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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