Monthly Archives: February 2024

Women of pulp covers

Good grief. My computer is refusing to show me images on WP so if that’s happening to everyone, this post is pointless. Sorry! Research indicates it’s a problem affecting other WP sites so hopefully it’ll be figured out soon [update: it was]

First Robert A. Graef shows us a woman doing some sciencing.Then a woman-in-underwear-meets-alien scene by Milton Luros.And this man/woman confrontation by Lawrence Stern Stevens which does the job of making me curious about the story.And I’ll wrap up with one of Earle Bergey’s oddly gowned women characters.#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.

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Filed under cover art, Reading

Republicans as the cult of Trump

Much of what we’re seeing in the Republican Party these days would be there even without Trump. But much of it wouldn’t

It has, since the civil-rights movement and the women’s rights movement, been moving increasingly rightward in a desperate attempt to reassert white male patriarchy. As Fred Clark says, that explains a lot of religious conservative support for Trump — the white evangelical stance is to deny the full humanity of non-white people. I’d add that they’re also big on denying the full humanity of women (see this post).

But as several political bloggers have pointed out, Trump has also turned it into a cult that worships him. That’s one reason nobody stands a chance of beating him in the primaries — Ron DeSantis can imitate Trump’s polices and promote himself as a more effective hatemonger but you can’t replace a cult leader just by claiming you’re a better leader.

Thus we have Arizona Republicans pushing a resolution that would declare Trump the automatic winner in November.Back in 2020, a lot of Republicans really were ready to overthrow the government and as Trump is still lying about fraud, so are they. Or Stephen Miller declaring that if Trump doesn’t have immunity, he’ll have Joe Biden prosecuted and tried for something. Laura Ingraham demands candidates celebrate Trump. The Republican National Committee seriously considered making Trump the nominee without further contest. Matt Gaetz insists Trump did not commit insurrection in 2021. Trump himself says Nancy Pelosi caused it.

And no matter how stupid his babble gets, they’ll defend him. Trump declared he’d encourage Putin to invade NATO members who don’t pay us protection money, they’re going to defend him on that too. That includes defending Putin’s right to the Ukraine as Trump’s against us supporting them: Tommy Tuberville, for example, claiming NATO provoked him even though Putin’s made it very clear he wants an empire.

And while Republicans clearly prefer a border crisis to stabilizing things, Trump opposing a bill seems to have killed it. Not even on immigration, an issue their voters care a lot about, are they willing to defy the cult leader.

And now Trump wants his daughter-in-law, Lara, as RNC chair and she’s already declared she’ll spend every penny of RNC cash on his re-election bid. Which would work out great if it starves the RNC of funds for down-ballot races — I mean that would doom Democrats, please, please don’t do that!

But not everything is Trump’s fault. I could easily see Republicans 20 years back declaring that Palestinian babies are not innocent in war. Or libeling a scientist to the point he collected bigly because science is against their belief. Or an elected Republican identifying Texas as one of the original U.S. states. And the latest in the long history of politically paranoid theories, that the Deep State will replace Joe Biden with Michelle Obama (also here). Orson Scott Card was working an early version of that bull more than a decade ago.

There’s also the overlap effect: as Trump spouts racist bullshit and proves he can get away with it, more Republicans say it openly. Like discussing how the government is Jewish-controlled, or pushing other anti-semitic bullshit.

This tells us something about the party’s future … but I’m not sure what. Other than that Republicans will be a scourge for a long time to come.

 

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Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches

Fantasy love, real-world sex work: books

HELLBOY IN LOVE by Mike Mignola, Christopher Golden and Matt Smith is set in the late 1970s, as Hellboy meets archeologist Anastasia Bromfield  and helps her protect her latest find from a gang of goblins. Anastasia is confident, reckless and quite taken with her defender as they investigate sinister shadow puppets and an ancient, accursed skull. Hellboy’s a lot less confident when it comes to women but love blooms — and much to my surprise, stays in bloom at the end of the book (I imagine we’ll learn what happened to Anastasia eventually). A mixed bag but some fun stuff in it.

LUNAR NEW YEAR LOVE STORY by Gene Luen Yang and LeUyen Pham tells the story of Valentina, a Vietnamese-American teenager who becomes more pessimistic about love the more she learns about her family history. Can the art of lion dancing and the interest of a couple of boys make her change her mind — and her heart? A l0w-key, gentle story, but it worked for me.

