frandroid: Photo of a TTC streetcar (toronto)
By sheer happenstance, while looking u^p some other Night Beats material, I stumbled upon the extra chapter of Cascade that had been sent to mailing list subscribers. I totally understand why the chapter was taken out of the book, but——that one est venu me chercher dans les tripes. Very satisfying, can I turn it into a promo zine?
frandroid: Library of Celsus at Ephesus, Turkey (books)
Just finished:

The Sleep of Reason, vol I: Cascade! It was phenomenal. The storytelling was amazing, and I was very amused and entertained. I could have used a bit more exposition at the beginning and after the main hinge point. I was amused/impressed at some of the very obscure vocabulary, and really dug the complexity of the internal dialogue the various characters had, especially some that ostensibly would be outside the natural ideological zone of the author. :) Looking forward to the next volume.

Grabuge Urbain. Je crois que j'ai ramassé ce zine plein-page couleur au Salon Anarchiste. C'est un zine pas mal punk et d'habitude, j'ai rarement de patience pour ça, mais la mise en page/les collages sont quand même poussés, et l'histoire d'une des autrices qui a raconté ses deux (!) poursuites gagnantes (!) contre la police pour cause de brutalité policière est assez impressionnante.

Retomber by Xiaoxiao Li: Despite the French title, this one is a thick English-language comic zine. This isn't a narrative as much as a diary-style thing, with lots of iPhone messaging conversations with an unidentified confidante. All drawing is line drawing with no fill, and all ink is coloured, no black. The effect is quite impressive. There are tons of self-portraits, including two with Munsch's The Scream's figure with are hilarious. It's fairly liberal young girl internal dialogue stuff that I don't usually have much time for, but it's quite compelling. There was a whole subset of young-asian-woman-internal-dialogue type of zines back in the 90s, but I hadn't seen one in a while, and this is probably one of the better ones. (I mean, other than the author's name, you could barely explicitly tell that it's Asian, but her voice is quite similar to that set, though I would be hard-pressed to describe it.)

I think I picked that last zine in the zine boxes at The Beguiling. I don't know exactly what Birkemoe is doing as a buyer, but there are one million unique zine issues in his boxes, some of them over 10 years old. Maybe he just orders a bunch of singles for his own reading pleasure and then dumps them in the sale boxes? Anyway, it's quite the selection. I mean, most of it is not really good, but it's one of the few times in my life where I really get to go crate-digging for zines, as opposed to comic book buyers and record buyers who have plenty of stores to cater to them (including that very store). I enjoy that.

Currently Reading:

Briefly read another chapter of Pirate Utopias. More and more I think The Pirate History Podcast did a better job at the actual history of Moorish corsairs (of course it's being produced 25+ years later...), but he doesn't really do the radical politics from a radical viewpoint, so Wilson's book is still relevant. At least I think so, I'm more into a history chapter than a politics chapter right now. I looked at the back cover of the book again and noticed blurbs by Christopher Hill, Marcus Rediker and Peter Linebaugh. Wheww! When I read this book for the first time in 1999, I didn't know who they were, but now I'm impressed.

Reading Next:

This is How You Win the Time War is overdue at the library with holds on it. Oops.
frandroid: Drawing of sabotabby in revolutionary attire: beret, tight green top, keffiyeh, flowing red hair (sabotabby)
Finished: Some zines. Nothing great, just following up with one author to see her other zines.

Currently Reading:
- Slowly continuing Rachel A. Rosen's Cascade. I'm laughing a lot. There was one paragraph I read where I was like, "oh, that's what Peter Watts is talking about in his blurb..." (re: author's "tricks")

- Re-reading the previous chapter of Pirate Utopias, because I didn't know was what when I picked it up again; the main reason I'm re-reading the book is to commit the pirate history of Salé (the semi-piratical/free city that would eventually grow to become Rabat) to memory this time, which is the topic of this chapter. There are lots of books/podcasts/TV about Caribbean piracy but fewer about piracy elsewhere. (The Pirate History podcast does a phenomenal job of documenting Mediterranean piracy before and during the Golden Age. There's also a book on Jewish Pirates that talks about that too, I forget its title, but there aren't many, so.) (I just remembered that Julius Caesar was once kidnapped by pirates, and I wonder if someone has written good ancient pirate history or fiction...)

One book thing I forgot to mention about my trip to Montréal: I got to meet Erica Lagalisse!!!! They go by Evan in person. They gave a workshop that I couldn't attend, which kind of sucks. At the very end of the fair, I saw them a few meters away but I suddenly got fairly shy, so I was hesitating to introduce myself. Thankfully a child who was part of their entourage came to my table, saw that I was selling their book, and brought Lagalisse to my table, where they promptly recalled a conversation we had on Twitter over a year ago. They sold me a copy of the French translation of their book, which I will gift to a friend I should never give gifts to ever again (he basically stole $1500 from me) but I know it's going to be right in his wheelhouse. Anyway we had a good chat so I was chuffed.

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