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review 2019-03-05 09:30
Stark, Kumpel, bist du's?
Kill City Blues - Richard Kadrey

Sandman Slim“ soll verfilmt werden. Mein Kumpel Stark auf der Leinwand. Eine seltsame Vorstellung. Die Pläne für eine Verfilmung reichen weit zurück. In einem Interview von 2012 sprach der Autor Richard Kadrey bereits konkret darüber. Diese Realisierung kam offenbar nicht zustande, denn laut aktuelleren Berichten kaufte Studio 8 die Rechte an der Reihe 2016. 2018 wurde öffentlich, dass Chad Stahelski Regie führen und Kerry Williamson die Drehbuchadaption schreiben soll. Über Schauspieler_innen ist noch nichts bekannt. Kadrey selbst weigert sich, Ideen vorzuschlagen. Er habe die äußerliche Erscheinung seines Helden bewusst vage gehalten, damit seine Leser_innen sich ihr eigenes Bild machen können. Einen Schauspieler zu nennen, würde diesen Effekt ruinieren. Aus demselben Grund kommt es für mich nicht in Frage, mir eine Verfilmung anzusehen. Ich bleibe lieber bei den Büchern. Mittlerweile bin ich beim fünften Band „Kill City Blues“ angekommen.

 

Ruhestand – hach, was wäre das schön. Leider ist das für James Stark aka Sandman Slim – Ex-Höllengladiator, Ex-Himmelssöldner und Ex-Luzifer – einfach nicht drin. Er rettete die Welt, doch die Gerüchte über die Macht des Qomrama Om Ya verbreiteten sich in Windeseile und jetzt ist jeder dahergelaufene Möchtegernschurke scharf auf das Ding. Diese Leute meinen es ernst. Wieder einmal wird Stark zur Zielscheibe und beschließt, zu verhindern, dass das Qomrama Om Ya in falsche Hände gerät. Er beginnt, eigene Nachforschungen anzustellen. Nach einigen Wochen ohne Ergebnis hat er die Nase gestrichen voll und tut, was er am besten kann: kräftig auf den Busch klopfen und schauen, was hervorkriecht. Während einer seiner… Erkundungsmissionen fällt ein Name. Kill City. Ausgerechnet. Die verlassene Mall voller primitiver, feindlicher Sub-Rosa-Clans und Monster ist nicht gerade ein Ausflugsziel, das Stark freiwillig gewählt hätte. Aber nun ja, was tut man nicht alles, um die Welt zu schützen?

 

