And taking a sharp turn from two weeks ago's kid friendly
recommendation I’m recommending two limited run books that are very adult. One
is just beginning it’s run while the other has just finished.
Mirka Andolfo’s Unnatural, published by Image, is just
starting its twelve issue run. That makes it new to readers of English, but it
was originally published in Italian in 2016 and has been published in several
other languages since. But I am an American and suck at other languages, so
it’s new to me. Chances are it’s new to you, too.
Unnatural features rather sexy anthropomorphic animals
that have had some reviewers and interviewers compare it to the wonderful and
explicit Omaha the Cat Dancer by Reed Waller and Kate Worley. Andolfo doesn’t
think the comparison holds beyond the sexy and anthropomorphism, and so far I
tend to agree.
Leslie is a literal pig and the lead. Where sex between
species was common and inconsequential in Omaha, it’s forbidden in Unnatural.
After one issue we don’t know why, but in this world there are two great sins.
One is sex outside of your species. The other is same sex relationships. Both
interfere with the government mandate for procreation of the many species.
Leslie has two big problems in this life. She’s
fantasizing in detail, and with increasing frequency, about sex with a wolf.
She’s also just turned twenty-five and is unmarried. The former she can keep to
herself, though she has shared with her roommate, but the latter means the government
can now pick a spouse from within her species for her. And that’s where the
first issue ends.
The book has the always reliable hook of sex, but like
Omaha, there’s a lot below that surface. It’s a story about race, sexism,
homophobia, and fascism disguised as religiously sanctioned truths. In other words,
perfect for our time in America. I’m looking forward to seeing where it goes.
Just ended is the five issue run of Mat Johnson’s and Warren Pleece’s Incognegro: Renaissance, published by Dark Horse under its Berger Books line. This is a prequel to their Incognegro graphic novel that saw Zane Pinchback, reporter for the The New Holland Herald, pass as white in the Jim Crow South to write about lynching.
This story takes us back to Zane as a cub reporter, broom
closet for an office and all, who pushes to pursue the story of the death of an
up and coming black writer at a party celebrating the publication of a once
great white writer’s first book in many years, with the assistance of the now
dead young writer. As you might surmise, this one is set in the Harlem
Renaissance.
Issues of race are forefront, of course, but homophobia,
sexism, police corruption, and corporate malfeasance appear as well. We learn
how Zane learned to pass in the later story. We learn about the presumptions of
white supremacy and white privilege. We learn how often those are willing to
briefly turn a friendly face to others as long as others serve them but will
abandon them, not in a pinch (heh) but as soon as it’s convenient.
These are two very different books, but they effectively
and entertainingly delve into the never ending issues that keep America from
greatness, have always kept America from greatness, and now threaten to drown
America in mediocrity at best, and perennial poverty of empathy and economics
more likely.
Laugh out loud - love it - you managed to give a nice introduction to a series and make it interesting and a solid short review of a mini-series with driving your political viewpoint home. Well done. Bonus point for brevity.
ReplyDeleteI like brevity with my schedule these days.
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