"We are all in the gutter, but some of us..."
Taking Trash Seriously.
"...are looking at the stars."
-- Oscar Wilde
January 29, 2009
Price: Your 2¢

This site is updated Thursday afternoon with a new article about an artistic pursuit generally considered to be beneath consideration. James Schellenberg probes science-fiction, Carol Borden draws out the best in comics, Chris Szego dallies with romance and Ian Driscoll stares deeply into the screen. Click here for their bios and individual takes on the gutter. Our Guest Stars shine here

While the writers have considerable enthusiasm for their subjects, they don't let it numb their critical faculties. Tossing away the shield of journalistic objectivity and refusing the shovel of fannish boosterism, they write in the hopes of starting honest and intelligent discussions about these oft-enjoyed but rarely examined artforms. Contact us here.


Recent Features


Tumbling for Boy George in Baghdad

flower arrangement 80.jpgThis month the Cultural Gutter features the first of two articles by Katarina Gligorijevic about growing up with Western pop culture in Baghdad and Belgrade.

My first time setting foot on North American soil was in 1989, when my family arrived in Toronto. It has remained my home ever since, and I credit the ease with which I took to life here in large part to the traveling we did when I was a child, but also to the early education I received in “western life”from the random assortment of films and television programs broadcast in the cities where I spent my childhood - Baghdad, Iraq, and Belgrade, Serbia (Yugoslavia, back then).

Continue reading...


AX: An Edged Collection

File0001.jpgThere are reasons I left alternative comics for superheroes and there are reasons I keep going back. They each have their wonder and joy; they each have their irritating and sadly heartbreaking points. Nothing's perfect, not Superman, not Jimmy Corrigan. But there is a way to find comics that you love and avoid ones that make you disike comics: collections. I've gone alternative again, even for just a while, with Top Shelf's AX: Alternative Manga (2010), compiled by AX Magazine editor Matsushiro Asakawa and edited by Sean Michael Wilson.

Continue reading...


Author's Cut

avatar-blue-small.jpgThe director’s cut is a familiar term in the world of film, but an equivalent “author’s cut” in the realm of books is not a widespread notion. Why might that be?

Continue reading...


Forgetful?

Perhaps you'd like an e-mail notification of our weekly update.

 
 

Follow-Up Visit

by James Schellenberg

attolia-small.jpgI love shiny new things. I’m also getting more ruthless about my time than I used to be. Those competing impulses get resolved in a simple activity that everyone does naturally: following writers who have proved themselves in the past. On that note, here are a few follow-up visits to Gutter pieces of the past. What's been going on with the best stuff of the last few years?

I'll start off with a brief follow-up to my piece last time on Harry Potter; I finished the series a week or so ago. Two thoughts: the build-up to the ending was terrific, really exciting stuff, but the ending itself was fairly... technical. Harry made an assumption based on arcane mechanics of wand magic, which required a lot of explanation. Maybe not that different than the info-dumps required at the end of the previous Potter books? And secondly, I'm dismayed that the movie-makers have chosen to split the the seventh book into two movies, since book 7 is probably the best candidate for compression. If Movie 7 Part 1 is all the camping bits from the first half of The Deathly Hallows, I'll happily skip that one.

+

January 3, 2008: Smooth, Smoother, Smoothest

Earlier last year, I looked at the first book in Megan Whalen Turner’s Attolia series, The Thief. Since then, I’ve read the two subsequent books, The Queen of Attolia and The King of Attolia.

These two are fabulous books, a joy to read in every sense. The Attolia series is my new example of a series of stand-alone books that are satisfying both on their own and in context of ongoing events. So, pretty much a textbook case on how to write sequels.

attolia-big.jpgThe drawback is that do a proper job like this takes a while! Turner is a slow writer, with the three books being published in 1996, 2000, and 2006 respectively. That means another 4 to 6 years before she'll publish another book. I'll venture that the wait will be worth it.

+

October 11, 2007: A Locked Room

Here I looked at the first four books in Timothy Zahn’s six-book Dragonback series, which began with Dragon and Thief in 2003. He’s since concluded the series with a book called Dragon and Liberator.

I confess to being a bit baffled by the conclusion. Each of the five previous books was like a separate adventure, a locked-room mystery of sorts, hence my title. In the sixth book, Zahn brings all the pieces together, and this was a drastic change in strategy, since remembering everything that happened previously wasn't that important. I'll frankly admit that I had trouble remembering all the characters.

