Random Comics

Huh! I read some more comics.

I finished off Leo’s Betelgeuse series.

Scenes like this really bring home how little variation there is in Leo’s human characters (beyond hairdos). It’s pretty amusing once you start noticing it.

But there’s plenty of variation in his other creatures.

These albums are really exciting, I have to say — so many interesting things happen, and so many mysteries. Of course, that means that the mysteries have to be somewhat resolved in the final album (or “episode”, as Leo calls them), and the solutions are never as intriguing as the mysteries. So a bit of a letdown, but still a really fun read. (Which really helps, since my French is baaad.)

New Kim Deitch! That’s something to celebrate.

This is not another chapter in his mega-cycle about oldee tymey cartoonists and their creation, but is instead a kinda meandering not-really-a-story tied together by scenes of Deitch talking to his wife about stories (and her coming up with a story). It’s a thoroughly entertaining read.

The main er “story” lasts for about a hundred pages, and then there’s an appendix of even more random stuff.

There’s just something incredibly pleasing about Deitch’s line. These pages are just a lot of fun to look at, beyond reading.

This is one of those huge omnibuses…

… and it collects these things, created by a cast of thousands. OK, dozens. A dozen?

Anyway, there’s so many writers here because Marvel had three (at least) ongoing Avengers series, but for a summer stunt, the other series were cancelled and the main series was published weekly for a few months. So all the writers from all the series converged on the main series…

You’d think that’d lead to a totally disjointed, overstuffed mess, and… not really? It’s a pretty fun read.

It’s got something going on. I enjoyed reading this, even though it’s pretty stupid.

Apparently other people also liked it, because Marvel decreed that there should be a followup a couple years later. So the three writers descended again and produced an unreadable mess. The followup series is just so bad. Incredibly awful.

D&Q’s Yoshiharu Tsuge series continues…

This is not Tsuge’s best work. Many of these stories just feel like he’s done them before — and that goes for most of the dream-like stories (like above).

On the other hand, the autobio stories (well, I assume they are) still seem pretty fresh.

So it’s a mixed bag, the good stuff is good.

This is the first of these collections I’ve bought — “Marvel Premier Collection”. They’re slightly smaller than standard size, and are printed on matte paper. So I guess this is Marvel’s response to the wildly successful DC Compact series of books?

I think the format is better than DC’s — I think the Compact books are even smaller than this? Which makes the lettering hard to read (at least for me). But it’s not perfect — the gutters are too narrow, the spine is too stiff, and they’ve put that horrible, horrible phtfalate “soft touch” stuff on the cover to make it classée, but that just makes your fingers recoil in horror.

Anyway, I’ve read some of these comics before, but I was late to the Fraction/Aja Hawkman, so it’s fun to finally read these comics in order now. Fraction and Aja was having a lot of fun in these issues, and it shows. (Sometimes it feels a bit like Fraction is going through Understanding Comics, page by page, to use all transitions described there, though.)

But it’s fun and inventive. So something like this would probably not get published by Marvel these days — it has way too much character.

But… even back then, they apparently didn’t leave the creators be. So almost half these issues are drawn by fill-in artists, which makes for such a jarring read. Didn’t Marvel even consider that this could have become a perennial seller in the paperback edition? With all these fill-in issues, the book just loses drive and becomes kinda aimless: Whenever you get to a fill-in issue, that feels like a perfect place to put the book down and then forget to start reading it again.

Such a waste of a perfect opportunity for making something memorable.

This is a Korean book about art school students, which feels like a genre that we’ve perhaps seen way too many books of in the past few years.

And I have to say that this artwork doesn’t do anything for me.

So I was starting to thing that I was going to ditch the book after having read some dozens of pages…

… but then I found myself pretty engrossed in the storyline, which is about obsession, mostly. And it has a solid ending. So that was surprising.

I almost never read reviews of books that I’m going to read, but I found myself reading Ryan C.’s brutal takedown of this book.

