My New Home Decor Blog

A while back, I bought a couple of very small TVs, and I was going to put them somewhere permanentish… and now, after procrastinating for just two months, I’m gonna actually do it.

It wasn’t all procrastinating — the TVs are powered via USB-C, so I wanted a USB-A to dual USB-C cable, and er not all stores have that, funnily enough. But here’s one, and I had to wait for it to arrive.

I wanted to put the TVs on a shelf in the hall, because there’s conveniently a cupboard with some computerey equipment right next to it… and there’s already one hole in that wall (for loudspeakers), so making another one is fine, right?

A USB-A plug is kinda big, though… that’s the biggest drill I have. Hm!

Well, I do have one that’s bigger and doubles as a magic stick, but it’s for concrete and stuff and not for drywall and wood, which is what this wall is, so that’s out.

Holey wall, Batman!

But then I cleverly detected that a USB-C plug is smaller than a USB-A plug, and I shoved them in from the other side. Genius!

See? Makes total sense!

Daytime…

And nighttime.

Result! Now I can watch Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles any time I want to.

Comics Daze

Oopsie! I’m awake in the middle of the night, and that’s not optimal, but since I got a bunch of comics the other day, perhaps I can read until morning, take a nap, and then read until night again? Let’s find out.

And because it’s the middle of the night, I’ll only play rockin’ oldies on the stereo.

But before I start reading, just a moment to mourn The Best American Comics series. It seems like it’s permanently dead now? I was looking at my bookshelves and realised that I missed the 2015 entry (edited by Jonathan Lethem), so I got that and read it a few days ago, and wow.

It’s not just that it’s chock full of wonderful comics (it is), but the contextualisation makes it so much fun to read.

And while I already have most of the contents, some it it was totally unknown to me and I got to do some shopping.

Since this is 2015, much of the stuff can’t be gotten at all now, like the above.

And some things you have to resort to ebay to get…

But it’s also great to revisit (parts) of stuff you’ve read before, like the best comic book from 2015, Gina Wynbrandt’s masterpiece.

Anyway. It was such a great series, but I guess we can’t have nice things.

Japan: Tin Drum (1)

04:11: Reggie 12 by Brian Ralph (Drawn & Quarterly)

This is a new edition of a collection of strips that were originally done in the late 90, I think. And I think I possibly have an earlier smaller version of this? Is that possible? I may just be confused as usual.

Anyway, it’s very funny.

Even though it’s mostly single and half page strips, it feels very coherent, and builds towards something larger. Unfortunately, it seems to lose some drive towards the end… but then it ends on a great note.

It’s a very cool book.

The Human League: Dare

04:44: Crumple #121 by Walker Mettling

This is a very large magazine, and it alternates between short stories (that are both funny, affecting and puzzling)…

… and illustrations. The result is that the book has a strange kind of compelling rhythm — it’s an outstanding book; it’s really gripping. So I guess I have to buy his other books now.

OK, done.

Eurythmics: In The Garden

05:08: Moonray 1 by Brandon Graham/Xurxo G. Penalta (Living the Line)

Hm. Is Living the Line specialising in publishing “controversial” artists or something?

Anyway.

Well, this is gorgeous.

And I like Graham’s storytelling — nobody else does narration like this, and for mostly good reasons: Having a narrator explain to us what we’re seeing is like a huge taboo these days, but it adds a ponderous touch; an atmosphere to it.

That said, as usual with Graham’s books, it seems to be going somewhere, but then again doesn’t. The story here is a straightforward quest, but the macguffin isn’t even there, and Graham just seems to pile on cool bits at a whim. I’m not sure there a there there.

But it’s an entertaining read, anyway — reminds me of oldee tymey science fiction.

Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft: Gold und Liebe

05:45: Poison Pill

It doesn’t say who edited this (I think), but it’s really coherent as an anthology — almost all of the pieces deal with kinda wistful memories, and features many of the most distinctive artists working in an er “retro indie comics” mode? Anyway, it’s a really good read. (Caroline Cash here.)