„Kill City Blues“ braucht eine Weile, um in Fahrt zu kommen. Deshalb teile ich diesen fünften Band der Sandman Slim“-Reihe in zwei Hälften unterschiedlicher Qualität. Die erste Hälfte gestaltete sich ziemlich verwirrend und chaotisch. Ich stieg nicht dahinter, welche Parteien das Qomrama Om Ya aus welchen Gründen besitzen wollen und Stark deshalb bedrohen. Ich fand die Situation unübersichtlich. Meine visuelle Assoziation war eine – zugegeben sehr brutale – Kabbelei unter Hühnern. Ich glaube, hätte nicht irgendwer angefangen, auf Stark zu schießen, hätte er sich mit Freuden zurückgelehnt und die Show genossen. Da er Kugeln aber nun mal ziemlich persönlich nimmt, mischt er sich in die Suche ein. Es schockierte mich, wie zahm und zivilisiert er dabei zuerst vorgeht. Meine Befürchtung, Kadrey könne seinen Biss verloren haben, die ich aus dem letzten Band „Devil Said Bang“ mitbrachte, potenzierten sich. Stark fragt herum. Er fragt! Er ist beinahe nett! Niemand stirbt! Ich kramte bereits mental ein schwarzes Kleid heraus, um angemessen um meinen Kumpel zu trauern, der einfach nicht mehr derselbe war. Die Mühe hätte ich mir sparen können, denn in der zweiten Hälfte von „Kill City Blues“ dreht Kadrey auf und legt eine Kehrtwende hin, die mir einen erleichterten Seufzer entlockte. Plötzlich war Stark wieder Stark. Es fühlte sich an, als hätte sich der Autor endlich auf den Kern der Reihe und das Wesen seines Protagonisten besonnen. Halleluja! Stark ist zwar wesentlich intelligenter, als er auf den ersten Blick erscheint, was mich immer wieder überrascht, aber weder ist er ein Stratege noch ein netter Kerl. Er ist unvernünftig und impulsiv. Er ist jemand, der so lange mit einem Knüppel auf den sprichwörtlichen Busch einprügelt, bis alles, was herausfällt, um Gnade winselt. Genau das macht er in der zweiten Hälfte von „Kill City Blues“. Er findet zu seiner alten Form zurück. Trotzdem gibt es Hinweise auf eine charakterliche Weiterentwicklung, die ich sehr begrüße. Stark arbeitet in Kill City erstmals in einem größeren Team. Das war interessant, obwohl ich ihn dennoch für einen Einzelgänger halte, der die Vorteile einer Gruppe nicht nutzt und handelt, als wäre er allein. In diesem Zusammenhang muss ich zähneknirschend zugeben, dass mir Candy in diesem Band besser gefiel. Sie benimmt sich weniger waghalsig und ich glaubte ihr, dass sie sich ernsthafte Sorgen um Stark macht. Eventuell erlaube ich ihr, die Frau in seinem Leben zu bleiben. Außerdem habe ich den Eindruck, dass Stark langsam zu einer inneren Balance zwischen den beiden Seiten seiner Persönlichkeit findet. Ich gönne ihm das sehr, denn er braucht diesen Frieden. Er muss beide Seiten akzeptieren lernen; gegen eine anzukämpfen, macht ihn nur unglücklich. Beide sind ein Teil von ihm, er wird niemals ein ruhiges oder gewaltfreies Leben führen, was er Stück für Stück einzusehen scheint. Sein verändertes Verhältnis zu Kasbian ist meiner Meinung nach Ausdruck dessen. Nach all der Zeit, in der sie widerwillige Mitbewohner waren, stecken sie in „Kill City Blues“ zum ersten Mal vorsichtig die Grenzen ihrer Beziehung ab. Werden sie am Ende vielleicht doch noch Freunde?

 

„Kill City Blues“ stimmt mich optimistisch. Der fünfte Band der Sandman Slim“-Reihe knüpft insgesamt zwar noch nicht an die Qualität der ersten drei Bände an, aber ich denke, Richard Kadrey ist auf dem Weg dahin. In der zweiten Hälfte des Buches lockert er die Zügel für Stark, sodass dieser endlich wieder der unbequeme Bastard sein darf, den ich liebe. Er erlaubt ihm sogar einen abenteuerlichen Kurztrip in die Hölle, den ich atemlos verfolgte. Ich hoffe, dass der Autor nun nicht länger versucht, aus Stark etwas zu machen, was er nicht. Die Handlung von „Kill City Blues“ deutet an, dass er auf einen inhaltlichen Abschluss und die nächste Stufe im Leben seines Protagonisten zusteuert. Wenn es nach mir geht, kann dieser Übergang gar nicht schnell genug stattfinden. Schluss mit alten Göttern und der Frage, wer die Hölle regiert – auf zu Neuem!

Source: wortmagieblog.wordpress.com/2019/03/05/richard-kadrey-kill-city-blues
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text 2016-01-06 04:30
My Favorite Books Published in 2015
The Princess and the Pony - Kate Beaton
Step Aside, Pops: A Hark! A Vagrant Collection - Kate Beaton
SuperMutant Magic Academy - Jillian Tamaki
Lafayette in the Somewhat United States - Sarah Vowell
Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs - Johann Hari
Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992-2000 - Ash Thayer
Brew Better Beer: Learn (and Break) the Rules for Making IPAs, Sours, Pilsners, Stouts, and More - Emma Christensen
BiblioTech: Why Libraries Matter More Than Ever in the Age of Google - John Palfrey
The World Is On Fire: Scrap, Treasure, and Songs of the Apocalypse - Joni Tevis
Three Moments of an Explosion: Stories - China Miéville

 


Well, as promised last week, here is a short list of my favorite books published during 2015 that I read! It seems that this year I focused mainly on non-fiction books and comics, but I guess that not's unusual! Those seem to be my top genres most years! In any case, looking forward to some more awesome reading in 2016!

 

Favorite Kids Book: The Princess and the Pony by Kate BeatonThe Princess and the Pony - Kate Beaton  

 

One of my favorite irreverent literary history nerd cartoonists working on the web today, Kate Beaton had an awesome year in books, publishing her first children's work, The Princess and the Pony, as well as the hefty new collection of her webcomic, Hark: A Vagrant, Step Aside Pops! 