D+Q […], which has seen them trade in their heritage of groundbreaking, experimental work in favor of a slate heavy on narratives of trauma-turned-triumph/canonization-through-victimization that started as a disconcerting trend, but has slowly morphed into something akin to a cynical, demographically-targeted “strategy” that’s just gotten REALLY fucking tedious.

Which I totally agree with! However, reading the review, it just sounded… odd. I mean, his objections to the book sounded to me like were already present in the book itself.

And I was right! This is not some kind of heartfelt trauma dump book, but is instead about the author’s confused and conflicted reaction to signing the organ donation sheet for her father who died of a fentanyl overdose. It’s super analytical and doesn’t ask for sympathy even once.

She uses the experience as a springboard to talk about how the opioid epidemic has made lots and lots more organs available for transplantation, and talks about how this is part of a long history of organs going from one demographic to another, which is interesting. And then, of course, there’s a conspiracy angle:

Hilariously depicted in this sequence, where (repeatedly) her friends treat her like she’s totally insane when she spouts these theories (note the silent panels). It’s also refreshing how she doesn’t insist on anything beyond her own confusion — is she making fun of herself? Is she saying these things seriously? We don’t know, and that’s wonderful.

So I have to say that I haven’t seen a misreading of a work on this level since R. Fiore’s takedown of Invisible Ink by Bill Griffith, and that one was pretty jaw-dropping.

The artwork is obviously very photo referenced, and sometimes it leads to very awkward pages, but I found the artwork to be quite compelling. And her storytelling really works — the book flows very nicely.

My only real criticism here is that the book kinda peters out. The final section with the scenes from the Paris catacombs was good, but it really didn’t seem to have much to do with the rest of the book, and could just as well have been published as a separate work.

OK, that’s it.

A Fuller Bubbles RSS Feed

There’s a new, fun aggregator out there: bubbles.town. I think the pitch is “like Hacker News, but for independent blogs instead of Silly Valley hucksters”. So it’s got upvoting and comments and all of that stuff.

Like Hacker News, it also has feeds. The feeds are nicer than on Hacker News — they have snippets of texts from the pages they link to:

But it’s only a snippet, so I wanted to make a fuller feed, like I’ve been making for Hacker News.

So here it is: Fuller Bubbles.

The source code is on Microsoft Github. I’ve just tweaked the original script a tiny bit more, and it works by going through the feed and then grabbing text from the original pages and putting that in there.

The point of all this is to be able to read the articles themselves in your favourite feed reader, i.e., in Gnus, reading from the Gwene NNTP server. (Isn’t that your favourite feed reader?! WELL I NEVER.)

See? All purty.

Of course, it doesn’t work reliably — it’s getting more difficult all the time do to web scraping, and especially from data centres (and that’s where this is running). But it works well enough for it to be worth it, I think.

Over 1,000,000 Pages About Comics

One over, that is.

It’s another extremely important and major milestone for Mrs. Kwakk Wakk’s Comics Research Site: The number of digits in the page count has increased! One more digit! Whoho! Look at how puny the number was just a day ago:

Yeah, yeah.

What finally pushed the count over the limit was that I’ve continued to top up the “text pages from comics” category. (It has non-comics pages from comic books — i.e., letters pages, editorials, “hype pages” and the like.)

I think we’re now up to 50K issues? But the vast, vast majority of the comics are super-hero comics, so there’s not that many letters pages featuring “T. M. Maple”, for instance. So, it’s a very skewed collection.

At least so far — I guess I’ll continue to run the scripts, and perhaps some indie comics collections will show up eventually. I wouldn’t hold my breath, though.

(To put this into context — the “queue” is 3K items long, and we’re up to… item 283 now. *gulp* That’s 3TBs worth of comics so far, so if the queue is consistent, we’ll end up at 30TBs of data to sift for text pages… Possibly. But I guess many seeds as we get further out into the queue will be dead, so possibly not.)

Random Comics

Here’s some comics I’ve read over the past month.

