Monday, January 25, 2021

The Adventures of Jodelle

'The Adventures of Jodelle' by Guy Peellaert and Pierre Bartier
Fantagraphics, 2013

'The Adventures of Jodelle' (160 pp.) was published in January 2013 by Fantagraphics Books. Like all the books from Fantagraphics, it's very well-made, measuring 13 1/4 x 10 1/2 inches in size, printed on higher-quality paper with very good color separations. A special feature of the book is the inclusion in one chapter of a sheet of tracing paper, designed to overlay a draft artwork page and thus reproduce the sequential process by which Peellaert drew and colored his 'Jodelle' comic. 

Few publishers other than Fantagraphics would be willing to commission the printing and binding of a book designed to accommodate such detail.


Prior to reading this book, I was somewhat familiar with Belgian artist Peellaert (April 6 1934 – November 17 2008) from his 1973 trade paperback of portraits of famous rock-and-roll performers, Rock Dreams

'Jodelle' reprints his graphic novel, first published as Les Aventures de Jodelle in France in 1966, along with an 80-page section containing  essays that cover Peellaert's early career, his commercial art, and his role in defining French pop culture during the 60s and 70s. 

These essays are pretty awful, as they are written by academics and overloaded with jargon and fatuous phrasing.

'Jodelle' garnered attention for its use of a Pop Art style reliant on bright, flat colors. As mentioned above, the book goes into detail on the painstaking process by which Peellaert drew and hand-colored each page.

The plot of 'Jodelle' is not particularly involved: the nubile heroine cavorts in a near-future, 'decadent' world populated by characters resembling some of the major pop culture and political figures of 1960s France. Needless to say, these satirical references likely are going to draw blanks from non-French readers, although the supplemental essays provide some degree of insight into these topics (for example, Peellaert's erotic obsession with France's 'Ye-Ye Girls', including Sylvie Vartan and Francoise Hardy).

I finished 'The Adventures of Jodelle' thinking that the book is an over-elaborate treatment of a comic strip that, like many pop culture phenomena, had a very short shelf life. I doubt that many contemporary readers will find 'Jodelle' that impressive or impactful; they likely will be amused to know that its fame in 1966 came mostly from its titillating aspects, which seem quaint and innocent by the standards of the early 21st century.

Used copies of 'The Adventures of Jodelle' have rather steep asking prices, as does the 80-page, comic-only version published by Fantagraphics in 2013. Accordingly, I believe that 'The Adventures of Jodelle' likely will be of interest only to a narrow segment of the reading public in Anglophone countries: those who enjoy French popular culture, the history and lore of comics, the Pop Art movement in Western Europe during the 1960s, and commercial art and television production at that time. 




Saturday, January 23, 2021

Vigilante Force, 1976

Victoria Principal
Vigilante Force, 1976

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Book Review: The Penal Colony

Book Review: 'The Penal Colony' by Richard Herley

5 / 5 Stars

Richard Herley (b. 1950) published his first novel, 'The Stone Arrow', in 1978 in the U.K. He followed it up with two more novels in what came to be known as 'The Pagans' trilogy. 'The Penal Colony' first was published in the U.K. in 1987; this Ballantine Books mass-market paperback version was published in the U.S. in June 1989. 

'The Penal Colony' was made into a 1994 feature film, titled No Escape, starring Ray Liotta.

Herley continues to published novels, mainly as ebooks, in the drama, suspense, and crime genres.

'The Penal Colony' is set in 1997, when the U.K. government - no doubt inspired by the film Escape from New York - has decided to convert some of its offshore islands into maximum security prisons. The rules on these islands are simple: 'once you go in, you don't come out'. A variety of high-tech surveillance and monitoring measures ensure that one ever escapes, save as a corpse bobbing in the cold Atlantic.

As 'Colony' opens the protagonist, Anthony John Routledge, is delivered to the island of Sert. Charged with the rape and murder of a young woman, Routledge - like the other inmates sent to Sert - is a 'Category Z' prisoner, condemned to live the rest of his life on the windswept island. 

The 500 inmates on Sert have set up two competing, and antagonistic, societies. One society, lodged on the southern tip of the island, is simply known as The Village, and is run by an overlord known as The Father. The other society, lodged on the northern end of the island in Old Town, is run by the most powerful and ruthless of the Category Z prisoners.

Sick and disoriented from the drugs used to pacify him for transport from the mainland to Sert, Routledge, upon awakening in a hut in The Village, is given a cruel choice: if he can survive for 6 days on his own outside the confines of The Village, he can petition to be admitted to its society. Otherwise, he will have no choice but to take his chances at the hands of the felons lodged in Old Town.