I guess this piece by Victoria Douglas is in a different mood, as it deals with comics artists being “content creators” and social media and stuff…

MS Harkness does a bunch of shorter stories…

… and Heather Loase is hilarious as usual.

All this and also Sam Szabo and Audra Stang — great magazine.

06:08: Tongues 6 by Anders Brekhus Nilsen

Well, this is an event… how long has the Tongues series been running now? Is it about one issue per year?

As usual, the book looks great — flaps and inserts and stuff, and it also comes with a process zine and some stuff.

The plot is really moving along now — we get a couple of infodumps that seems slightly out of place, but they might not be true, so that’s fine.

And… it’s both creepy and really thrilling. Fantastic book!

But I really should re-read all the issues one of these years, because I have a feeling I might have forgotten some of what’s going on… the weird thing is really that I remember as much as I do — it’s a striking series.

Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft: Alles Ist Gut

06:28: Nap Time

Is it nap time now? I think it might be.

*time passes*

David Byrne: The Catherine Wheel

14:40: Ralph Azham 3 by Lewis Trondheim (Super Genius)

OOPS! That wasn’t a nap, that was a proper night’s sleep. Only happening a bit late in the day. Or early? Oh well; now my sleeping’s gonna be even more messed up…

Anyway, this is a smaller-format collection of three more Ralph Azham albums. I’ve enjoyed the previous two volumes, and while the format isn’t ideal, it works well enough.

Somewhat unusually for French comics, it’s a very tight continuity — the first album here is the conclusion of a storyline that’s been running since the first album (I think), and I’m getting pretty confused by all these characters… and I’ve even forgot what all the hullabaloo is about. Some recapping would have been handy.

The Cure: Faith (1)

So with the 7th album, Ralph is rich and safe… and then off to on a wild chase again.

Tom Robinson: North by Northwest

With the 9th album, we get to the boring “well, now that he’s rich and powerful, is he gonna be all corrupt or what?” bits, and I feel like Trondheim things that a boring plot, too, because he fortunately goes off in a different direction pretty quickly — by bringing in yet further twists and complications.

It’s entertaining, but it feels like the book is sinking under the weight of its own mythologies…

Talking Heads: The Name Of This Band Is Talking Heads

16:12: The Lonesome Shepherd by James Collier (Wig Shop)

The shepherd is lonesome because he doesn’t have any sheep, you see.

It’s an interesting book — it seems to hint at many things, but doesn’t try to resolve in any way.

16:22: New Level of Love by Patrick Keck

This is a collection of wild drawings.

Really cool.

16:29: Satan’s Kingdom by Robert Sergel (Secret Acres)

My first thought when seeing these pages was “another Nick Drnaso fan”, but I see that some of these were published before Beverly… so perhaps the influence goes the other way.

Anyway, many of these stories seem like they’re recaps from wikipedia, but then you get an O. Henry ending… They’re really creepy stories, though, and I think they do what the author wants, but it’s not really my thing.

16:50: Pet Peeves by Nicole Goux (Avery Hill)

This starts off entertainingly enough as a pretty standard early-20s-people thing…

… but then turns into an ambiguous horror story. (The ambiguity is that it’s not clear whether it’s a horror story or not.) That sounds like a good concept, but the book feels like it’s dragging its heels — it gets repetetive, and not much interesting happens. In some ways, it feels like a sketch towards a script for a horror movie or something.

17:06: Maple Terrace #2 by Noah Van Sciver (Uncivilized Books)

This continues the seemingly earnest autobio story of his childhood…

… but it’s hard to tell whether it’s fiction, and what kind — are we supposed to interpret scenes like this as daydreaming, or a dream, or a lie (he’s depicted as lying a lot), or what.

Anyway, it’s a fun book, and I wish the publishing schedule was more rapid — I like the resurgence of the indie comic book over the past couple of years.

17:18: Ginseng Roots #12 by Craig Thompson (Uncivilized Books)

And speaking of indie comics — I’ve really been enjoying this series, but I guess it had to end at some point.