This is the one that I’ve spent the most time with, by far. It’s a collection of DC westerns from 1970-73. It’s not something I would normally have bought, but Matt Seneca made an argument for it collecting a masterpiece — Son of Tomahawk by Robert Kanigher and Frank Thorne, so I thought I’d give it a go. I’ve been reading a couple stories here and there, so it’s taken me weeks to get through these six hundred pages.

And… is Son of Tomohawk a masterpiece? No, of course not. But it’s pretty darn good! Much better than what you’d expect for with something like this. The stories feel fresh, and Thorne obviously put a lot of work into this — it’s a propulsive read. Kanigher sort of ran out of stories to do towards the end, but it’s very enjoyable.

Have you noticed that DC artists (in the 70s) basically were in one of two camps? You had Neal Adams and all his imitators, and then you had the Joe Kubert school (heh heh) of art, and this book is 90% the latter. So Kubert himself, Thorne, Grey Morrow, Gil Kane in his grittier mode… It suits these stories very well, if course.

So these stories look swell.

It’s also fun to randomly stumble over a story pencilled by Adams and inked by Berni Wrightson.

I was also impressed at how varied these stories are. I had the misfortune to read a whole bunch of Marvel westerns from a few years earlier, and they were formulaic to a fault, and were nigh unreadable after reading a couple, just by how boring it got. These pieces, on the other hand, were very entertaining… at least when reading a handful of these per sitting.

This on the other hand…

What is it about the translated books Fantagraphics are publishing these days? So many of them seem to come out of the same machine — not very attractively drawn, and with desaturated art, and aggressively middlebrow. It’s like Respectability 101 time. (And how did they get the paper this shiny? It’s almost impossible to snap anything here because of the reflections…)

Anyway, I didn’t manage to make it through this one. Very annoying book.

I did make it through this one, also from Fantagraphics.

It has the unfortunate reek of metaphor.

They’re fighting their way through a jungle! Endless! So symbolic!

I mostly felt bad for the artist who had to draw hundreds and hundreds of pages after the writer had turned in a half-assed script that feels like it took all of thirty minutes to write. That’s how much depth it has.

But perhaps it took longer to write, in between playing video games.

And I read a li’l stack of super-hero books. Anything of note?

Not really, but I enjoyed Web of Venom #1.

It’s very amusing.

Written by Jordan Morris… not a name that’s familiar to me, but I guess I should start keeping a lookout for more books from Morris.

Since I said what the best of them was, I guess I should say what the worst one was. So many to choose from, though, but I’ll go with The Uncanny X-Men Annual #1.

It’s just cringe worthy.

I assumed that this was a new album, but it’s from 2007, but newly translated. The Natacha series is very variable, but it’s sometimes great fun.

And Wathery is a solid artist… but there’s probably a reason this hasn’t been translated before.

It’s just very chaotic. Walthery starts the intensity at MAX and then holds it there for the entire album. It’s defatigant.

Speaking of French… I’ve read much of this series by Leo before, but I happened upon the first one here in a used bookstore, and I found it so relaxing to read in French that I ordered the rest from bdfugue.

The thing with Leo is that he has no — zero — sense of humour. There are no jokes, no wordplay and no slang. This makes it totally ideal for a beginner in French to read. These albums are some of the few where there usually isn’t a single sentence I don’t understand (although there are some words I have to guess at from the context, so I’m still learning while reading).

The other thing is that these books are so… science fictioney. They have all these strange and unnerving concepts that Leo keeps embroidering on and revealing more and more about. It’s no wonder these books are hugely popular.

And the artwork is extremely appealing. All these strange creatures, the vibrant colours, and the scale of the environs…

His only problem artwise is that he basically has one human form that he likes to draw for 90% of his characters: Slim and tall, and they have these narrow faces. Still, Leo manages to make them all distinguishable by varying hairdos, hair colour and dress.

Another thing — “ce n’est pas croyable, ça!” — Leo’s go-to villain is (usually) The Patriarchy: Our heroes often find themselves in societies/villages that are ruled by men who have decided that they control everything, and the way they seize control is always nightmarish, but oh so familiar. It’s great! (Don’t worry, they’re always defeated.)

