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review 2020-01-28 12:20
Brillant und revolutionär
A Head Full of Ghosts: A Novel - Paul Tremblay

Paul Tremblay bricht eine Lanze für modernen Horror. Im Essay „The H Word: The Politics of Horror” argumentiert er, dass Horror nicht reaktionär und konservativ sein muss, um erfolgreich zu sein. Er hält das Ende von „Der Exorzist“ für einen Fehlschlag, weil Regan und ihre Mutter nach dem schrecklichen Erlebnis der Besessenheit zu den konservativen Werten der Ausgangssituation zurückkehren – die beiden leben glücklich weiter, als wäre nie etwas geschehen. Tremblay diskutiert, dass diese Wiederherstellung des Status quo der Grund dafür ist, dass sich die wenigsten an die letzten Szenen erinnern, während sie Erbsensuppe mit völlig neuen Augen betrachten. Der horrende Charakter einer Geschichte sollte nicht allein durch singuläre Ereignisse entstehen, sondern durch das Wissen, dass nichts mehr so ist wie vorher. Auf dieser Theorie fußt Tremblays Roman „A Head Full of Ghosts“.

 

Zuerst waren es nur Kleinigkeiten. Marjorie verhielt sich merkwürdig. Nachts schlich sie in das Zimmer ihrer jüngeren Schwester Merry. Sie stahl ihre Kinderbücher. Sie malte unheimliche Bilder. Sie erzählte Merry gruselige Geschichten. Dann wurde es schlimmer. Ihre Eltern schickten Marjorie zu einem Arzt. Nachts schrie sie. Sie erzählte von Geistern in ihrem Kopf, die sie nicht schlafen ließen. Es wurde noch schlimmer. Zwei Wochen verbrachte Marjorie in einem Krankenhaus. Ihr Vater suchte Trost bei der Kirche und traf Vater Wanderly. Als Marjorie zurückkehrte und noch immer nicht sie selbst war, nahmen ihre verzweifelten Eltern die Hilfe des Priesters an. Wenig später zog ein Kamerateam in ihr Haus. Doch auch sie konnten Marjorie nicht helfen.
15 Jahre später erinnert sich Merry an die furchtbaren Monate, die ihre Familie zerstörten. Unterstützt von einer Autorin kehrt sie in das Haus ihrer Kindheit zurück, um herauszufinden, was sie als 8-Jährige nicht verstand: Was ist damals wirklich geschehen? War ihre Schwester besessen?

 

Hände hoch: wie viele haben abgeschaltet, als sie das Wort „Horror“ im ersten Satz dieser Rezension lasen? Wie viele, als „Besessenheit“ dazukam? Schämt euch. Ich würde doch niemals eine abgedroschene, überholte Geschichte von Besessenheit mit fünf Sternen bewerten. Zugegeben, das Horrorgenre ist mit vielen Klischees belastet und Paul Tremblay berichtet selbst, dass er darum kämpft, als Horrorautor ernstgenommen zu werden. Aber der kleine Exkurs in der Einleitung sollte euch versichern, dass er sich dieser Klischees bewusst ist und „A Head Full of Ghosts“ deshalb kein herkömmlicher Vertreter des Genres ist. Dieses Buch interpretiert jedes Motiv, das normalerweise mit Besessenheit verbunden ist, neu. Es dreht ikonische Szenen auf den Kopf und stellt äußerst unangenehme Fragen, indem es die natürliche Distanz zwischen Geschichte und Publikum aufbricht und die Leser_innen zwingt, sich in die Figuren hineinzuversetzen, statt gierig und voyeuristisch Bilder von Blut, Gewalt und Terror aufzusaugen. Es verschiebt den Fokus des Horrors von billiger Effekthascherei zum Erleben der Charaktere, wodurch Physisches völlig in den Hintergrund rückt. Es ist sensibel, einfühlsam und intensiv. Kurz: Es ist brillant. „A Head Full of Ghosts“ schildert die tragische Geschichte der Familie Barrett aus der Perspektive der jüngsten Tochter Merry, die acht Jahre alt war, als ihre große Schwester Marjorie verrückt wurde. Ihren konsequent kindlichen Blickwinkel, der sich sowohl in ihren Erinnerungen als auch in der Gegenwart manifestiert, halte ich für den Geniestreich, der dafür sorgt, dass dieser Roman außergewöhnlich ist. Durch ihre Jugend ist Merry eine äußerst unzuverlässige Erzählerin, die zwar massenweise Informationen bereitstellt, in ihrer Interpretation jedoch eingeschränkt ist. Als Nesthäkchen der Familie war sie selbstverständlich tief in die Ereignisse involviert, wurde allerdings bewusst auf Distanz gehalten. Vieles wurde ihr nicht erklärt, die Entscheidungen ihrer Eltern blieben ihr verschlossen und ihre Beziehung zu ihrer Schwester wurde von einer idealisierenden Note geprägt, die mich an ein Märchen denken ließ. Sie sah durch einen Filter, war halb drinnen, halb draußen, was zu einer einzigartigen Wahrnehmungschronik führt und die Aufmerksamkeit der Leser_innen nicht auf Marjories Zustand lenkt, sondern auf all das, was erst ihre Anfälle und später die TV-Show der gesamten Familie antaten, was ihnen genommen wurde. Ich empfand Merry als das Opfer der Situation, weil sie am wenigsten in der Lage war, zu verstehen und ihr darüber hinaus am meisten gestohlen wurde, von der Fürsorge ihrer Eltern bis zur Sicherheit ihres Heims. Paul Tremblays Anliegen, die Auswirkungen horrender Erlebnisse zu proträtieren und die Figuren durch diese nachhaltig zu verändern, ist ihm zweifellos geglückt. Niemand kann „A Head Full of Ghosts“ lesen und glauben, nach den Geschehnissen sei wieder alles wie vorher. Es ist nie mehr wie vorher, das kann ich euch garantieren.

