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From: dvandom@eyrie.org (Dave Van Domelen)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.comics.misc
Subject: Dave's Capsules for October 2024
Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 03:57:41 -0000 (UTC)
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                    Dave's Comicbook Capsules Et Cetera
          Generally Monthly Picks and Pans of Comics and Related Media

Standard Disclaimers: Please set appropriate followups.  Recommendation does
not factor in price.  Not all books will have arrived in your area this month.
An archive can be found on my homepage, http://www.eyrie.org/~dvandom/Rants
         Tenure application submitted, seems likely to succeed.

     Items of Note (strongly recommended or otherwise worthy): Magilumiere
Magical Girls Inc vol 4, Kaiju No. 8 vol 11, Nothing Special vol 2:
Concerning Wings 

     In this installment: Dreadnought (Nemesis Book 1), City of Strange Gods
(Signalverse Book 10), Stop! Project 2025, Kaiju No.8 vol 11, Dinosaur
Sanctuary vol 5, Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. vol 4, I'm In Love With The
Villainess vol 7, Shock City, Amoeba Adventures: the Warmth of the Sun,
Nothing Special vol 2: Concerning Wings 

     Not a lot this month, but high quality.  Kinda a complement to last
month, where I got a lot of stuff but found fault with much of it. 


"Other Media" Capsules:

     Things that are comics-related but not necessarily comics (i.e.
comics-based movies like Iron Man or Hulk), or that aren't going to be
available via comic shops (like comic pack-ins with DVDs) will go in this
section when I have any to mention.  They may not be as timely as comic
reviews, especially if I decide to review novels that take me a week or two
(or ten) to get around to.

     Dreadnought (Nemesis Book 1): Diversion Press - The debut novel from
April Daniels, published in 2016 but I only found out about it recently.  The
premise is "What if a superhero world's Superman analogue was powered by
something that was passed onto a new host when the current one dies, it got
passed to a deeply closeted transfemme high school student, and rebuilt her
into as female as the power could manage?"  Daniels, being trans herself,
writes from experience up to a point.  One presumes she does not secretly
have superhuman powers.  Danny, the new holder of Dreadnought's powers, lives
in a world that has had superheroes and villains since WWII, which you might
think would be less alienating than a world where she's the only superhero,
but not so much.  Yes, it's bad to have no support network and have to figure
everything out yourself, but it's far worse for a support system to exist and
you can't TRUST it.  In fact, one of the major deuteroantagonists of the
series if a teammate of the previous Dreadnought, a TERF witch who Daniels
says on social media she's pretty sure wasn't based on Rowlings, if only due
to the timing.  Even seemingly decent teammates who are doing their best to
be accepting are still at best uncomfortable around Danny, due to the whole
"our long-time friend and teammate just died" thing that would be awkward
even if Danny wasn't trans and a minor.  Not to mention, being able to shrug
off tank shells doesn't mean you automatically gain the ability to stand up
to an emotionally abusive father.  So...dreams come true, but there's
definitely some monkey's paw in the mix.  The sequel, Sovereign, came out in
2017 and is currently sitting in my TBR queue, but due to personal issues the
third book is still in development.  (Her social media is still active and
the most recent update about the progress of the book was a few weeks back.)
Recommended.  $6.99 in the Kindle Store, I picked it up when it was on sale
for $1.99.  No hardcopy available, but there is an audiobook for $1.99. 

     City of Strange Gods (Signalverse Book 10): Self-published - I reviewed
the first book in this series, Miracle Girl and Jack, several years ago.
While I haven't been reviewing all the books since (or any, I'd have to go
digging), I figured this one merited a "where are things now?" catch-up
review given that it's a bit Event blowout featuring or at least mentioning
every main character from the previous nine books.  (A few are only mentioned
to point out that they were not in town and therefore couldn't help with the
current crisis.)  It builds up into an Origin Of Powers story, with author
Blake Michael Nelson establishing why there's magic in the world and
suggesting how that might have indirectly led to other sorts of powers as
magic worked its way into the fabric of reality...even as someone is doing
something Bad to the source of magic.  Anyway, it's very ambitious, and
Nelson does mostly manage to keep the characters all in the air and distinct
(although Sneak and Skeeter can be a little similar at times).  There's a
whole mantlepiece full of Chekov's Guns, but better to be obvious than to
pull plot devices out of absolutely nowhere.  Probably not a good starting
place for the Signalverse, but it does show he can manage a wider world.  If
you've read any Signalverse books but haven't read this one, it's worth
picking up.  $3.99 in the Kindle Store, $14.99 trade paperback. 


Digital Content:

     Unless I find a really compelling reason to do so (such as a lack of
regular comics), I won't be turning this into a webcomic review column.
Rather, stuff in this section will generally be full books available for
reading online or for download, usually for pay.  I will also occasionally
include things I read on Library Pass (check to see if your public library
gives access to it), although the interface can be laggy and freeze
sometimes. 

     STOP! Project 2025: StopProject2025Comic.org - This is a free
informational comic put together by dozens of comics professionals as a piece
of political advocacy.  Some of the names attached to it that are relatively
well known in the profession are Matt Fraction, Gene Ha, Zander Cannon, Cully
Hamner, Rick Veitch, Denys Cowan, Jay Hosler, Steve Lieber, Jim Ottaviani,
Jeff Parker, Greg Rucka, and Chris Ryall, plus a couple dozen more who are
willingly painting large targets on themselves in case the election goes the
GOP's way.  The actual Project 2025 document is dauntingly long, and comics
have a long history of being used to present a lot of information memorably
in a condensed form.  As one might expect from an anthology, the quality and
tone vary pretty wildly (everyone's against P2025, but some are more on the
dark humor side while others lean into the horror of it).  I really do not
recommend reading it all in one sitting unless you have a very high tolerance
for inhumanity, though.  Nor do I expect many (or any) people reading my
reviews to be undecided at this point, but some of you might benefit from
knowing more about what might be happening starting in a year or so (even if
Dems win the White House and both houses of Congress, a lot of this stuff is
going to get implemented at the state level in too many places).  Free, other
than the damage to your sense of calm. 


Manga Collections:

     With manga collections coming to dominate my reading habits, I decided
to formally split them off from Trades (informally they'd already been split
for a while). 

     Kaiju No 8 vol 11: Viz/Shonen Jump - This is where the Big Damn Battle
turns around, thanks to a comnination of motivational flashback scenes and
Kafka reaching a sort of personal enlightenment and getting past the
uncertainty and self-doubt that has been plaguing him since his identity as
Kaiju No. 8 got revealed.  This is one of those books that would be pretty
weak as an introduction to the title, because it's so heavily about paying
off all kinds of personal arcs.  The sheer number of important characters is
still a little difficult to follow at times, but as Payoff volumes go, it's
very well done.  The battle is not over yet, but this volume is chock full of
Turning Points.  Recommended in isolation, strongly recommended as part of a
binge read.  $11.99/$15.99Cn/#8.99UK rated Teen. 

     Dinosaur Sanctuary vol 5: Seven Seas Entertainment - The "prickly
ankylosaur keeper" arc wraps up in this volume, with the rest being split
fairly evenly on the ceratopsian specialist and the standoffish veterinary
doctor, with the usual protagonist newbie taking more of a back seat to those
two (much as she was more of an audience to the therapod specialist's
backstory).  Itaru kinoshita does seem intent on making this a full ensemble
book, both humans and dinosaurs as characters, and moving away from the
newbie's coming of age story.  Recommended.  $13.99/$17.99Cn rated Teen 13+. 

     Magilumiere Magical Girls Inc. vol 4: Viz Signature -  Saving the expo
last volume has given MMGI a much higher profile, and the CEO feels the time
is right to start licensing their "middleware" (management in the field
software) to other companies.  Bur first, time for new brooms, and a new
supporting character who's a prodigy at broom design.  Like, she's in grade
school and already recognized as the best in the field.  That MMGI can get
appointments with Dr. Ginji on short notice is further evidence that MMGI is
way more than what it appears. The second half of the volume has a magical
girl from the company whose techs helped out at the expo coming to learn the
MMGI Aesthetic (and steal as many secrets as she can, but joke's on her, I
think they WANT the secrets "stolen").  She also provides a bit of exposition
for newbie Kana and the reader, of a Kaii Disaster 15 years ago.  In the
first draft of this review I went into a bit of spoilery detail speculating
on how this ties into the fact that there doesn't seem to be a Big Bad behind
the Kaii like in other magical girl stories, but I'm going to narrow it down
to this: the Big Bad of this setting is capitalism, and the kaii are a
metaphor for anthropogenic climate change.  I could be wrong, but it's
plausible, eh?  Anyway even if this is just what it looks like on the surface
and there is no deeper metaphor intended, it continues to be a really good
take on the premise of magical girls as a business model.  Strongly
recommended. $14.99/$19.99Cn/#10.99UK rated Teen. 

     I'm In Love With The Villainess vol 7: Seven Seas Entertainment - If
Dinosaur Sanctuary is rather lacking in yuri (girls loving girls) for Seven
Seas, this book more than covers that base.  There is a nun on the cover,
which in this book is a sign of danger.  She's actually a cardinal, and her
name is Lilly because this is not going to be an even remotely subtle volume.
(For those who don't know, yuri literally means "lily.")  She's also the
first important character in the game who Rei does not know the name of in
advance, because she was so deeply background that none of the official
material said anything about her save that she was the fiancee of one of the
princes (so, yeah, the game encourages some cheating if you decide to pursue
that prince, which I suppose may be normal for dating sims with heavy
worldbuilding...not really my genre).  While Lilly and her relationship with
her fiancee do make for some major plot points to bookend this volume, the
middle half (roughly) is actually a flashback to Rei's real life high school
days, and the first real information we've gotten about her other than
"office lady who lives alone and is obsessed with the game."  So, a break in
the magic and aristocracy yuri story for a regular high school yuri, the
story of Rei's first love and her awakening to her sexuality.  This parallels
how a lot of characters in the main story are developing as people, instead
of being one-note villains or background cyphers.  It's possible that
whatever force put Rei in the world is letting her unconscious desires shape
the unformed aspects, and as I noted in a previous volume's review, the plot
is starting to come off the rails in a big way.  And while Rei thinks of
herself as a Grown Woman Who Knows Now What Love Is, some of the less than
mature behavior in the flashback reflects Rei's own behavior in earlier
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