I’ve read (most of) these books before in the Cinebook versions (translated to English). Cinebook is notorious for drawing shirts on all the topless characters (because they also sell these comics in Saudi Arabia, or something, and there’s No Boobs Allowed), but I think a much bigger problem is the colours. Cinebook prints on a highly absorbent paper, so the saturated colours Leo used are washed out and not as impressive. (And also 10% smaller page size, for some reason…)

Anyway, I’ll be reading all of Leo’s books in this series, I think. There’s about 20 of them? They read like TV series episodes…

And I read three issues of Spirou.

The kids that get lost all the time discover the secret to how Spirou is made — the publisher has all the artists chained up in the basement! Can the kids save them, are do they just get lost again!?

And this édito from Les Fabrices made me laugh.

OK, and that’s it? Yup.

Gadget Review: Agar Mini Keyboard

I got a package today! I thought it perhaps was that keyboard I ordered some time ago, and my confusion grew when I picked it up, because the box is, like, a couple kilos. And I only ordered a li’l keyboard!

Let’s unbox!

Yeah OK…

Still mysterious.

And the box contains… something that makes a noise? Is that a good sign?

Now then…

Yes! It’s a keyboard!

How cute.

And there’s… stuff…

And more stuff.

Oh, the other box had lots of alternate keycaps. So I guess the stuff is for prying off the caps if I want to.

So much stuff.

And, yes, the keyboard is small, but indeed — it’s heavy. It’s got a metal insert (that can be removed) to give it more heft.

It’s a portable size, so I guess the extra weight is to give you a better work-out while you’re out climbing mountains with the keyboard in your bag.

And what’s the range? This is a bluetooth keyboard, and I’ve had some with just horrible range. It’s important that this has a good range, because in my use case here, it’s going to be placed about three meters from the Raspberry Pi that it’s going to connect to.

Looking promising in my very scientific test, as you can see above, unless you get too sea sick.

So what is my use case, you ask? I mean… you do, doncha?

BE THAT WAY, THEN

As you probably won’t remember, I was looking for a way to hyper-optimise one thing: Grocery shopping. As you can read in that blog post, I ended up using the li’l laptop you see above, but that was only because this keyboard took its time to arrive. (Not through any fault of the manufacturer — it’s just that I bought the keyboard at a pre-sale; it wasn’t in production yet.)

I couldn’t find any other wireless keyboard with these specs — just the normal alphabet keys, space and return and no much else. And — it had to be a “real” keyboard, not something you’d thumb or anything.

And.. I think there’s too much going on visually — all the “alt” meanings (which I have no use for) are marked on the keyboard, so perhaps I can buy new key caps that are plainer?

But otherwise I think it looks pretty good. The range is good, and it allegedly has enough battery to last three months on a single charge. But on the other hand, I do have access to electricity where I’ve put it, so perhaps I can just leave it plugged in.

I tried it a couple times. There’s no screen here, of course, but you don’t need to see what you type to type bananas RET, which is what I type the most. It feels very nice. Because of the weight, it feels very solid, and doesn’t scootch around, and the key switches are clicky in a very satisfactory way.

So… I recommend it, I guess? Here’s the link again if you’re looking for something like this.

But I’m not absolutely sure whether I want to switch out my current solution. I kinda like the look of the li’l laptop? It’s so… technical.

(Oh, and I’ve now been using this system for a month, and I have to say that it works even better than I’d hoped. Whenever I’m cooking and noticing that I’m missing something or is low on something, I can just tap away at that keyboard without really thinking about it and then get on with what I was doing. That is, it doesn’t involve a distracting context shift. The poor delivery guy, though — this has led to bigger deliveries (at least the first few times) because I’m forgetting less of what I was going to buy. So the previous delivery was probably the biggest one I’ve ever had done. And it’s on the fourth floor without an elevator, so poor guy…)

Anyway! Nice keyboard.