CITY OF EROS: New York City, Prostitution and the Commercialization of Sex, 1790-1920 by Timothy J. Gilfoyle does a fine job studying an age when New York was a massive redlight district where women sold sex part-time and full-time, respectable businessman profited by renting out brothels (hookers had the money to pay their rent regularly), cops turned a blind eye and coutnless ordinary citizens had to deal with sex workers in the house or apartment next door. A very detailed look at the various ways sex was sold, the types of women who sold it, and reactions ranging from machismo (“sports” whose wild life was proof of their manliness) to reformers to anti-sex arguments that every prostitute was a sex-trafficking victim — no woman would choose sex work as an option! While sex work obviously hasn’t vanished, it shrank in the 20th century, primarily because it became easier for women to find decent-paying jobs. Makes me wish I were writing something where I could use this as a resource.

SEX WORKERS, PSYCHICS AND NUMBERS RUNNERS: Black Woman in New York’s Underground Economy by LaShawn Harris makes an interesting sibling to City of Eros, though it suffers from heavy, pretentious academese that made it hard for me to read closely. That said, Harris argues, as Gilfoyle does, that black women working in illicit occupations ranged from hardcore professionals to part-timers who turned to sex work or numbers running when they needed to pay the rent. For black women, however, it was more complicated as they dealt with racism from cops and criminals and outrage from some of their own people who expected black women to strive for model-minority status. A number of the women profiled, however, didn’t see any conflict between their work and being a good “race woman” — numbers queen Stephanie St. Claire was an outspoken civil rights activist, for instance. Interesting despite Harris’ writing style.

#SFWApro. Cover by Matt Smith, all rights remain with current holders.

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Filed under Comics, Reading

Youth in revolt! Specifically daughters

LADY BIRD (2017) was Greta Gerwig’s first writer/director feature, with Saorsie Ronan and Roseanne’s Laurie Metcalf as a Sacramento teen and her mother. They love each other but drive each other crazy (it reminds me of the romance cliche that the person you fall for appears to be the Most Obnoxious, Most Irritating Person You’ve Ever Met) as Ronan navigates first crush, first sex (“I liked dry humping better.”), college applications and hiding her working class roots from her school friends. All the material is familiar but it’s well done so I don’t care; I particularly enjoy this is low-key rather than constant high drama. ”Let’s name our star Claude.”
TURNING RED (2022) is the charming Pixar feature in which a confident thirteen-year-old Chinese-Canadian freaks out on discovering she’s been hit with her matrilineal heritage of transforming when excited into a ginormous were-panda (the director cites the panda-shifter of Ranma 1/2 as an influence along with the magical girls of Sailor Moon). This leaves her terrified that she’ll be outed as a freak, or that worse, her overprotective mother will never stop smothering her. Then it turns out the other kids in school think this is the coolest thing ever, but that brings on a whole boatload of new problems …

Like Lady Bird a lot of this feels like familiar coming-of-age stuff but it’s done with such warmth and imagination and with such charming characters, it doesn’t matter — I loved this. Though sometimes the protagonist’s embarrassment was so painful I had to look away from the screen (I have that reaction to what my friend Ross calls “comic embarrassment” a lot). With Sandra Oh as the voice of the Mom and James Hong as a Chinese mystic. “I like boys, loud music — and gyrating!”

Surprisingly TYG has never seen LABYRINTH (1986) so that became our date night movie last weekend. Jennifer Connelly plays a teenager who coccoons herself in fantasy and fairytale reading. When her parents insist she babysit her little brother so they can go out, it seems perfectly whimsical and harmless to call on the Goblin King to take him away. Unfortunately the king (David Bowie) was listening … Now all Connelly has to do is enter his realm, make her way through the title labyrinth to his castle, survive assorted traps and recover her brother. Simple, right?

The combined imagination of Jim Henson and British fantasy artist Brian Froud make this a visual treat that I’ve enjoyed multiple times. It’s less TYG’s cup of tea than mine, but she still loved it, so yay. “You wouldn’t be so brave if you had ever smelled the Bog of Eternal Stench.”

#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.

 

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Caged forever? Kind of

Plushie came off cage rest Tuesday in the sense his back has healed up. However it’s never going to be right — back issues are part of his breed — so he’s still in a cage. When we can, we put him in a cage on the couch, often with Trixie as you see here. When he’s too rowdy, we put him back in the cage on the floor, sometimes with me joining him. The thing is, his back will go out again if he jumps enough or climbs enough stairs so we’re determined to avoid that and postpone the next incident as long as possible. The cage stops him from jumping off the couch, or more likely on and off, on and off ..

