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Saturday, October 10, 2009 ( 10/10/2009 09:14:00 PM ) Bill S. WEEKEND PET PIC: A simple shot of Kyan Pup on the old deck in the backyard: THE USUAL NOTE: For more cool pics of companion animals, please check out Modulator's "Friday Ark." # | Friday, October 09, 2009 ( 10/09/2009 06:12:00 AM ) Bill S. THE UNBEARABLE SPARSENESS OF BEING Postings've been a lot sparer around this joint recently, but it's not 'cause I don't love you Sporadic Reader. I'm still working on getting into the routine of my new job at the behavioral health center: though it's less driving than my previous position as an in-home therapist, there are a lot less lulls in it. Most days I've been coming home, feeling pretty whipped and barely able to make it all the way past prime time. At the same time, we're still working to pull ourselves out of the financial valley that my unemployment pushed us into. The new job pays less than my last 'un, so we're still having to readjust our already fairly modest lifestyle. Better than no job at all -- or having to go through the effort of relocation one more time -- but it still can be anxiety inducing. All part of the current economic slump, of course. We keep hoping the book will capture someone's attention, but, to date, the response has been limited. It's a hard clime for small publishes, we're told, though that hasn't stopped up from initiating a follow-up to Measure by Measure. (We like the characters too much to leave 'em alone.) And if any of you out there have dropped good money to read the first Measure, why not leave a comment on one of the bookstore sites? Anyhoo, I've still got more reviews and comments at this here blogspot in the works. Haven't said anything about the new teevee season yet: we're currently wholeheartedly enjoying Eastwick, liking Glee at times in spite of itself and holding out hopes that Flash Forward will really bust loose. When we realized that Jay Leno's new show had most likely helped push Medium off NBC, we were rather surly about it, but, thankfully, the show's shifted over to CBS Fridays where sturdy Patricia Arquette will most likely trounce that scrawny Eliza Dushku's butt. Me, I'm just grateful for the invention of the DVR. See ya on the weekend. # | Wednesday, October 07, 2009 ( 10/07/2009 09:52:00 PM ) Bill S. MID-WEEK BLUESY MUSIC VID: A great performance from 1966 by that force of nature hisself Howlin’ Wolf. Whenever I feel the urge to hear some blues, the first man I turn to is Chester Arthur Burnett: # | Sunday, October 04, 2009 ( 10/04/2009 04:16:00 PM ) Bill S. The one place where young males aren't used as baby makers is the palace of the shogun. Said to contain 3000 of the country's most beautiful men (though, in actuality, the number is closer to 800), the Inner Chambers represent the "height of luxury in a time of scarcity," though for those young men who actually enter the chambers, it proves a seething setting filled with jealousy, feverish social battles and intrigue. Our eyes into the Inner Chambers belong to a handsome 19-year-old named Mizuna Yunoshin, born of a poor family, who looks at his entrance as a way of supporting his parents and sister without having to marry into money. He doesn't realized just how treacherous palace life can be until it's too late. Within the chambers, there's a strict hierarchy: first divided between those who are deemed worthy enough of their liege's sight and those who aren't. When Yunoshin enters into service, he arrives in the lowest rank of houseboy, but it isn't long before he leaps into the upper tiers. A much more active and traditionally "manly" youth than many of the preening sons of the wealthy who primarily populate the Inner Chambers, he immediately stands out after he fights off a trio of his peers who attempt to "initiate" him by forcing him to "play the woman." He also draws the attention of the Machiavellian senior chamberlain Fujinami, who quickly realizes the disruption to the strictly maintained social order that Yunoshin presents. Yoshinaga deftly delineates the social mores and social maneuvering in her hermetic setting. If she occasionally over-hammers the gender switch aspect of her storyline ("That is no different from the spiteful tormenting of indentured apprentices by the women of a merchant's house," Yunoshin says of his peers at one point), most of this is in tune with Ooku's community of emotionally stunted young men. In a world where having a "pale pretty face and impeccable manner of social conduct" bests swordsmanship, it's inevitable that an excess amount of foppish posturing will take place. As a "Mature" rated series, Ooku has its share of sexual references, many of which turn out to be homoerotic: "T'is a commonplace of life here in the inner chambers." While nothing explicit is shown, Yoshinaga's dialog can get quick ribald. (Commenting on Yunoshin's quick rise in the social strata, one rival bitchily notes, "He rose from the bottom up with his bottom up!") The first volume is shrink-wrapped to prevent prying younger eyes from getting a peak at the provocative goings-on, but since the more adult material is imbedded within the comic's dense dialog, I don't see many peepers getting much of a charge from it. And, again, these sexual themes remain secondary to Ooku's main concern: the jockeying for power and prestige within a rigidly stratified community. When a new lady shogun comes to take over the palace after the untimely death of her young girl predecessor, the political maneuvering grows even more deadly, especially at the hands of the savvy senior chamberlain. The new shogun, recognizing that the luxurious world of the inner chambers is impractical due to the dire straits of the shogunate treasury, begins cutting back on the extravagances -- which inevitably sparks resistance from those who've grown comfortable within the Inner Chambers. Much of the action in the first volume, then, focuses on nuance and the minutia of palace service (there's a six-page sequence, for instance, devoted to finding a missing sewing needle), which is not to say that the stakes aren't frequently high for our protagonists. When Yunoshin is selected to be the new shogun's first dalliance, for instance, neither he nor the shogun herself realize that the role of "secret swain" carries a deadly penalty. Ooku's art -- filled with tiny flashes of emotion, guarded sidelong glances, and the occasional cartoony touch -- catches this shark-y milieu without over-dramatizing it. Her handling of her alternate Japan is so precise and convincing that at times you have to remind yourself that the Redface Pox never really happened. Labels: sixty-minute manga # | |
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