Jun. 3rd, 2018

juushika: Screen capture of the Farplane from Final Fantasy X: a surreal landscape of waterfalls and flowers. (Anime/Game)
I just spent a few days with my mother & father in Ashland, seeing three plays:

Henry V: Excessive, modern dance-y choreography; better minimalist set design than Henry IV 1 & 2; Daniel JosĂ© Molina is, again, phenomenal as Henry—pulled off the comedy unexpectedly well—a full, human, complex portrayal; Rachel Crowl as understudy for Pistol was a delight—the depiction & fate of all of Henry's old gang was devastating (even Fallstaff's entirely off-stage death), but Crowl especially brought a physicality and dimension to a character I normally dislike. This was my favorite of the three, I cried a good handful of times, it is even better alongside recently reading the Henriad in our Shakespeare project.

Othello: Aggressively, unproductively over-blocked—this showed worst in Iago and while I understand the intent (to clarify the language & make the play more accessible) it should've been toned down; also wish there weren't 23049 loud & excitable schoolkids in the audience; perhaps too much comedy. But my real complaints aren't complaints per se; rather, they're that this play, especially in 2018, is miserable & exhausting & supremely unsatisfying. No one learns anything, there's no catharsis. The last third was hard to watch, most especially Desdemona's prolonged death scene.

An interview afterward with Chris Butler, who played Othello, helped provide some of the closure the play denies; I asked specifically about depicting racism/xenophobia alongside misogyny/violence against women, about finding a balance that doesn't allow one—and here I mean the misogyny—to overwhelm the other, to be more accessible and sympathetic, particularly to OSF's particular demographic of progressive but majority middle class white folks; his response was considered and conflicted: to make the play intentionally multicultural in order to explore Otherness a complex issue rather than something (if you'll excuse) black and white; to emphasize all forms of discrimination, to refuse to allow anything to be buried, to broadcast it all even when it involves discrimination within and between minority groups.

(My dad, who attended the interview with me, was struck by how my question brought the discussion to a standstill, to how thoughtful was Butler's reply. This is about 98.5% paternal affection, but tbh I appreciated that paternal affection. My dad doesn't care about Shakespeare, he attends the plays because my mother and I care about Shakespeare; his investment is in my investment.)

Destiny of Desire: inspired by & effectively a condensed telenovela, dense with mistaken identities and ridiculous plot developments and meta-commentary, and social commentary specifically about Latinx community/identity and its intersection with class. Absolutely a gimmick; but a fun, engaging one, ridiculously compelling and quite charming; the audience was enraptured. Not perfect! not in love with the queerbaiting in particular. And I couldn't imagine seeing something like this more than once a year; it's A Lot & not to my personal taste. But a fun, successful experiment, and I'm glad this was our end-note. (I <3 the "rewind" gimmick for particularly !!! moments.)


We stayed at an Airbnb—my first—and it was homey and clean; but the wifi was what I would forgivingly call "unreliable" & the pull-out bed I slept on was. bad. probably bad under any circumstances & for any body, but double plus ungood for my particular back. All these things are a lot for me to handle: seeing and internalizing three plays; two nights of increasingly bad sleep, and three days of back pain and sun exposure; being in close contact with my family while my dad is ill, in the same location we were when he got sick/right before his cancer diagnosis. All three of these things at once was too much.

My dad's done with the immediate chemo treatment; he's now on an experimental inhibitor through a trial out in Pennsylvania. He's dealing with fading chemo side-effects while acclimating to new medication side-effects, and hasn't yet had the appointments which will determine if the meds are working/not working/if we have no idea but keep taking them!—the waiting and doubt makes the side-effects worse. This continues to be the best possible version of events, but in a worst case scenario: it's still terminal. So it's just a lot to be around that. Small things develop bizarre repercussions and meanings. (On our usual tour of downtown he impulse-bought me a moleskine—and last year we saw the same one and none such thing occurred to him—and is it end-of-life impulsiveness? it's a red moleskine (I've always wanted one of the color ones), and when I fill my current one he will be dying, dead—will it always be on my shelf the bright red moleskine, the Dead Dad moleskine, wrapped in memories of a grief and crisis that I can't even begin to imagine? everything is this, is laden, is an omen; it's exhausting.) It's all exhausting.

