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-- Oscar Wilde
August 13, 2009
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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).

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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.

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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?

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Magic vs. Superpowers

by James Schellenberg
graceling-small.jpgLast time around (An Absurdly Low Number of Books), I was worried because I hadn't read many books this year. In my search for explanations, I might have missed a key one: maybe I was getting bogged down by reading crappy books! Or, restated: it was too long since I had a book that I couldn't put down.

Enter Graceling by Kristin Cashore.

When I starting reading Graceling, I thought to myself, "This book seems alright," but by the end, I was a white-knuckle reader. I kept looking at the pages remaining and wondering how the heck Cashore was going to wrap everything up. In the last chapter, there was a huge development (I hesitate to say twist), one that fit in organically with the preceding plot events and made sense in terms of character, and when that one was resolved too, I was totally wrung out emotionally. A fast-paced story, characterization that convinces, and neat world-building, all in one package.

Plus a satisfying ending - how's that for a novelty!

To phrase it another way, Graceling is like Turner's Attolia series, but with the writing cranked down one notch and the action cranked up one notch. In other words, the writing is a little less elegant, but the reader is compensated by a plot that's more grab-you-by-the-throat in nature.

The protagonist is a young woman named Katsa, living in one of the seven kingdoms of her world, and she is one of the rare people who has a "Grace" - a power of some kind. Her Grace, as it appears at the start of the book, is the ability to kill. If she's in a battle of some kind, she will always be alive and her opponents will always be dead or injured. It's not much of a surprise that this is a really miserable power for any thinking, feeling person.

She has some adventures, she gets into huge scrapes because of her active conscience, and the twists and turns follow logically from the world, the Graces, and the people who live in that world and possess those Graces.

After reading Graceling, and recovering from being so wrung out, I thought about the magic system a bit and started to wonder: are we talking about magic here or superpowers?

graceling-big.jpgNow I'm not sure how much of a difference there is between the two, apart from pretty much everything that ordinarily surrounds them in a story! But I see magic as something indefinable and strange, whereas superpowers can be dissected. Tolkien never explains how Gandalf got his powers, and not even really what his powers are; in my admittedly less-than-extensive knowledge of comic book-based storylines, the opposite seems true (ok, I admit it, I saw X-Men Origins: Wolverine on a recent airplane trip, and the idea of transplanting all of the X-Men's varied powers into one individual stuck in my mind). Contrarily, there has definitely been a trend in fantasy books lately where the magic of the world in question is codified, explained, systematized, etc. See the books of Brandon Sanderson for the clearest example of this.

Either magic or superpower, the Graces require a huge amount of "great power, great responsibility" style jibber-jabber, and the nature of the antagonist (who seems like a supervillain to me) clicks in tightly with this theme as well. The supervillain's power actually makes sense in context (and see the link at the end about Cashore's next book - even Cashore's description of it fills a huge plot hole). All kids who are Graced are sent to the service of the kingdom before they become too powerful. As is displayed in Katsa's life, it takes an enormous amount of effort for her to break free of her duty, in this case to a monarch acting in bad faith. In this way, most of the superpowered kids running around are socialized into "productive" members of society. The supervillain gets around this by the expedient of having a Grace that defeats any attempts at socialization or control.

This kind of theorizing aside, I admired Cashore's work here because it seemed like she instinctively knew what to do with the material. At the most basic level, she uses it to supply a very memorable and shocking scene late in the book: there's an unexpected showdown between Katsa and the supervillain. Because we've already seen the (seemingly) invincible nature of his powers, there really doesn't seem to be a way out for her!

Like all proper heroes or heroines, she escapes of course, but that whole sequence - surprise, despair, struggle, freedom - gave me a better reading moment than I'd had in a while.

I recommend taking a look at Cashore's blog, which is a bit of a laugh - it's definitely on the informal side of the spectrum of authors' blogs.

In other news, I'm looking forward to Cashore's next book, based on its premise (spoiler warning).

But what about the odd Graces? The ones about being able to whistle anything? Or the one about being able to climb trees faster than anyone else? I wonder if those have superpower equivalents. ie: Transpodude, who would always have exact change for the bus, no matter where he was in the world.

—Chris Szego

those seem like the kind of superpowers that mutants who don't make the x-men have. you know, the ones who end up joining the brotherhood of evil mutants or living in the sewer.

i poked around a little bit and found this:
"Watching X-Men II when it came out set me to wondering about this – there’s a kid at Xavier’s school that only displays two abilities – he doesn’t sleep, and he can change the TV channel by blinking."

—Carol Borden

Tree climbing and whistling are actual Graces in the book. Well, they don't really figure, but they're mentioned. Along with somewhat more useful graces of being able to swim really fast, and hit anything you shoot at.

James, Cashore's FIRE was excellent. Different in many ways, because the main character was quite different from Katsa, but excellent.

—Chris Szego

yeah, i was trying to think of cognates and the cognates i can think of would end up being marvel mutants and then of those, it's the misfit mutants. the problem is that i am way more interested in those kinds of mutations/abilities than the writers usually are.

—Carol Borden

Ahaaaaaaaah -- I see what's going on. Kristin Cashore couldn't get the comic book companies to publish her story...

"...too much like X-Men based in a McEurope swords-and-sorcery fantasy setting."

Or however they do the rejection letters at DC and Marvel, etc.

So she turned her failed comic book into a novel.

Yep.

Now I'll know how to read the rest of it. (Already had it checked out from the library.)

—Chuck

This book sounds interesting and I'm definitely gonna check it out.

The idea of everybody having a power ( magical in this case) was used quite effectively in "A Spell for Chamelion" by Piers Anthony, which was the start of his Xanth series. The series isn't everybody's cup of tea since it has a lot of silliness and puns in it.

In a more recent series "The Codex Alera" by Jim Butcher many people have control of lesser or greater "furies", elemental spirits with various abilities.


-Willard

—Willard

Thanks for the comments, everyone!

Not sure if this one would have worked as a comic book. Part of the joy of Graceling is coming face to face with a very effective sort of supervillain in a high fantasy setting. Like if Sauron and his motivations actually made sense in Tolkien :)

(Along those lines, I'll be writing up some thoughts about a new writer named Brent Weeks in my next piece - some interesting parallels between Cashore's book and Weeks').

—James Schellenberg


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Thanks for the comments, everyone!

Not sure if this one would have worked as a comic book. Part of the joy of Graceling is coming face to face with a very effective sort of supervillain in a high fantasy setting. Like if Sauron and his motivations actually made sense in Tolkien :)

(Along those lines, I'll be writing up some thoughts about a new writer named Brent Weeks in my next piece - some interesting parallels between Cashore's book and Weeks').

—James Schellenberg

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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.
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"Once again, a [film-making] technique progresses from 'innovative' to 'standard procedure' to 'OK, please stop doing that.'" (More teal and orange madness, here).
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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.
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Yellowback novels were pulpy Victorian reading. Emory University has a bunch of them for you to download. (via @houseinrlyeh)
~

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