Step Aside, Pops: A Hark! A Vagrant Collection - Kate Beaton

The book is, right off the bat, an absolutely adorable work of children’s literature. However, I feel it is more than that, as well. The cartoony, detailed art lends itself perfectly to the simple story. Princess Pinecone, the littlest warrior, wants to fit in and be a right menace in battles like the other warriors, with their cool helmets, cloaks, and amulets, but for her birthday she receives a roly-poly, farting, none-too-bright pony.

Of course, she learns to love the creature and becomes the star of the annual Great Battle, making the lesson ostensibly something like not “looking a gift horse in the mouth.” However, under the surface of this useful little life lesson, there is more going on; this work would appeal, I feel, equally to children of both genders and does not distinguish between what young girls and boys are stereotypically “supposed” to be into; Without any sort of preaching, Beaton illustrates a world that does not condescend to tell readers what they should like.  A great picture book for any storytime!

 

Favorite Comic: SuperMutant Magic AcademySuperMutant Magic Academy - Jillian Tamaki by Jillian Tamaki

 

Like Hark: A Vagrant, Jillian Tamaki's funny, witty work of Canadian humor began as a webcomic, but here, instead of cute, nerdy literary and historical references, the focus is on cute, nerdy sci-fi and fantasy tropes, set in that ever popular magical school, with all of the typical and not-so-typical characters. I loved the realistic high school drama coupled with magic, cat people, and people who just can't die! Tamaki's artwork is a great compliment to her writing as well, and I don't think I would ever tire of flipping through this one! 

 

Favorite Nonfiction

 

History: Lafayette in the Somewhat United States by Sarah Vowell

 

Lafayette in the Somewhat United States - Sarah VowellIt's been awhile since Sarah Vowell’s last captivating collection of essays on a historical topic, sharing her deep interest and love of American history with the reading and listening audience, so I was excited for her latest obsession, the Marquis de Lafayette. Using the idealistic young Frenchman and his quixotic devotion to the cause of the American Revolution to explore how the Revolutionary War have come to be seen by the loosely affiliated United States and his legacy today. Traveling with Vowell as she visits the various sites of the Revolutionary War battles Lafayette participated in across Pennsylvania, we encounter plenty of interesting facts and the usual local eccentrics, including some very interesting Quakers with philosophical opposition to books discussing war.

Vowell’s trademark acerbic yet optimistic interpretations of these historic events made Lafayette in the Somewhat United States another absorbing work of popular history. Vowell, I feel, is always particularly adept not only at explaining how these nearly legendary events in our nation's history really went, but connecting them with our culture today as well. 

Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs - Johann Hari 

Social Sciences: Chasing the Scream by Johann Hari

 

This book was a difficult one for me, a book that struck really close to home but one that riveted me with its insights, compassion, and arguments for how our world could be different. In another facet of the century long “war on drugs” that has captured the world, Minneapolis and St. Paul are currently in the grips of a major heroin “epidemic” that has struck the suburbs as well as the city, a close relative being among the victims. Now many from privileged backgrounds have been effected, a debate has sprung up on how to treat this issue. After reading Chasing the Scream, I was able to get some context into the reasons behind this; a very intriguing response to some of the major debates regarding the so called war on drugs.

Journalist Johann Hari, himself suffering personal loss and hardship from addiction and drugs, embarked upon a three year quest to discover how things have come to this; with overdoses, poverty, rampant and violent crime, corruption and the host of other social ills, he demonstrates how current global policy, headed by the United States, has failed. His compilation of facts provides a very compelling argument for not online the decriminalization of drugs throughout the world, but their legalization as well, for the purpose of strengthening order. In visiting places where the universal prohibition of narcotics has been loosened, even a little bit, he shows what things could look like in a world just a little different.

 

Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992-2000 - Ash ThayerPhotography: Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992-2000 by Ash Thayer

 

Kill City” contains a fascinating collection of images, shedding light upon a neglected and oft maligned subculture. These intimate, vivid photographs capture a specific and interesting period in the 1990s, as young squatters, following egalitarian and creative dreams, transformed the Lower East Side neighborhood of Manhattan. While I’ve yet to visit NYC and was in grade school for the majority of the period explored here, the influence of these experimental living space still resonate throughout the country and the world. Thayer’s masterful photography illustrates this important and inspiring community in a way not seen before.

