchased at Disneyland and found in their collections. Those cards were often affordable souvenirs costing just a nickel. The hobbyists start with founding and they walk us through the decades up until the 1990s. The cards are supplemented with additional images not captured on postcards to provide us with additional context. They also offer fellow collectors checklists of cards that were offered in the parks.

Gordon, Mumford…which one of you is the funny one? Maybe it’s both. There are a fair share of dad jokes in this book that made me unexpectedly chuckle. Honestly, the light and friendly tone combined with images provide a very easy to engage with text. Throw in some additional background on attractions that we may not see mentioned in a lot in books and some images, like a bulldozed Fantasyland, to help one understand how this book has been referenced heavily. This is especially true as one asks how many Disney history books were offered in the 1990s.

The late authors often provide a tone that makes you believe that they are friendly with many of the figures they are discussing. When they talk about Tony Baxter for example, it comes off as their pal Tony, not some third party who they are simply chronicling. This is because they are bringing across in their tone the actual relationships they held. Gordon was an Imagineer who contributed to Splash Mountain, a project led by Baxter. Mumford worked on the Land and Star Tours in Tokyo Disneyland, a project that Baxter helped to design in the United States. This gave them the perspective as a pair of not only chronicling but in some cases making Disney history. It also can help explain their access to some photos not found in postcards. And despite their years at WED and WDI and vast achievements, it is in their role as Disney historians that they are often best known for, helping found a tradition of Imagineer historians with this being seen as one of their most important contributions.

I do need to warn those of us with collector personalities, this book can be addictive. And I’m not just talking about collecting this hard-to-find volume. As you read, you may find yourself saying, “One postcard isn’t a collection, and I like that image. It’s vintage!” Gordon and Mumford are enthusiastic not just about Disneyland but also about postcard collecting. I found myself putting the book down to shop on eBay several times. I have a little bit of an addictive personality, so one card could easily become 30. It does compliment the authors that 3 decades later, readers are excited not just about the Disneyland park that brought them to the volume, but also the hobby that helped extend their fandom.

Disneyland: The Nickel Tour by Bruce Gordon and David Mumford for many Disney fans may be unobtainium, a book that is priced well outside our price range. But keep your eyes open as you may never know what you will find. The volume itself is visual, fun, insightful, and best of all engaging. It helps us uncover a Disneyland that many of us never saw. It also binds us together in our shared fandom and excitement in our various hobbies. 

 

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