You few, you proud, you selective -- you readers -- I like to imagine that you've been wondering why I have not posted any "What I read last week ..." entries for two weeks now. The pithy and obvious answer: because I have not read any books for two weeks.
Does admitting that mean I've lost my bookworm cred?
It's been a fairly hectic two weeks, what with the usual two-and-a-half hours I spend on the road in rush-hour traffic each day, and ripping the bejeesus out of my yard, and getting the paperwork in order for refinancing the house, and discovering that the mighty Saturn's repair bill is more than the actual value of my trusty ten-year-old car (sob!), and going to Monterey to see their new white shark, and honestly ... I have not really had "time" for reading. Or "working brain cells."
So here is what I have read in the past two weeks: catalogs and comics.
Because I am an assiduous recycler, I do not have the compleat catalog of my bulk-mail inventory, but all the usual suspects have passed through our recycling bin: Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware, Crate & Barrel, Rejuvenation Hardware, Archie McPhee's, Johnnie Boden, J. Crew, Lands' End, Garnet Hill (which, in a shameless display of cross-company leveraging, sold my name to no fewer than five of its affiliates), the Oriental Trading Company, the Sundance Catalog, Design Within Reach, CB2, Uncommon Goods, Chiasso, Title 9 Sports, Athleta, Smith & Hawken, White Flower Farm, Art.com, Exposures, Flor, the Company Store, the Vermont Country Store, the Popcorn Factory, Williams-Sonoma, Sur le Table, Zingerman's, Penzey's Spices, Wireless, Flax Art & Design, Signals, Levenger, Olive Juice, Bas Bleu and the aptly titled What On Earth? And it's true --that's what I exclaimed upon finding it in my mailbox.
You know, reviewing that list makes me feel like I've left some catalogs out. The Fright Catalog, maybe? Cuddledown? Fine Cheeses of New England Monthly? I have every confidence that if these catalogs haven't already arrived and been recycled, they'll be waiting for me today.
And then there are the comics. Last week, I picked up and read Fables: 1001 Nights of Snowfall along with my usual stash, and gosh, is it gorgeous and sharp. James Jean's art in story is simply charming, all whimsical lines until the first panel where they skew, horribly and suitably, into jumbled confusion. Tara McPherson's art is similarly beguiling; I have adored her work on Thessaly and The Witching (one of the covers over on the left), so it was great to see her here. The Fables hardcover will be of the most use to die-hard Fables readers, because it provides juicy backstories and little continuity call-outs, but it's a nice stand-alone read if you are a collector of alternate fairy-tale interpretations.
This week, I picked up the final issues of Seven Soldiers (only six months after its promised release date!) and Planetary, which I am sure I have been reading since the Bush I administration. Or maybe it just feels like it since the issues don't come out on what could be called a "frequent" basis. Of the two, I think I enjoyed the Planetary finale more, despite having to haul out a crib sheet to remember what plot callbacks came from where. The Seven Soldiers wrap-up was ... well, it was Grant Morrison, so it's not like I wasn't warned, but I still feel a little deflated. Morrison has J. Michael Straczynski's problem -- great set-up, tremendously detailed fictional words and backstories, and weak denoument.
But now that those comics are done and my recyling bin is full, perhaps I can redirect my attention to something where there are more words on the page than pictures. Maybe. Tune in next week ...
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