It’s still better. He can sleep with us on the bed at night (we have a cage around it too — I know, it does sound rather kinky) and he’s much happier. And we can take him for long walks again. Overall it’s inconvenient but he’s our boy and he’s worth it. And TYG is still working a lot downstairs which takes some of the pressure off me.

I got more work done on editing Southern Discomfort. I didn’t get as far as expected because I had to rewrite one scene with the FBI, then go over it a couple of times. I’d gotten some technical points about bombs wrong and when I fixed that, I realized other parts of the scene would have to change. The scene’s better now, of course.

I went over my notes on the first draft of Let No Man Put Asunder and began thinking about how to improve the second draft (I’ll have some discussion in the coming weeks). I don’t know that I want to work out a full outline for the next draft but there are issues with the plot and character arc I need to address. If I can fix them, I think I’m in good shape.

I wrote a piece for The Local Reporter about a memorial this Sunday for an 1890s lynching victim. Over at Atomic Junk Shop I wrote about that god-awful cliche, the Hero vs. Hero story; the annoyance of titles that give away the big reveal; and the way the quality of a comic-book can rise and fall. While it’s not central to any of the articles, this shot of Dr. Doom after his mind has taken over Daredevil’s body was still worth mentioning — seriously, a super-genius like Doom can’t even suspect that DD is blind?#SFWApro. Art by Gene Colan, all rights remain with current holder.

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Filed under Personal, Southern Discomfort, The Dog Ate My Homework, Time management and goals, Writing

Wisp’s new comfy chair

We have a pile of sheets handy so our dogs don’t eat straight off the carpet. Wisp discovered them the other day.Snowdrop, meanwhile, has been trying to befriend Trixie. She’s tentatively okay with it.#SFWApro.

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Filed under The Dog Ate My Homework

Manhandling the Destitute

“Politics is bad enough in any shape but it shouldn’t get around to manhandling the destitute.” — Martha Gellhorn. But that doesn’t stop conservatives (and sometimes non-conservatives) from trying. After all it’s much easier to punch down than go after the rich.

For example Florida Republican Rep. Ryan Chamberlin wants to eliminate property taxes as a revenue source in favor of a higher sales tax. According to Chamberlin, property taxes “create an arrangement under which homeowners never truly own their domiciles. We all simply rent it from the state, and as long as we pay those rents, then we can use the property we hold a deed for,” he said. “This is not a tax; it is slavery.””

Well, no, it isn’t. Right-wingers have been thumping taxation=slavery for decades but it isn’t. If Chamberlin sells his house and moves in with family, nobody’s going to come ordering him to buy real estate and pay tax again. Taxation is coercive, yes, but not slavery. Slaves didn’t have options.

And if property tax is slavery, why isn’t just as oppressive to be forced to pay tax every time you buy something that isn’t exempt (as food is)? The answer, of course, is that sales tax hits much harder at the working class and poor than the rich whereas rich McMansion owners feel much more pain from property tax. Chamberlin referring to it as “consumption tax” is presumably meant to hide that, making it sound as if it’s some kind of punishment inflicted on spendthrifts. It isn’t. And several legislators have pointed out it’s a bad economic idea.

If Chamberlin is concerned about homeowners losing their property, he could always fix the home insurance crisis. But well-connected business people are making bank off that so I don’t anticipate Chamberlin or anyone else doing the (in fairness extremely) hard work needed to fix things.

Overdraft fees hit the poor hardest too, which is why I’m glad the Biden Administration is moving to limit them.

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Filed under economics, Politics

The other women in my life

TYG is the love of my life and it’s immeasurably better with her than without her. But she doesn’t want me posting photos of her online, so here are some photos of my other women instead.Hope everyone else is having fun with their special someone or someones today, regardless of gender.

#SFWApro.

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Filed under The Dog Ate My Homework

It’s tough out there for writers

Back in the 1990s, I made my first attempt at going full-time freelancer. I had a steady stream of income stringing for a locla paper, some magazines that liked my stuff, I was working on what I thought was a promising book, I had some money saved up. Looked good.

It wasn’t. The paying work dried up: the newspaper cut its stringer budget and the editors who liked my work moved on or found lots of other writers. I was not successful finding alternative sources which I think is a bigger problem: work often goes away but successful writers find alternative markets. And the novel — well, I was writing on my first computer and the freedom to endlessly revise a book led to me revising endlessly. Not Good.