Completely unprepared for the reality of life in the Penal Colony, the hapless Routledge must struggle to survive in the wilderness of Sert.......where both the Wild Men - who eke out an existence in the inhospitable terrain - and the violent residents of Old Town are perfectly happy to use any 'New Meat' for their own depraved purposes.......

I first read 'The Penal Colony' when it was released in paperback in 1989 and thought it a very good novel, and in the ensuing 31 years my opinion hasn't changed: it's a genuine 5 Star awardee. 

Richard Herley's prose style is declarative and unadorned, and his plotting straightforward, propelled by sharp episodes of violent action. The brutality of life lived under the rule of criminals who think nothing of casually disposing of one another lends a note of intensity to the struggles of Routledge and, by extension, the society making up The Village, the sole outpost of sanity on Sert.

The novel's ending avoids contrivance; there are no conveniently-timed Pardons to be issued by the UK government, and no clandestine escapes by helicopter. Indeed, salvation from Sert, if it can be gained at all, requires a uniquely cerebral type of desperation.

While both hardcover and softcover versions of 'The Penal Colony' now are hard to come by, if you see a copy available for a reasonable price, it's well worth picking up. 

Sunday, January 17, 2021

Richard Hescox: Science Fiction and Fantasy art

Richard Hescox
Science Fiction and Fantasy art
from The Deceiving Eye: The Art of Richard Hescox
Paper Tiger, 2004

I had posted some of the art from this book back in May, 2016, but I thought it seemly to post some additional content, if only to start the New Year off on a colorful note.......


Song of the Siren, 1992

Shai's Destiny, 1984


The Emigrants, 1987

Fire Lord, 1988

Lost on Venus, 1990

Life Force, 1988

Mission: Tori, 1989

Mounting Up, 1997

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Book review: Amazon Planet

Book Review: 'Amazon Planet' by Mack Reynolds
3 / 5 Stars

'Amazon Planet' (190 pp.) was published by Ace Books in 1975. The cover artist is not identified, but may be Robert Pepper.

This book falls within Reynolds' 'United Planets' series of novels, most of which feature the machinations of an intergalactic troubleshooting agency called 'Section G'.

As 'Amazon Planet' opens, our protagonist, a rather bland and diffident bureaucrat named Guy Thomas, is on assignment to the planet of Amazonia. His mission: negotiate with the Amazonian leadership for trade in valuable minerals and metals with select member states of the United Planets.

Circling the planet in the S.S. Schirra, the cargo ship that provided him transport, Thomas is regaled by the crew with stories of Amazonia's female-dominated society, one where men are little more than chattel and kept in a kind of 'male' purdah. When a team of Amazonians arrive aboard the Schirra to arrange for his transfer to the planet, they more than fulfill the stereotyped image of Amazonian warrior-women, and Thomas is warned to follow their every instruction lest he be kidnapped........and forced to endure a Fate Worse than Death.

Once on the ground, Thomas reveals he is not quite what he seems, and in fact possesses an ulterior motive: he is to clandestinely meet with a dissident group known as the Sons of Liberty. The Sons are made up of men who desire freedom and emancipation from the strictures of female rule, and they hope that the United Planets will support their cause.

Although Thomas finds the leaders of the Sons of Liberty to be underwhelming personalities, he agrees to plead their case to the United Planets. But it turns out the Amazonian leadership have their suspicions about Guy Thomas, and his real purpose for traveling to their planet, and they are quite comfortable with using any and all methods of interrogation to learn the truth behind his actions..........

Dallas McCord Reynolds, who used the pen name Mack Reynolds (1917 - 1983), was an author who wrote sci-fi to earn a living. During the nearly four decades (1950s - 1980s) he was active as a writer he published over 200 novels and short stories, some of these posthumously. Inevitably, some of this content was less than polished, and I have to assign 'Amazon Planet' to that category.

The narrative moves at a good pace, but in its later chapters takes on the character of a crime novel, as revelations about the true nature of society of Amazonia are paired with rather contrived action sequences that display an unimaginative attitude towards plot resolution. There are regular passages of a pedantic nature which illuminate Reynolds' stance on political theory and economics (such as, for example, the concept of basing an industrial society on the hour of labor, rather than currency, as a medium of exchange). I can't say I found these passages to be particularly engaging.

Summing up, 'Amazon Planet' is a workmanlike sci-fi adventure that stays comfortably within the boundaries of the genre as it stood in the mid-70s. I finished the book with no burning desire to pursue other Section G novels by Reynolds, although dedicated fans of his works may have a differing opinion.

Monday, January 11, 2021

Karen Carpenter: Makin' Love in the Afternoon

Karen Carpenter
'Makin' Love in the Afternoon'
from Karen Carpenter (1980)
You can't go wrong with the bouncy pop sound of this track from Karen Carpenter's one and only solo album, which was recorded during 1979 and 1980, and featured contributions from a lineup of accomplished musicians. It's the very embodiment of how well-produced, frothy, and feel-good a pop song from that era could be. 