 

Ich hoffe sehr, dass ich euch vermitteln konnte, wie großartig „A Head Full of Ghosts“ ist. Beim Schreiben dieser Rezension hatte ich die ganze Zeit das Gefühl, meine Begeisterung nicht ausreichend artikulieren zu können, weil ich über viele Details, die mich beeindruckten, einfach nicht sprechen kann, ohne zu spoilern. Es ist nämlich nicht nur eine exzellente psychologische Analyse von Horror, es ist auch ein Buch, das mit zahlreichen, oft versteckten Erkenntnissen aufwartet, die ich keinesfalls vorwegnehmen möchte. Ich muss darauf vertrauen, dass ihr herauslesen könnt, wie bewegend ich die Geschichte fand, die Paul Tremblay erzählt und wie revolutionär diese für das Genre ist. Ich bete, dass ihr „A Head Full of Ghosts“ eine Chance gebt, sogar wenn ihr sonst nicht viel mit Horror anfangen könnt. Dieses Buch ist anders, darauf gebe ich euch Brief und Siegel. Wahrer Horror entsteht nicht durch Brutalität oder Schock – er entsteht durch die Infragestellung unserer Glaubensgrundsätze.

Source: wortmagieblog.wordpress.com/2020/01/28/paul-tremblay-a-head-full-of-ghosts
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review 2019-10-25 07:04
Shared World Novels what what
Lord of the Abyss - Nalini Singh

This was an odd little experiment, which I undertook because I'm so on the hook for Nalini Singh's Psy-Changeling novels, but then I haven't been down for much else she's written. I'm not sure what the official name for this series is -- Lords of [Something] would be my guess -- but it's four different paranormal romance novels with an overarching plot written by four different writers. I find this sort of thing fascinating -- when novel writers collaborate like television or comic writers.

 

The last series like this I read was the Crimson City novels. Most of them are by someone called Liz Maverick (which is surely not a pen name at all), but the second is by Marjorie M Liu. who, before she racked up all the awards for Monstress, wrote this fucking brilliantly weird PNR series called Dirk & Steele. I mean, she really moved the markers for what you can pull off in the sometimes boring vampire/werewolf snorefest you can find in the genre. Liu took the kind of premise that made me exclaim, wait, what?? like a hundred times when I was reading the first novel, Crimson City, and in her story, grounds it so completely in believable interpersonal concerns that my brain stopped screaming every 15 minutes about how nothing about the world made any sense. That's some godamn writing right there. 

 

Singh's outing in the Lords of [Something] maybe wasn't at this level, but I actually made it all the way through to the end of the novel, which is something I cannot say about the other three books in the series. Some of this is just the silliness of the premise, because all of the books are riffs on various fairy tales. There's one based on Goldilocks and the Three Bears, for example, where our fair haired maiden finds a rock hard cock which was just right, and I just couldn't stop my brain from squealing immaturely, and then breaking into laughter.  

