ext_292058 (
peggy-2.livejournal.com) wrote in
queensthief2010-09-10 07:38 am
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
While She Knits
Summer is over, school has started, Megan is back in Ohio knitting a new pair of socks for her upcoming trip to Boston as a Boston-Globe Horn Book Awards Honoree, and
thesehnsucht 's recent post brings to mind just how long it has been since we had a WSK conversation.
What books have you read recently that really left an impression on you? What are the ones on your To Be Read or Upcoming New Release lists that you are simply itching to get at?
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
What books have you read recently that really left an impression on you? What are the ones on your To Be Read or Upcoming New Release lists that you are simply itching to get at?
no subject
JUST SO YOU KNOW, IT IS NOT A KIDS' SERIES.
The basic concept is similar to Brian K. Vaughan's (also very good, also not a kids' series) Y: The Last Man: in the late 18th century, a fairly grisly disease striking only men reduces males to 20% of the Japanese population.
This completely upends traditional, firmly male-dominated Japanese society; the Ooku, or Inner Chamber, where the Shogun traditionally kept his concubines, is filled with men instead of women, and the Shoguns themselves are women. Women take over farming and trade; men who can produce children become a valued commodity. The result is a cultural and personal struggle to find balance, enforce rules, and hang onto a sense of normalcy in a terrifying and seemingly incurable situation. It is brutal, but also extraordinarily insightful and sympathetic.
If you know Japanese history, it's a real treat to see how Yoshinaga uses it--e.g., the Redface Pox is the real reason for Japanese isolationism, and keeping out unwanted Christian missionaries was only a front. If you don't know Japanese history, I think the atmosphere and personalities are still perfectly evident. In either case, it's a powerful series, and (loathe I am to say it) in a minority of truly well-written comics.
no subject
I know some people have a prejudice against comics, especially manga, but it's definitely worth reading
no subject