The story goes that A & M record executives Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss considered the album unmarketable, and refused to release it. Not until 1996 (Carpenter died in 1983) was 'Karen Carpenter' released.

'Makin' Love in the Afternoon' features backing vocals by Chicago's Peter Cetera, and a fine saxophone solo.

In my opinion, the song - and indeed, all of the songs on the album - compare very well to the material being released by today's female vocalists.

Saturday, January 9, 2021

Wind by Kilian and Caza

Wind
by Philippe Kilian (story) and Caza (art)
from Heavy Metal magazine, January 1998


Even during the Kevin Eastman years and their emphasis on softcore porn, Heavy Metal occasionally would publish some worthy material, such as this existential treatment from writer Philippe Kilian and Caza.







Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Book Review: Cheap Thrills / An Informal History of the Pulp Magazines

Book Review: 'Cheap Thrills / An Informal History of the Pulp Magazines' by Ron Goulart
4 / 5 Stars 

What was to become known as the great Nostalgia Craze of American popular culture was underway and gathering steam when, in 1970, Tony Goodstone published The Pulps: 50 Years of American Pop Culture, a well-produced hardbound book that combined color prints of pulp magazines covers, black-and-white illustrations from the magazine interiors, and reprints of selected pulp stories.

The indefatigable Ron Goulart (b. 1933), himself a fan of the pulps, followed up in 1972 with Cheap Thrills, his own hardbound exploration of the magazines.


Like Goodstone's book, Goulart provided an overview of the different categories of pulps, highlighting some of the more prominent authors, editors, and characters. However, unlike Goodstone, who brought a 'this stuff is so campy, but hey, it's nostalgic' attitude towards the subject, Goulart was more affectionate in his treatment of the pulps.


In 1973 Ace Books released a paperback version of Cheap Thrills, retitled An Informal History of the Pulp Magazines (192 pp.). The paperback version contains a section of magazine covers reproduced in graytone. Cheap Thrills covered the genre from its origins early in the 20th century, to the decline and eventual cancellation of the pulps in the early 1950s.


In 2007 the Hermes Press released a 8.4 x 10.8 inch trade paperback version of Cheap Thrills, with additional text and illustrations.


Copies of all three editions of Cheap Thrills can be had for affordable prices, but the 2007 Hermes Press edition is the best of them in terms of illustrations and content.


I found Cheap Thrills to be very readable, filled with little bits of info and anecdotes that help illuminate not just the pulps, but American pop culture as a whole. Goulart starts the book off with an overview of the growth of the magazine market in the US during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, then segueing into chapters devoted to the different pulp genres: heroes, The Shadow, Doc Savage, crimefighters, secret agents, cowboys, Tarzan and barbarians, and science fiction. In the Hermes Press edition these chapters are crammed with reproductions of the magazine covers and interior illustrations.



My one complaint about this section of the book is that whoever took the photographs inadvertently wound up cropping many of the covers...........?!

The closing section of the Hermes Press edition reproduces in their entirety the letters mailed to Goulart in response to his inquiries to pulp editors and writers for their reminiscences of the era. Along with insights into how the pulps operated, it's illuminating to see what it really meant to type a letter in 1969, years before word processor programs and PCs and personal printers became something we now take for granted.


The interviews with pulp authors make clear that during the depths of the Depression writing for a penny (or sometimes a half-penny) a word was a route to financial security (or even wealth, for some practitioners) for men (and more rarely, women) who were seeking to escape the pervasive hard times then gripping the nation.


Summing up, if you are a fan of the pulp era and its heroes, interested in American history and pop culture, or interested in the art of magazine illustration, Cheap Thrills is worth picking up.

Sunday, January 3, 2021

Totem El Comix: Especial Concurso

Totem El Comix: Especial Concurso
(Totem comics: Special Contest)
art by Federico Gonzalez
1987

This striking illustration by the artist Jose Luis Escalante  was used to demarcate a 'sampler' insert of comics from the Spanish magazine Totem El Comix that appeared in a 1987 issue of the Zona 84 Especialo Concurso (which loosely translates into 'special contest' or 'special competition' in English). 

Like Zona 84, Totem El Comix was published by Toutain and was aimed at the same readership that Heavy Metal magazine addressed in the U.S.A., albeit with greater emphasis on 'erotic' material.

The above illustration was part of the short comic, titled 'A Key Prisoner' (Un Llave Prisoniera) that was drawn by Escalante and written by Federico Gonzalez, and published in the Especialo Concurso. I've posted it below. It's unfortunate that an English translation never was made............