 

Lord of the Abyss is very loosely based on Beauty and the Beast, and it works in the places that Singh tends to excel, and otherwise is kind of a mess. She does an excellent job writing characters out of trauma and abuse. She doesn't go for the magic vagina, the ladybits that can cure all, but constructs believable psychologies warped by neglect, and then slowly, carefully, draws them out. But the world, and the magic, is slapdash, so the parts of the plot that intersect with that are shaky at best. 

 

So, fun to see a writer I tend to enjoy, at least in one limited context, pull off something in a shared world. Didn't captivate me like Psy-Changeling, but it was a perfectly cromulent way to pass the time. 

 

ETA: Ok, I actually looked, and the series is called Royal House of Shadows, which seems kind of stuffy and conceited, but what do I know. 

 

 

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review 2019-07-06 13:33
Summer at Tiffany by Marjorie Hart
Summer at Tiffany LP - Marjorie Hart

Do you remember the best summer of your life? New York City, 1945. Marjorie Jacobson and her best friend, Marty Garrett, arrive fresh from the Kappa house at the University of Iowa hoping to find summer positions as shopgirls. Turned away from the top department stores, they miraculously find jobs as pages at Tiffany & Co., becoming the first women to ever work on the sales floor—a diamond-filled day job replete with Tiffany blue shirtwaist dresses from Bonwit Teller's—and the envy of all their friends.Hart takes us back to the magical time when she and Marty rubbed elbows with the rich and famous; pinched pennies to eat at the Automat; experienced nightlife at La Martinique; and danced away their weekends with dashing midshipmen. Between being dazzled by Judy Garland's honeymoon visit to Tiffany, celebrating VJ Day in Times Square, and mingling with Café Society, she fell in love, learned unforgettable lessons, made important decisions that would change her future, and created the remarkable memories she now shares with all of us.

Amazon.com

 

 

 

 

NYC, 1945: Author Marjorie Hart (then Marjorie Jacobson) and friend / sorority sister Martha "Marty" Garrett were just a couple of young Iowa girls who jumped headfirst into life in the Big Apple, hoping to find exciting positions in upscale department stores. They thought they'd be guaranteed work at Lord & Taylor because three other sorority sisters were hired on there, but on arrival Marjorie and Marty were told there would be nothing for them until the fall season. Desparately needing work, they hit the pavement, inquring at a number of other stores, only to be repeatedly turned away. Then that monumental moment came: Marty, feeling bold, suggested they see what Tiffany & Co. department store had to offer...even though at that time, sales floor positions were held exclusively by men. I mean, after being turned down so many times in one day, what's one more no, right?

 

It turns out the ladies picked a fortuitous time to apply for work there. Because of World War II, the store was short on pages, the guys that ran orders back and forth between the sales floors and the repairs and shipping departments. It was decided by management that day that Marjorie and Marty would become the first women ever to hold sales floor positions with the iconic jewelry and home goods retailer.  

 

In this memoir, Marjorie recalls all the most memorable scenes of that glorious summer: daily lunches with Marty at the Automat, evenings at the Stork Club, flirting with military men at dances. Hart also shares a couple of her favorite celebrity sightings while working for the store: Judy Garland and Marlene Dietrich. Judy Garland popped in while on her honeymoon. Later, when Dietrich came in, Hart mentions feeling a connection to her because of their shared musical background --- Hart being a trained cellist, Dietrich a violinist.

 

That summer, Hart was also witness to a couple of highly emotionally charged moments, one being her memory of being in Times Square on VJ Day, seeing the announcement that WW2 had officially ended projected onto Times Tower. 

 

We stayed rooted to our spot with one eye on the Times Tower and the other on the street. Suddenly, at three minutes after seven, the big screen went dark. The crowd seemed to pause momentarily in anticipation. When the lights came on, the screen read:

 

**** OFFICIAL **** TRUMAN ANNOUNCES JAPANESE SURRENDER

 

A thunderous roar rose from the crowd. Church bells pealed, air-raid sirens wailed, cars honked, tugboats tooted, firecrackers exploded, and people cheered as confetti and paper fell from the windows. Near me, an old man threw his cane in the air. An army private kissed every girl he could find. Including me. Streams of tears ran down the cheeks of an elderly woman as she watched the words circling the tower. No one was a stranger in that crowd. 