It’s not gotten any easier in the years since. Like anyone else, we have to worry about financial reversals. Management can’t think of anything to do but slash jobs at newspapers and magazines. Here’s a good article about the boardroom games that led Arena Group to fire Sports Illustrated‘s staff. And switching to a non-profit model doesn’t necessarily help. Though for-profit propaganda hacks are definitely hurting. Then there’s the death of Pitchfork.Going indy frees me up to publish books such as Questionable Minds and Undead Sexist Cliches even if nobody else does. It does not guarantee anyone will buy them, let alone that enough people buy it to put bread on the table. If I weren’t a two-income family and collecting Social Security, I’d have problems. Promotion is an art and as I may have mentioned it’s often frustrating. To prep for the release this year of Southern Discomfort and Savage Adventures, I’ve been looking for suitable book bloggers and none of the ones I’ve looked at so far are accepting new books for review. Local stores have no interest in events involving books printed at Amazon, presumably because they’d be sending people to buy from the competition (and maybe the average quality isn’t great). And out of the several cons I’ve applied to this year, it looks like I’m going to be a guest at just one.

I’ve read articles that say you should spend 90 percent of your time promoting books, 10 percent on writing them which just does not make sense. That means if I worked 40 hours a week on my own writing, I’d be writing 4 hours (and there simply isn’t 36 hours of promotion to do!). Rebecca Jennings looks at how personal branding has become a heavy workload; commenting on the piece, John Scalzi ponders the outdated concept of selling out and “where it feels like putting your art out into the world is often like chucking it down a hole and hoping enough people see it flashing by before it settles forever into the darkness.”

And there are always ways it could get worse: Yann LeCun, a French computer scientist, has argued that as the money we make is so little, books should be free to download: we authors won’t lose much and think how it will benefit society!

No conclusions here, just brooding. And I’m still writing. As John Hartness said when I was at a con a few years ago, I may not be a brand name but I do get to sit on the writers’ side of the panel table.

#SFWApro. Covers by Samantha Collins (t) and Kemp Ward, all rights to images are mine.

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Filed under Doc Savage, economics, Southern Discomfort, Writing

Sen. JD Vance shoves his head even further up Trump’s ass

Looks like the senator really, really, really hopes to be Trump’s right-hand lickspittle — er vice-president.

Vance, , if you remember, is the raging misogynist who think being able to divorce an abusive spouse is a bad thing. And that people should get extra votes based on the number of children they have. I presume both are pitches to religious conservatives who think it’s a man’s right to beat his wife and that breeding huge Duggar-like families is a godly thing. His recent statements on Trump likewise seem to be toadying to the former president.

The recent $83 million defamation verdict against Trump? Joe Biden made it happen and the jurors were liberal so it isn’t a valid decision (as Philip Bump puts it, “suggesting that New York is one of several “extremely left-wing jurisdictions” where Trump is facing charges, implying that this was a stacking of the deck against Trump instead of a result of his alleged crimes while he lived in those jurisdictions.”)! And this isn’t something 2024 voters care about so stop mentioning Trump’s a rapist! And Congress should have refused to certify the 2020 results until the states submitted some pro-Trump electors because there were serious problems like social media covering up the evidence against Hunter Biden (Rep. Elise Stefanik, who’s competing with Vance for the Most Loyal Trump Toadie Award, is likewise anti-certification). Of course, even if that swayed the election results (it didn’t) that doesn’t justify not certifying the electors, any more than James Comey’s bullshit about Clinton in 2016 (which probably did tip the scales) invalidated Trump’s win.

Keep in mind, Vance has already called for Trump to fire anyone in government not loyal to him and ignore any Supreme Court decisions he considers invalid. And parroted right-wing lies about how J6 rioters are being locked up without trial. But as LGM says, his views (to the extent he believes any of it) shows again Republicans are all in on their lord and master, Trump. And for the attempted coup: Charlie Kirk, for instance, claims the rioters wouldn’t have been arrested if they’d made a gay sex tape. He seems to think this makes sense.

As Jennifer Rubin says, faced with tyranny, people can resist, accommodate or collaborate. “Republicans did not face imprisonment or death for standing up to Trump. It wasn’t that hard to put up a fight” but very few joined the Dems in resisting. Instead they accommodated, providing examples of “how a reasonable person can dismiss Trump’s astounding disregard for the law and even for basic decency and yet still vote for him and other GOP candidates in the name of some greater good” or they collaborated, whole-heartedly supporting Trump’s agenda and, if he wins, dictatorship. Vance has chosen option 3.

 

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