The author writes that he had some problems finishing the series — a severe writing block. And… the final issue is pretty awkward — the previous issues were more whimsical and felt less like people being interviewed for a TV documentary.

But it’s pretty good — I think it’s the best thing he’s made. He’s now reformatting the series into a graphic novel and adding 40 pages, so I guess I’ll have to get that, too.

Simple Minds: New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84)

17:50: The Sojourner Cooler by Luke Fallon

Huh, this looks kinda like Moebius, doesn’t it?

The first issue has some kind of narrative, although it’s vague. It’s rather engrossing.

The second issue goes totally off the rails, and I think the author perhaps lost interest in the narrative. It’s still pretty interesting…

Peter Gabriel: Peter Gabriel 4

18:09: I Don’t Want To Be A Mom by Irene Olmo (Graphic Mundi)

This book is an impassioned plea for people to stop questioning why some women just don’t want to have children.

And… to me it feels like “duh”? But it’s a Spanish book — she has oodles of friends, but doesn’t know a single woman that doesn’t have a child (and she’s 31). So I guess it’s perhaps not a “duh” thing in Spain? Even nowadays?

And the art style doesn’t do anything for me, but I guess it’s well made…

New Musik: Warp

18:52: Miracleman: The Silver Age #6 by Neil Gaiman, Mark Buckingham and others (Marvel Comics)

My reaction when this showed up in the mail was “eh? what? didn’t the series end already?” But nope — I guess I just found the last few installments of this (when did the last one arrive? half a year ago?) so disappointing that I’d filed this mentally in the “it’s over” dept.

And… it’s a full issue, at least, instead of being mostly filler. However, if you can’t guess what’s going to happen for the rest of this issue after reading these two pages, you’ve never read anything ever before.

19:04: The Plot Against The Giant by Caroline Bren

This is a very short little book.

It’s good, though.

King Crimson: Beat

19:07: Kafka by Nishioka Kyodai (Pushkin Press)

This adapts a whole bunch of Kafka short stories and fragments in a slightly abstract way.

The longest adaptation is the Metamorphosis one, and they’re doing something in a translation I’ve never seen before — some of the caption boxes are so narrow that they’ve opted for putting the English translation in sideways. (Presumably these originally had vertical text.) It’s a bit confusing until you get used to it…

Anyway, these are pretty good adaptations, but… on the other hand, they don’t feel very… urgent? I mean, we’ve all read these stories before, and I’m not sure these versions bring all that much to them? On the other other hand, they’re fine, so why not?

Kate Bush: The Dreaming

20:37: Yearly 2023 by Andrew White

Hey, it comes with a nice little sketch…

I got this from White’s shop

… and it’s lovely as usual. It’s a bit different from previous year’s books, as White has been creating a couple of longer works that aren’t included here. So we get some shorter, more direct works.

*sigh*

Grace Jones: Living My Life

20:58: Hockey Girl Loves Drama Boy by Faith Erin Hicks (First Second)

Hey, sports comics! I used to read some of those when I was growing up…

This art style is a bit confusing — that is, it’s difficult to say whether these people are supposed to be 45 or 15… and the faces look quite similar.

Hey! Food arrived. Mm, olives…

Anyway, it’s a pretty entertaining book? It’s a quick read with exceedingly clear storytelling, and I can totally see many, many teenagers loving this book. It felt a bit unresolved to me.

Eurythmics: Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)

22:09: The Ladder by Tana Oshima

This is a fun little parable (I guess) about er stuff. I like it.

And it has pearls and emeralds.

Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft: Für Immer

22:13: The Heavy Hand by Chris C. Cilla (Sparkplug Comics)

Well, that’s a nice way to start a book…

… but unfortunately it doesn’t really continue that way. At first I thought this was all a collection of short pieces, but it’s all one narrative, more or less.

But the characters keep infodumping at each other, and recapping books… and then stuff happens, and then it’s over. I guess the book feels very improvised? And kinda annoying?

22:38: The End

And I think I should stop reading comics now, because I’m exhausted.

Sysadmin 4 Lyfe

This blog has been experiencing intermittent networks problems lately — it’s hard to say what the problem really is, but the symptoms were simple: Some pages and images just didn’t want to load (at random). Poking around showed some TCP connections with lots of data in the SEND-Q, but that doesn’t really help much with chasing down where the problem is. In Apache? Linux? The VM? The host?

And in any case, the installation was pretty old, so it was time to do something about it, anyway. But… this blog runs on a Digitalocean Ubuntu VM image that comes preinstalled with WordPress, and I was rather unsure whether something like that would survive an OS upgrade. (And besides: Fuck Ubuntu and all their shenanigans.)

So I sat down and actually learned how a WordPress installation worked, and it turns out to be incredibly simple: You have DocumentRoot somewhere, and you have a database, and the credentials and everything is stored in DocumentRoot. So there’s only two things to worry about: The wp-contents directory and the database, and both are really easy to move from one machine to another.

And since it’s that simple, it’s also trivial to have several WordPress installations on the same machine: Just point to different DocumentRoots in the Apache setup and you’re done. I didn’t know that, so I had previously had a bunch of different tiny VMs with one blog per host (Kitchen Sink on one, Epic on another, and so on), so I moved them all to the same, beefy host.

So all the blogs should be faster now, and there should be less maintenance work for me long term — especially since the host is now Debian, and I’m pretty confident that that’ll allow me to upgrade indefinitely without moving to a new host.

I SAID “PRETTY CONFIDENT”! THAT”S NOT A A JINX!!! IT”S NOT

*phew* Close shave.

Aaaand there’s IPv6 on all the blogs, so it’s all modernz now.

Anyway, if you see any of the blogs behaving weirdly, lemme know.

Comics Daze

I got a big shipment of comics a week ago, but I’ve been sorta holding off reading them — not chomping at the bits to read them, really. Because this is mostly non-small-press books (Fanta, D&Q, etc), and the likelihood of being them middle-of-the-road books is greater… I mean, with movies and novels and stuff, I like art and I like junk and I don’t much care for the stuff in between. But I love the comics art form so much that I’ll read just about any comic book, even if the comic book is kinda stodgy and “Pulitzer prize worthy”…

But I haven’t actually looked at which books I got — perhaps it’s all bangers? *crosses fingers*

OK, let’s get readin’.

Saya Gray: QWERTY EP

07:58: Nejishiki by Yoshiharu Tsuge (Drawn & Quarterly)

Speaking of respectability… this is the Screw Style book, right? So why is it called Nejishiki? Yup. I guess D&Q just can’t publish something called Screw Style these days… What would the community say… And that’s an aggressively boring cover, isn’t it?

And I think we’ve reached Peak Japanese Comics Essayification — there’s 180 pages of comics here and about 70 pages of essays.

I’ve read the Screw Style story before, but it’s still pretty wonderful. The reproduction is kinda meh, though… Hm…

Jockstrap & Taylor Skye: I<3UQTINVU

It’s a collection of short pieces (from Garo, as always), and some seem more autobiographical than others, but they’re all rather dream-like.

With lots of sex, as befits a dream-like book.

It’s great stuff, and rather unnerving.

Oval: Now, Never, Whenever Vol. 1

08:48: Night and Dana by Anya Davidson (Graphic Universe)

Oooh! I’ve been a fan of Anya Davidson for yonks… Her stuff is so wild.

What the… This looks nothing like her older stuff — it’s got a subdued palette (all the rage these days) and everybody’s shouting all the time and the characters all look oddly short and dumpy…

Joni Mitchell: Archives: The Asylum Years (1)

And everybody’s drawn the same — like in that next to last panel, it looks like two men are playing in the sea, but then it turns out that it’s a teenager and a toddler.

Everything just looks so odd — I mean, look at that last panel. How are those people sitting at that desk? How do those figures make sense? For that matter, how does that table make sense? Is it just hovering?

It’s so weird — Davidson is really talented, but this looks like she took an assignment to do a young adult comic book and dashed it off on an Ipad over a couple of weeks. In addition to the artwork being uninspiring, the storytelling is choppy and the story is… not very thrilling.

09:40: My Picture Diary by Fujiwara Maki (Drawn & Quarterly)

Hey! This isn’t comics!

Oh right, her husband is Tsuge, and this depicts the same period as his The Man Without Talents. I guess that’s the main interest here — it seems like a kinda fannish thing to be publishing this (and of course, with a hefty essay at the end about it all). But… it’s pretty good, actually? I like the artwork and the “story” gets more interesting at the books proceeds.

The Unthanks: Here’s The Tender Coming

10:18: Nap Time

I got up way too early, so I think I’ll take a nap now.

[time passes]

Eek! That was a bad idea. I slumbered for a couple hours and then finally fell asleep…

15:20: Night Cruising by Harry Nordlinger (Floating World Comics)

So this is a little horror story…

It’s Harry Nordlinger, so you get some pointless mutilation and then it’s over. Très transgressif.

The Au Pairs: Equal But Different: BBC Session 1979-1981

15:25: Not a New York Love Story by Julian Voloj/Andreas Gefe (FairSquare)

Oh wow, I really like the artwork on this… very expressive, and very accurate at the same time.

The story is pretty intriguing — until you get to the end, where it’s *doh*. The end comes as a surprise, most of all because there’s 30 “bonus pages” of sketches and stuff, so you’re reading along expecting the book to be much longer, and then it just stops over a couple of pages.

15:39: Dan’s Secret by Jasper Krents

So what is his secret?

Yup!

It’s pretty funny, and it’s original.

15:43: My Brilliant Friend by Chiara Lagani/Mara Cerri (Europa Editions)

Wut. Why did I buy this, then? I’ve read the first two books in the Ferrante series, and I guess I liked them well enough, but I was pretty fed up with it all, too… so why get a comics adaptation? I must have been drunk.

Huh, this isn’t what I expected — comics adaptations have a tendency to try to preserve too much text, so that you end up with an illustrated version of the novel instead of a comic book. But this is quite the opposite.

Doing it in this style means that you can only get a few scenes from the novel into the book, so it’s like the comic version is more of a souvenir, reminding the readers of key scenes.

But does it work as a comic book? Well, it’s interesting… it’s a really brisk read, but it does have the mood of the novel. I’m not quite certain somebody who hasn’t read the novel would be able to understand what’s going on, though.

I enjoyed reading this version — I like the artwork, and the storytelling is good.

Ah, there’s a TV series, too:

Readers unfamiliar with the works underlying this iteration of the story—Ferrante’s original books and the hit HBO miniseries from which Cerri drew visual inspiration—may find some incidents puzzling to parse, such as schoolgirl Lila’s apparent fall from an apartment window.

Right:

This graphic novel is my first experience with the material. As a stand-alone volume, I found it pretty confusing. I did read it cover to cover, and there were multiple times that I wasn’t sure what was going on or which characters were which.

Yeah, I can see that.

16:13: Mangaka 1 by Floyd Tangeman

I’ve gotten more small press comics than I remembered…

As usual with Tangeman, the book is wild, and is wildly enjoyable.

16:23: Röhner by Max Baitinger (2d cloud)

I’d also forgotten that I’d gotten a mystery box from Desert Island, and the past two months have been heavy on old books from 2d cloud. Which is nice — most everything they published was good. But the problem is that I’ve already got almost everything. And this book looks really familiar, too, but I can’t find it on my shelves, so perhaps this is one I’d missed?

… and… it’s fantastic! And I don’t think I’ve read it before after all?

I think I would have remembered.

It’s about a passive aggressive (very) guy, his neighbour and a possibly annoying friend that visits. It’s fascinating and rather gripping.

Ida: The Bottom of the Hill (1)

16:58: Vanishing Perspective by Alexis Beauclair (2d cloud)

Another 2d cloud book that looks really familiar, but I can’t find it here, either…

These are pretty minimalist comics…

… but some of them are weirdly narrative. I mean, the “stories” are about being in a labyrinth (above), or watching from the perspective of a bird flying by, but all told in this minimal way. It’s fascinating.