 

 

The other was the day a plane crashed into the Empire State Building. It was not an act of terrorism. Disoriented by the fog that morning of July 28th, pilot William F. Smith flew his B-25 Army bomber into the side of the building. Newspapers later reported that he HAD been advised to land earlier, but decided to disregard. His decision to do so cost the lives of thirteen people (including his own) and injured twenty-six more. 

 

After that summer, Marjorie left her position at Tiffany's but promised to return one day. She went on to pursue a musical career, joining the San Diego Symphony in 1954. She also played accompaniment to a number of famous acts such as Peggy Lee, Sammy Davis, Jr. , Liberace, and Nat King Cole. In 1965, Marjorie decided to return to school, going on to earn her master's degree in music from San Diego State University. She began teaching music at University of San Diego (yes, they are different schools) in 1967, becoming chair of the Fine Arts Dept in 1978. Marjorie retired as professor emerita in 1993 and retired from performing music professionally in 2004 at the age of 80. It wasn't until 2004 that she finally fulfilled the promise to return to Tiffany's for a visit (cue end of A League of Their Own). 

 

This was such a lovely, easy breezy read full of wonderful notes of history and nostalgia, so if that's your jam, this is definitely perfect summertime chill-out material for you! It certainly leave the reader thinking on one's own pivotal moments in life, those that feel like basic, everyday moments at the time but turn out to be essential to forming your later self. 

 

I will say, I was left curious as to what happened to Jim... that part of the story just seemed to go off into the ether... but the way she left it, I imagine it was one of those connections that just seemed to quietly fizzle out after the war. 

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text 2019-06-04 13:14
Hugo: Best Graphic Story
Abbott - Saladin Ahmed,Sami Kivela,Jason Wordie
Black Panther: Long Live the King - Nnedi Okorafor
Monstress, No. 3 - Sana Takeda,Marjorie M. Liu
Paper Girls Volume 4 - Brian K Vaughan
Saga Volume 9 - Fiona Staples,Brian K. Vaughan

So I started reading them yesterday and I'm mostly done.  On a sunbeam is a web comic (I can't link from work) and I'm making my way through it, I've read the first few episodes and find it interesting.

 

Again it was hard to choose within an interesting bunch, my favourite was Abbott, ranking the rest was hard.  

Eventually I just decided an order but it was work.

 

Abbott features a female investigative journalist who can see more than she wants to at scenes and a series of grotesque murders.  Stands alone and leaves room for sequels.

 

Black Panther: Long Live the King - Black Panther at home in Wakanda fighting a creature that is destabilising the country.

 

Monstress: Volume 3: Haven - this is so pretty, the artwork is very special and the story winds around and keeps me reading.  You need to have read the previous two books before this.

 

On a Sunbeam is a story of some people travelling around in a spaceship exploring buildings along with some exploration of the past of some of the characters.   Unusual and interesting.

 

Paper Girls - Volume 4 - this one really needed that I read the rest before embarking on it, lost doesn't quite describe it enough.

 

Saga - Volume 9 - I've read the previous stories, the artwork is lush and the story interesting, now I want to know what's going to happen next.

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review 2019-01-01 08:34
Monstress: Awakening Vol 1
Awakening - Marjorie M. Liu,Sana Takeda

I read this for one of my summer classes. We had to read and annotate 10 comics/graphic novels. Here's the annotation I wrote for that class:

 

Maika Halfwolf is on a quest to discover information about her shadowy past. Along the way she must battle an ancient entity who shares her mind and body and makes her the target of every faction in her war-torn world.

 

Monstress: Awakening is the most beautifully illustrated comic book I have ever seen. Every panel is like a painting and so full of detail I could spend minutes taking in each one, yet the art never overwhelms the page or the story. Even the body horror and gore manage to look beautiful. In addition to beautiful art, Monstress contains creative character design and diverse characters. It is refreshing to see a fantasy world populated with resilient, chromatic, female characters whose existence is normalized. These women are the rule not the exception. 

           

Monstress also includes incredible world building. Immediately in the book there is the sense that this is a fully realized world, and there is little awkward exposition to explain it. It is left to readers to put the story together for themselves. Some of the more complex aspects of the world are explained at the ends of chapters in short lectures. The conceit works at conveying information that clarifies the story, but if this information is really that important, it deserves space in the actual comic rather than being relegated to a clever info dump.

           

Monstress is a fresh take on fantasy worlds. It deserves a spot in the graphic novel canon for its artwork alone.

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