 

Libraries: Biblio Tech by John PalfreyBiblioTech: Why Libraries Matter More Than Ever in the Age of Google - John Palfrey  

 

I wrote about this very interesting topic back in July in my Reading Online segment of Reading Rainstorms, so check it out over here!

 

Essays: The World is On Fire by Joni Tevis

 

The World Is On Fire: Scrap, Treasure, and Songs of the Apocalypse - Joni TevisAnother of my favorites this year, I included this fascinating, gripping collection of essays on a diverse and amazing collection of topics in my entry, Libraries at the End of the World. Through a series of creative nonfiction essays, she explores various interesting topics through the lens of apocalypse and collapse, including popular culture and how your understanding of the past can transform your life in the future.  

 

Food: Brew Better Beer by Emma Christensen

 

Brew Better Beer: Learn (and Break) the Rules for Making IPAs, Sours, Pilsners, Stouts, and More - Emma Christensen After checking out a variety of homebrewing how-to books, trying to get started on brewing my own beer, I felt that this one was the most user friendly, nicely organized, and comprehensive one I looked at, offering instructions for a lot of varieties of beer, including gluten-free types. Whether starting with with simple extract based kits, or going all in with all grain recipes, Emma Christensen shares all of the equipment, ingredients, and background information you will need. Along with plenty of troubleshooting info on how to respond to questions and things going wrong along the brewing process, it really is a great place to start. Focusing on gallon batches, a batch easier to just pick up and start brewing, especially in cramped quarters, but there are also recipes provided for larger batches as well once you get the procedure down.

I tried the recipes for a couple of old fashioned, historic types in the British and Session ale styles, a “braggot,” which is a mead-beer hybrid, and a “gruit,” which is an ancient Scottish style using fresh herbs rather than hops. All in all, for my first attempt, I think the braggot worked out, making an extremely alcoholic heavy beer, while the gruit, sadly, didn’t work out, but as Christensen points out, you have to start somewhere!

 

Three Moments of an Explosion: Stories - China Miéville  Favorite Fiction: Three Moments of an Explosion

 

You never know what to expect in the short stories of China Miéville- that’s not to say they all have a “twist” like in an M. Night Shyamalan movie or anything so obvious. Each story, from the most to the less successful ones included in this collection experiments with the very mechanics of storytelling in some very atmospheric, ingenious and unsettling ways. Each of them is different in subject and style and each takes on a different, genre defying theme. Intricate, complex constructions of language, it really pays off to pay attention to the deeper connotations of each of these tales and this a collection that would really award a second reading, I feel.

These stories take the world we know and shake them; maybe immense, floating blocks of ice appear orbiting above London. Maybe a plague strikes that causes people to develop ever deepening trenches or moats in the soil around them- needless to say, a devastating development for modern infrastructure. Maybe an archaeological dig turns up human and non-human beings living in harmony, falling victim to the same volcanic event. Also, the collection includes two of the most chilling stories I’ve read in a long time, “Säcken” and “The Rabbet-” I’ll leave it to other readers to find out more. “The Dowager of Bees” was another of my favorites, about mysterious cards that appear in high stakes card games, with rules of their own that are broken at great peril.

I cannot wait to enter the world of words put together by China Miéville once again!

 

*Theme music; "Auld Lang Syne," Andrew Bird, Holidays Rule, 2012

 

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text 2015-12-07 01:29
in need of a book and all that
Kill City Blues - Richard Kadrey

rather start this series at book 1, but book 5 is what i can get a digital audio book of through the library... so let's see how it goes.  a lot of people have recommended this series to me

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review 2015-10-01 02:28
Not as good as the other three volumes, but still good reads.
Sin City, Vol. 6: Booze, Broads, and Bullets - Frank Miller
Sin City, Vol. 5: Family Values - Frank Miller
Sin City, Vol. 2: A Dame to Kill For - Frank Miller
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review 2015-10-01 02:27
love the story.
Sin City, Vol. 1: The Hard Goodbye - Frank Miller
Sin City, Vol. 4: That Yellow Bastard - Frank Miller
Sin City, Vol. 3: The Big Fat Kill - Frank Miller
Sin City, Vol. 7: Hell and Back - Frank Miller
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