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3.9k reviews by:
maiakobabe
adventurous
emotional
hopeful
mysterious
fast-paced
This was my third re-read of this book, and when looking back over my book list I realized that my first read was 20 years ago!! I believe I picked it up in a used bookstore based solely on the cover art, which is a bit funny in retrospect when looking at it, because it is very beautiful but not very accurate to the character descriptions in the book. Regardless, I'm glad it caught my eye because this remains one of my favorite fantasy novels of all time. It's a coming of age story interwoven with court intrigue, magic, politics, and a deep compassion for common folk, the kind of people who fish, farm, care for horses and dogs, who cook and clean around the edges of the lives of royals and nobles. This story follows Fitz, a bastard son of the royal family, from age 6 to about 14, as he learns and grows into what he might eventually become: a catalyst of immense change. The writing in this series is so good, so grounded in real lived details, neither fast nor slow paced but unrolling at a natural speed that draws the reader along and into this rich and complicated world.
No Straight Lines: Four Decades of Queer got an Eisner nomination this summer for best comics anthology. This hefty book includes samples from hundreds of different comic artists' work, including some that had never before been published in the US. It begins with underground gay comix and gag strips from the 1970s, includes comics written during the AIDs epidemic and proceeds chronologically all the way up to modern day queer and trans webcomics. And excellent survey of this genre!
Crecy is a relatively short comic about a historical battle from the Hundred Years War. In 1346 a much smaller English force routed the flower of the French military at Crecy with their better strategies and well-trained longbow men. This comic is narrated by an archer in the English army who explains, with much swearing, the idiocy of the French command, the various types of arrow heads, and the reasoning behind England's focus on archers.