Plays, body, family all at once was too much & today the gravity feels higher, I feel denser and slower, small things are an effort. I'm still glad I went—as always, the profound disinclination that I felt right before departure was counterbalanced by the good experiences that these visits always are; I'm grateful they've been inviting me, and I treasure these Ashland trips. But now I give myself a week to Be Potato & try to recover.
juushika: Screen capture of the Farplane from Final Fantasy X: a surreal landscape of waterfalls and flowers. (Anime/Game)
Title: Blue is the Warmest Color
Author and Illustrator: Julie Maroh
Translator: Ivanka Hahnenberger
Published: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2013 (2010)
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 160
Total Page Count: 259,365
Text Number: 839
Read Because: personal enjoyment, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: A high school girl falls in love with a female college student. This is a fairly traditional but not uncomplicated story about sexual awakening, coming out, queer community and identity, and fidelity. Love at first sight is an uninteresting trope, but the course of the relationship is significantly more complicated; the characters are flawed in sympathetic ways, and ClĂ©mentine's non-romantic relationships are well-rendered. I don't hate the tragic framing as much as I expected, it's not as maudlin as it could be, but I still don't find it as effective as the protagonist's character arc. The art is—well, it's not great, but it's emotive when it needs to be, particularly in the depiction of messy emotions, and I'm a sucker for selective coloring. (The editing of the English-translated ebook is unforgivably bad, with text overlapping itself and exceeding word bubbles.) And so I find myself ambivalent: the general thrust of this is relatively routine, but the specifics—although somewhat amateur, somewhat unrefined—have a messy authenticity which I appreciate. But I still don't like it as much as I wanted to.


Title: Smoketown
Author: Tenea D. Johnson
Published: Blind Eye Books, 2016 (2011)
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 200
Total Page Count: 259,565
Text Number: 840
Read Because: personal enjoyment, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: After being decimated by plague, the city of Leiodare stands isolated and safeguarded against the world near-future world. This is a book in which the setting is the central, and arguably most distinct, character; isolationist and traumatized; divided between advanced technology and gangs, cults and ritual. It's stylized and not especially convincing worldbuilding (I could do without the made-up nouns), but is also the book's highlight, an evocative, atmospheric study of society-building and social change. Plot and characters are by contrast vaguely forgettable. Of the trio of PoVs and overlapping plotlines, only Anna's interested me; there's big concepts at play in the plot, but they're underexplored and have predictable resolutions.

Smoketown reminds me of Brissett's Elysium, a more ambitious book with a similar focus on city as central character.* I wonder if ambition could have saved Smoketown, made it more focused and concrete; or if the problem is that Johnson's abilities can't yet support the ambition of Smoketown. Her floaty voice compliments Leiodare, but it makes for a distant, dead narrative, particularly in dialog and character interactions. I'll consider reading her other work to find out; I think her intentions and potential are promising.

* and Tidbeck's Amatka, another floaty city-as-character novel, this one with more satisfying worldbuilding and speculative concepts.


Title: The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms (Inheritance Trilogy Book 1)
Author: N.K. Jemisin
Published: Orbit, 2010
Rating: 4 of 5
Page Count: 420
Total Page Count: 259,985
Text Number: 841
Read Because: fan of the author, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: A woman is pulled from the relative obscurity of her distant kingdom into the central capital ruled by corruption and the power of enslaved gods. To my surprise, I like this fractionally more than the Broken Earth series, which I enjoyed; I find this atmosphere more appealing, the narrative trick here more successful than in The Fifth Season. I am never entirely on-board with the divine on this scale, with the localization of their influence and interactions, with the kinship between gods and humanity—even if intelligently interrogated by the text, as it is here. I want my gods larger and weirder. But within those limitations, this is an intriguing and evocative concept, well-complimented by Jeminsin's language; the theology is convincing, the gods large and strange; the ending suits that scale admirably well (although it would had been better left to stand alone, without the appendices). The pettier political plot is relatively well balanced against these aspects; many of the character types and dynamics are recycled into the Broken Earth books, but honestly I don't mind—like Jeminsin, I find them id-gratifying. I will continue with the series.

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