The Underwater Welder by Jeff Lemire

This is the first “serious” non-serialized graphic novel I've bought for kindle. Never read Jeff Lemire's work before (not Essex County, not the mainstream DC or Vertigo stuff).
 
The art is great, if you ask me. The storyline is intriguing as well – a diver making peace with his drowned diver dad and with his life in parallel, while he's about to become a father himself. Flashback over flashback over flashback.
 
Maybe, if I were a diver myself, I could've related myself a bit more to some of the things here – sadly (or luckily) I ain't one.
 
Many reviewers compare it to The Twilight Zone – my problem – I never watched the original TV series, I think I may have watched the mid-90s' movie ages ago and remember nothing, so hard to say whether it is indeed so.
 
Overall, definitely worth a read.

Serenity: Better Days by Joss Whedon, Brett Matthews and Will Conrad

Better Days, volume 2 of Serenity comic books, was actually much better than volume 1. It actually had a feel of typical Firefly spirit from the TV series, of fun, action, some humor, and a tiny bit of clumsiness.

In a nutshell, I liked it. The rest of the shorter stories, nothing impressive. Oh well.

 


Serenity: Those Left Behind by Joss Whedon, Brett Matthews and Will Conrad

Breaking through my block of buying e-comic books for kindle, I've decided to start from the least valuable chewing gum crap, which I won't regret not having in physical paperback or hardcover form on my shelf.

Joss Whedon's Firefly / Serenity comic books are nothing too worthy of attention – still, bought the second volume already. Eh.

 


30 Days of Night: Dark Days by Steve Niles and Ben Templesmith

Good art, poor storytelling. The original 30 Days of Night book was much stronger than this sequel and resulted in a no less scary motion picture.

Nothing to report, folks, really – just 120 pages of vampire driven chewing gum – but again, Ben Templesmith's sloppy, raw drawing style fits it perfectly.

So sad very few decent comic books are available for kindle. Yet. Oh well.

 


The Walking Dead vol. 17: Something To Fear by Robert Kirkman, Charlie Adlard and Cliff Rathburn

Important change for me – after very long deliberation and sixteen volumes on my shelf, I stepped over my collecting craze and bought #17 electronically for kindle (kindle for ipad, that is, of course). Cheaper, faster and the quality of scan was great. Amazon promised panel-by-panel view – but somehow they lied.

While vol. 16 was boring as hell, in vol. 17 (actually, numbers 97-102 of the actual serialized comic) the hardcore action returns. And given these bits were likely created in parallel with Walking Dead: The Game by Telltale Games (which is absolutely fabulous and beats both the comic book AND the TV series combined – something I couldn't have expected) – similar topics appear. Bandits taking 1/2 of the supplies – or killing all. Zombies are nearly out of the picture. As usual, people are worse and scarier. Looking forward to vol. 18 – or should I start buying original 103, 104 volumes etc?

 


Tenderness in Hell by Vytautas Pliura

Passing by my bookshelf, I noticed 4 different copies of Vytautas Pliura's only published book, Tenderness in Hell, including the original 2001 edition which I bought used for over $100 together with the author's letter to a prospective publisher, two copies of the 2009 re-edition (bought five, I think, when they got out – and gave some away already) – plus a 2003 brilliant Russian translation by Linor Goralik and Stanislav Lvovsky, a 500 copies only edition, also a rarity. In pre-kindle times, there was a reason to stock up on Pliura's books – they were hard, impossible to get.

Haven't opened them for 3 years at least – and a quick thought blinked through my mind – Vytautas is dead. Struck by the thought, I rushed to google it and indeed, March 30, 2011, a year and a half ago almost, one of my absolutely favorite poets, if not the favorite, dead.

So in much belated memoriam, here goes his poem that I love so much. Rest in peace, Vytautas.

 

Tenderness in Hell

When my father spoke in his sleep
Often he would speak in German
Frightening us kids

We didn't speak German in our home
We hardly ever spoke Lithuanian for that matter
We were American
We spoke English
I learned English from my mother

As a little boy I remember my father speaking in broken English
“Throw me down the stairs the towel!” he said to me
one morning after his shower
I laughed thinking it was funny

When he spoke in German in his sleep
We kids knew he was dreaming that he was in the
concentration camp again
My mother
Would talk to him in a soothing way like a turtle dove
Telling him that he was at home
In our big Victorian house on the edge of the town
cornfields coming up to our swing sets
That he was safe
That no one would hurt him
She would speak in broken Lithuanian to hide this from us kids
But we knew anyway