In addition to this basic layer of confusion on my part, it looks like Zahn wanted TEH AWESOMEST space battle of all time to wrap up the series. Sure, but I didn’t really understand what was happening. It dragged on and on, and the characters, already foggy in my memory, were frantically flying here and there doing... important yet incomprehensible things.I usually roll my eyes when the hero and the villain end a long saga with hand-to-hand combat, but at least I could understand that!

I liked the series a great deal and I might give it another shot now that all the books are out. Not a disaster of an ending, but not one I was expecting.

+

October 6, 2005: The Bandwagon

The Bandwagon was about a book by Ursula K. Le Guin called Gifts, a YA fantasy that I quite enjoyed, the first in a series now called The Annals of the Western Shore. Since then, she’s written two more books in the same series, Voices and Powers. I would highly recommend all three books: the series might not be action-packed, and they're not easy big fantasies, but the writing is superb and the characterization is particularly sharp. The Western Shore is a world where some psychic powers are real, but rather than focusing on the mechanics of these gifts, Le Guin uses them as a way to address topical items - like slavery or totalitarianism - in a way that retains the audience's interest. That's a rare feat.

I think Le Guin is on a real renaissance lately. Even her latest book, Lavinia - historical fiction, not a genre that typically appeals to me - won me over completely. As a Le Guin fan, I couldn’t be more thrilled to see the quality of her recent output.

+

January 26, 2005: Kicking Ass, Literary-Style

Wow, this feels like ages ago! Way back when, I wrote about Firefly, the famously cancelled Joss Whedon series. In the fall of 2005, the movie version, Serenity, came out to less-than-blockbuster status, which sank the hopes of many fans. I enjoyed Serenity a great deal but I could see why it didn't do so well at the box office. There was something wrong about the flow, as if the story was constantly tripping over itself. Perhaps that was inevitable? A serialized TV show with an ongoing storyline requires a large cast and expansive storylines; recreating everything the fans loved about that in a less-than-two-hour movie, all the while bringing in new folks, is a huge task. I give Whedon credit for giving it his best. Sometimes the hopeless tasks are the ones that define us.

Oddly enough, I started my piece about Firefly with a dig at Buffy and Angel. Times change! Back in 2008, I finished watching both shows. Excellent stuff. I will add, though, that I’m pretty sick of vampires again.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Totally agree about the Attolia books: both that they're truly excellent, and that we've a long, long wait ahead. Which is too bad. Though books of that caliber are worth the wait.

—Chris Szego

I'm ashamed to admit that the only books you cover that I've read are the Harry Potter books. Even more ashamed, because I've always admired LeGuin's writing. However, the reason I'm posting is because, like you, I'm really sick of Vampires. enough, already!

Nefarious Dr O


Chuck your 2¢ into the Gutter
Follow-Up Visit - The Cultural Gutter
Lost your 2¢? Write us.

Paw through our archives

I'm ashamed to admit that the only books you cover that I've read are the Harry Potter books. Even more ashamed, because I've always admired LeGuin's writing. However, the reason I'm posting is because, like you, I'm really sick of Vampires. enough, already!

Nefarious Dr O

2 comments below.
Pitch in yours.


Of Note Elsewhere
It's the most horrible time of the year! Lovecraft Season! Learn ehow to summon a shoggoth, the horrible sanity-blasting truth of your pitiful existence and salve the madness reading about The Crimson Cult.
~
 Lady killers get their revenge in this Vaultcast from Vault of Horror interviewing I Spit on Your Grave director Steven Moore and actress Sarah Butler. Vault of Horror also debates misogyny in the film with producer of both the original and the remake, Meir Zarchi. Meanwhile, ladies serve up their revenge hot in the game "Hey Baby," a first person shooter where guys who harass ladies on the street are the target.
~
"Once again, a [film-making] technique progresses from 'innovative' to 'standard procedure' to 'OK, please stop doing that.'" (More teal and orange madness, here).
~
Gloria Stuart has died at 100. Most of the media remembers her as the elder Rose in Titanic. The Gutter remembers her in the James Whale classic, The Old Dark HouseThe New York Times obituary discusses her many accomplishments outside film here.
~
Yellowback novels were pulpy Victorian reading. Emory University has a bunch of them for you to download. (via @houseinrlyeh)
~

View all Notes here.
Seen something shiny? Gutter-talk worth hearing? Let us know!

On a Quest?

Pete Fairhurst made us this Mozilla search plug-in. Neat huh?

Obsessive?

Then you might be interested in knowing you can subscribe to our RSS feed, find us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.


Follow CulturalGutter on TwitterFacebook Buttons By ButtonsHut.comFacebook Buttons By ButtonsHut.com


This site is autoconstructed by v4.01 of Movable Type and is hosted by No Media Kings.

Thanks To

Canada Council
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $20.3 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada.