lurkerwithout: (Book on bed)
So more than a bit late on this one.  Ah well.  Starting out with the uncollected short stories for the month.  Seanan McGuire's Emeralds to Emeralds, Dust to Dust is part of a series of e-stories re-imagining the Oz setting.  Hers is a noir-ish murder mystery where political agitator and some-time diplomat Dorothy Gale is tasked with solving a murder by her ex, Ozma.  The was Weston Ochse's Border Dogs, part of his Seal Team 666 series, about chupacabres, drug cartels and coyotes.  The people smugglers not the wild canines.  Liked this one I eventually got around to picking up the book.  Then we've got a Hemingway homage by Harry Turtledove, Running of the Bulls.  Might have more to comment on that one if I'd ever been into Hemingway.  And finally a steampunk Western, Terrain, by Genevieve Valentine.  Which just serves as another reminder that I should try and track down some of her full length work...

A big portion of March's books come from me deciding to pick up a giant stack of Lone Wolf books.  Like a lot of D&D nerds I was big into Joe Dover's & Gary Chalk's choose-your-own-adventure series as a kid.  Books are still pretty good and tempt me towards seeing if I could get a group together to run the rpg version.  Anyway, re-played Flight from the Dark, Fire on the Water, the Caverns of Kalte, the Chasm of Doom, Shadow on the Sand (which covers the regular Kai books), Kingdom of Terror,Castle Death and Jungle of Death (starting the MagnaKai books)...

Malindo Lo's Huntress is a fairy tale style fantasy, serving as a prequel to her Ash book...

On the collected short story side, had several anthologies for March.  Grantville Gazette vol. 46, edited by Paul Goodlett, continuing the e-collections for the Ring of Fire series.Tales of the Far West, edited by Gareth-Michael Skarka is a collection of Wuxia/Western mash-ups.  The quality of the stories in the Mad Scienctist's Guide to World Domination will likely vary on how tolerant you towards various level of bad guys win type stories.  But its got a good selection of writers.  Austin Grossman, Seanan McGuire and DIana Gabaldon among others.  All editied by John Joseph Adams.  And I finally got around to finishing up Vol. 29 of the Year's Best Science Fiction.  This was the 2011 edition, edited as always by Gardner Dozois.  Literally took me a year to get thru this, despite the very high quality of the contents...

Midnight Bluelight Special is the second in McGuire's Incryptid novels.with Verity Price, ballroom dancer and cryptonaturalist and her ex-Covenant boyfriend having to deal with a Covenant team.  One of whom is family...

Patricia Brigg's latest Mercy Thompson book is Frost Burned.  Picking up where her last Alpha/Omega left off, a rogue group has kidnapped Mercy's husband and nearly all of his werewolf pack.  Plus some Fae assassins...

The Last Policeman by Ben H. Winters starts with a pretty great high concept.  A cop looking to solve a murder when the whole world is under a death countdown from a closing asteroid.  Happily its a well written book on top of that...

The Cold Commands is the second of Richard Morgan's grimdark fantasy books.  More brutal violence and terrible good guys fighting worse bad guys...

Jay Lake's Green is an excellent fantasy series.  One with a nice off-brand setting, magic-system and mythology.  Also an intriguing  and entrancing lead in the much-piled-upon Green...

Carrie Vaughn's  Kitty Rocks the House is the latest in her Kitty Norville books.  With werewolf radio host Kitty having to deal with a power grab by an outsider in her pack.  And vampiric ally and Master of Denver, Rick, being tempted away by a secret order of Catholic vampires...

Michael Brandman was one of the co-writers on the Jesse Stone tv series.  Which explains why he was picked to continue the late Robert Parker's books.  At least the Jesse Stone ones.  And he does an..adequate job of it with Killing the Blues.  Not enough to get me to continue with non-Parker Robert Parker, but ok...

And lastly Joe Schrieber's Red Harvest another of his Star Wars + Zombies books.  This one set at a Sith academy during the Old Republic era...

Total Books: 22
lurkerwithout: (eastman)
The only real problem I have is that the action sequences don't translate that well to the show. Especially the Sensei Ping v. Luchadors episode. A minor issue is that the 4th issue would have worked better by yanking out the one reference to the Succubus run modeling agency and making it the second episode...

But both leads are very likeable and Matt Keeslar reminds me a lot of Paul Gross' Benton Fraser from Due South. And even these first four episodes show an expansion from the comic's world-building...
lurkerwithout: (Reading cat)
Photobucket
Maintenance vol.1: It's A Dirty Job... written by Jim Massey, illustrated by Robbi Rodriguez, tones by Jared Jones, lettering by Douglas E. Sherwood

Maintenance has everything you could want in a book about two janitors who work at a mad science lab that supplies super-villains. Its got man-sharks and aliens and time-travelers who look like Captain Caveman and zombie kittens stuck in the vending machine. Even secret crushes on the cute secretary. "Heroes" Doug and Manny are likeable everyman schlubs. Just like you! If you had to clean up living fetid piles of goo and get sent back in time occasionally for your job. Which you might. I don't know...

But you probably don't! So why not live the dream vicariously? By reading Maintenance!
lurkerwithout: (SP Me)
1) The sizable majority of polled can't pick just one person or group to punch in the face...

2) Mage: the Ascension was the preferred choice for the following week's Thursday RPG...

3) Worst nightmare for many: Empty rooms that seem familiar and where you can almost remember what is supposed to be there...

4) The majority felt that frolickin' otter pups were the cutest of all...

5) Favorite Disney/Marvel joint project is a tie between Kim Possible: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Pixar's Rocket Raccoon. I can't say I disagree with either choice...

6) The Dutch are apparantly to blame for my not having a pony. DAMN YOU NETHERLANDS!

7) Another tie between those who'd wish for Magic Ponies and those wanting a donut...

8) Apparantly the best option for a force of pure terror and destruction would be a giant composite cyborg made up of cyborg meerkats that launched mind-controlled, laser-guided dingoes...

9) Too many of you won't talk about the truth that is out there...

10) By a clear margin its agreed that dolphins are up to something. Mad, grinning not-fish...
lurkerwithout: (Reading cat)

The Umbrella Academy: Apocalypse Suite written by Gerard Way, art by Gabriel Ba, colors by Dave Stewart, letters by Nate Piekos of Blambot

The first volume of the Umbrella Academy opens with a professional wrestler dropping a flying atomic elbow on a cyclopean space squid from Rigel X-9 and quickly begins to get weird. What kept surprising everyone about this comic wasn't that musician Gerard Way had some decidedly odd ideas for his story. What surprised everyone was just how damn good the whole thing turned out to be. Seriously, outside of My Chemical Romance's legions of teen fans, who was expecting the guy to have these levels of creative chops. But he does. And when matched with Brazillian artist Gabriel Ba you get what is easily one of the top comics for 2008...

Time travel, little kids fighting the Eiffel Tower, bad parenting, talking chimps and a family reunion that probably isn't that much more of a disaster than most peoples. I mean sure most reunions don't lead to the end of the world, but the crying and fighting is probably pretty typical...
lurkerwithout: (Reading cat)

Skin Horse vol. 1 by Shaenon K. Garrity & Jeffrey C. Wells

The first collection for the Skin Horse webcomic. A comic about the semi-secret Black Ops Social Services department for non-human intelligences. The ones who go in with government assistances for those poor Destroyer Robots, Transgenic Beasts and Stranger Things That Result From Playing God. When the Rampage Ends, Thats Where Project Skin Horse Begins...

Well they try anyway. But with a field team consisting of a talking ex-pat Canadian dog (Sweetheart), a patchwork zombie girl (Unity) and a transvestite psychologist (Dr. Tip Wilkin) its possible things might not go according to plan. But that doesn't mean they won't find a way to solve the problems of their clients. Whether they be genetically-modified lions, warring mutant societies in the sub-basements or foul-mouthed cyborg battle copters...

lurkerwithout: (SP Me)
Sadly, this week, there won't be a Friday Poll. And I think I'll be taking a break from doing them for little while. Mostly because I'm really running out of ideas for them. Going over the last ten I realized I did ones using Bad Super-Hero Concepts TWICE. And thats over a period of only two months. So no more until sometime in the new year. Though I'll probably do a poll on Christmas. Because I love Christmas...

But as to what I've learned:

1) Bad Super-Hero Idea (Take 1): The Oozing, Weeping Plague Sore Kid...

2) The most popular way to help kill zombies? If you had to borrow a gun from Firefly's Jayne...

3) Best Dracula? Bela!

4) Scariest ghosts are those made up of your own dead dreams...

5) Favorite Halloween treat? Mini-candy bars...

6) For destroying my Nemesis, its a tie between Karl Rove's brain in a robot alligator or a zombie-cyborg made from my roommate. Probably be best to use both then...

7) Most popular Sci-Fi/Classic Novel mash-up movie idea was Dumas' The Three Rockateers...

8) Bad Super-Hero Idea (Take 2): Drunken, Racist, Suburban Housewife Woman. Plus a bonus poll result showing the Comte de Mink is the most popular of the Weasel Lineage of Heroes...

9) Three way tie for showing them all. So obviously that means the Not-Mad-At-All Plan will involve a robot army, otter pups, 18 million tiny whirling devices, poison frogs, a selection of roses, a riddle fiendish in its intricacies, passages from King Lear, the power of STEAM and the ghost of Bud Abbott...

10) Another tie, as the best way of gaining revenge from beyond the grave is either your own re-animated corpse or bees. Maybe the revenant can spit bees?
lurkerwithout: (Reading cat)

The Five Firsts of Science
Written by Matt Fraction, Art by Steven Sanders, Lettering by Sean Konot

On the one side you have Nikolai Tesla and Samuel "Mark Twain" Clemens looking to bring about world peace. With science! And a scam involving giant robots fighting "demons".

Opposing them is the cabal of J.P. Morgan, Thomas Edison and Andrew Carnegie who are using dark magics to summon their foul god-thing. To destroy the world? Conquer it? Really I wasn't very clear on their motives. But then they're a group of murderous and crazed cultists so thats ok...

Full on gonzo pulp heroing from the dawn of the 20th Century. Plus a yeti...

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