When I picked up the phone one day
when Daddy's car had broke down
He told me he was calling from the “YUM-KAH!” hotel
I had no idea what he meant
Later my mother figured out that he was at the YMCA

When Daddy spoke in German in his sleep
We kids sensed something terrible
Something dreadful
German was so harsh
Not like Lithuanian which was soft as rose petals

He would cry in his sleep

One of his jobs in the camp
Was to take dead babies from their mothers
He was in charge of sanitation
Dead babies could spread disease
He would speak in German
Pleading with the woman to give up her baby
Being a medical student from Heidelberg and a prisoner himself
That was his job

Often women would nurse their dead babies, holding them up
to their breast, to fool Daddy

I pieced this all together years later
After my uncle told me about the camps and how he would outwit
the guards at the prison dairy by spreading the soft butter on
his chest and smuggling it out under his shirt
That's why Daddy didn't starve in the camp

Daddy never spoke of his time in the camp
He never breathed a word
At least not when he was awake

Only
When he was dreaming



The Hive by Charles Burns

The Hive is a dark and disturbing continuation of X'ed Out, recently published part 2 of Charles Burns' new trilogy definitely inspired by Hergé's Tintin – but with a Naked Lunch twist.

Given it's a very complex multilayer story (part 1 made no sense on its own, part 2 now start to form patterns of sense), I was left with no option but to re-read X'ed Out again – just to remember what it was about. Timelines cross – reality, imagination, hallucinations, present and past, all intersect and collide – and oh boy, now both X'ed Out and The Hive have become a thrilling read.

My problem – by the time part 3, called Sugar Skull, hits the shelves, I will have forgotten X'ed Out and The Hive entirely, and will have to re-read both again. It looks like a marketing scam, I would say, splitting a 300 page graphic novel into 3 thin installments to sell 3 books $20 a piece and not just one for $25. Oh well, I like it so much now that I couldn't care less. Finally, a great follow up to Burns's renowned Black Hole, well overdue.

P.S. … and if you didn't like my imprecise praise and want to read proper review of the books, here's a decent one. Enjoy

 


All You Zombies by Robert Heinlein

Ages since I read any science fiction stuff. Came upon this short story while wiki'ing Heinlein upon re-watching Starship Troopers recently. Plus, I guess it also popped up on some libertarian wires that flood my facebook feed.

After all, what's $1.25 paid to amazon for a story about a man who realized he is both his own father and his own mother? Well, go figure.

 


Why I Left Goldman Sachs by Greg Smith

Not a mind blowing book for sure, but maybe a worthwhile, I dunno, bathroom read or something. A few observations, though.

A, the book is 11 chapters long, and the first 10 is all [in high pitched voice] “I love you, Goldman Sachs, I love you”, over and over again. Agree with dealbreaker, sometimes it seemed as if he wanted the firm to turn to him and say “I'm so sorry, Greg, old buddy”, hug him and then elect him partner or CEO or something.

B, most of it is written with an attitude as if he had not outgrown his junior banker excitement – strange to hear it from an overdue VP/ED who worked 11 years in the industry – and especially on GS trading floor, for Christ's sake – would be more acceptable for an analyst or associate to still trumpet all those “wow's” sooo loud and clear. Looks to me GS never promoted the guy for a reason.

C, chapter 11, “the muppets” chapter (the word itself used less than a dozen times), is way too idealistic for my taste. Maybe I am far too cynical (indeed), but why would you run your firm over in the press like that and bury your career along with it? I don't want to, but I kinda buy into Goldman's case that there are two versions to this tale.

Overall, a quick read – not anywhere as good and exciting as The Accidental Investment Banker, but it has its laughs. Roger out.

 


NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman

Hard for me to say it, but it's been a while since I tried any psychology book at all, leave alone a child / teen psychology one. All I have to say – a gripping read. First time ever I have a book like this on the beach and don't want to go into the water until the end of the chapter.

Leaves far too many questions open for me, but still – gives extremely valuable advice and sets mind to work on how to bring a child better. Sad I haven't got my hands upon it earlier, say, a year ago or so – actually, it was my wife who found it and put me on course – we would've done a few things differently, I guess.

Set with a purpose of understanding on how to improve parenting experience and get better results in upbringing, the authors do little but summarize in plain “christian” words tons of different research on how to praise a child, stimulate speech development, instill fairness, resolve sibling conflict, teach a child how not to lie etc etc. For me personally, it was a much more useful read than, say, Kindergarten is Too Late – a great book as well, but it gives only concepts that you have to apply in an inexplicable way – but here, some tools as well. Good read.