And the final section piles on the patterns to such a degree that they start resembling those optical illusion bits, and start shimmering in the eyes and moving around…

It’s great stuff.

17:10: Bloodlines 3 by Rob Walton

Here it is — the final book in the Bloodlines series (started more than four decades ago). I’ve been a bit surprised that this book hasn’t gotten more attention (surely I can’t have been the only fan of the original series (partially published by Vortex)), but then again, this is a print on demand book available from Amazon only… and you can’t really find it by searching on Amazon:

You only get the old series. You have to use Google to search:

Bizarre. Perhaps there’s some kickback scheme where you have to pay Amazon extra for them to show people what you’re selling… Anyway, here’s the actual page where you can buy this book.

Anyway, this book is mostly the final showdown between Manasseh and Deborah, and it’s drawn in Walton’s super duper sharp style as usual. There’s a lot going on — I’m guessing there’s a lot of religiousey symbolism that I’m probably missing — but it’s a kind of thrilling read anyway. It’s just gripping.

So many 80s comics series just disappeared before they finished, but over the last decade more than a handful have been belatedly completed and collected. And… most of them have kinda failed? That is, it’s obvious that the creator(s) have lost all enthusiasm for the work over the decades, and are grudgingly adding some new pages to finish off the book. (I’m looking at you, Puma Blues.) But that’s not the case here at all: This feels like it has all the enthusiasm and conviction the original series had back then.

Ida: The Bottom of the Hill (2)

17:48: 40 Men and 12 Rifles by Marcelino Troung (Arsenal Pulp Press)

OK, this isn’t my kind of thing — having characters recap their dilemmas for the reader is just really boring. (If efficient.)

And when they’re not recapping their own lives to one another, they’re recapping the history of the country to each other.

My god.

OK, I just have no interest in this — it’s like everything I don’t like piled into one book, so I’m ditching it.

Emma Tricca: Aspirin Sun

18:17: The Out Side edited by The Kao, Min Christensen & David Daneman (Andrews McMeel)

This is a collection (on very shiny paper) of very brief… er… I don’t even know what to call them. They’re not even vignettes, most of them?

They’re more like itsy bitsy little presentations on why these people are trans (or adjacent) — I think the shortest one is one page, but most hover around the five page mark. So it feels like I’m reading a Xitter thread. And most of the er pieces aren’t very interesting in themselves, so after reading a dozen of them, I lost faith in the book and started skimming. There may be some good pieces in there; I have no idea.

I blame the editors.

18:45: Shadow Hills by Sean Ford (Secret Acres)


I like this — it’s got a late-90s indie comics vibe going on. It’s very mysterious and stuff.

It’s a kind of horror story, I guess, but also about fracking and drugs.

It’s a really enjoyable read, and Ford has an attractive line. It sometimes feels like he was losing confidence in the work, because he adds infodumps like this that feel really unnecessary? Anyway, it’s good stuff.

Oneohtrix Point Never: Again

19:11: Blackward by Lawrence Lindell (Drawn & Quarterly)

OK, I think I’m gonna stop reading soon, but one more…

This is pretty amusing…

… and it’s an entertaining story. The humour sometimes (especially in the last half) veers a bit into sitcom territory, but that’s OK.

19:48: The End

OK, now I’m going to make dinner.

And I’m gonna cut back on ordering so much stuff from Diamonds Previews and buy more small press comics. For sure this time!

The Wizard Magazine Search Engine

So I’ve been making various magazines about comics available for research, and… tada:

Yeah, yeah… I’ve “found” Wizard Magazine scans on the internet, and I’ve spent the last day or so adjusting the files and running them through OCR.

And you can now see the results here. I’ve never read Wizard Magazine myself, so I don’t really know if there’s anything of interest there people doing comics research, but what the hey.

To search all the magazines (Amazing Heroes, Comics Journal, Comics Scene and Wizard), use this URL.

(For more info about this project, there’s some bloviating here.)