Grant Morrison’s Luda

Grant Morrison’s Luda isn’t a beach-read one might enjoy in isolation. Instead, it’s best experienced as an object for discussion.  Author Gabino Iglesias, for example, feels Morrison’s handling of identity and gender merit analysis: Morrison shows just how fluid gender is while obliterating the idea of identity as an established, monolithic thing. Luci and Luda […]

Haight-Ashbury: August 9, 1995

On the Death of Jerry Garcia I walk with women spinning in the street,Between two psychedelic minivansGridlocked by the color-drenched bereaved.A broker’s luminescent tie commandsRespect, and, farther on, I hear some linesFrom “Alabama Getaway” — two bums,Both tenors, beg for change while singing songs,Your children left behind.Our Jerry’s gone.  The mourning City hums,“We Will Get […]

Revisiting John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee

During the 1970s, most boys around Campbell, California bonded with their fathers through sports, automotives, fishing, and hunting, not horror magazines, comic books, or Saturday afternoon science-fiction film shows.  I truly wanted to bond with my father, but he was into football and baseball, and for me sports, even still today, are yuck.  My only […]

Recent Comics Inspired by the Beatles

Lucy in the Sky Writer Kiara Brinkman and illustrator Sean Chiki craft the early history of the Fab Four . . . not that quartet, but the all-girl Strawberry Jam.  Lucy Sutcliffe’s life has not been running smoothly.  A seventh grader, she feels increasingly separated from her friends, Vanessa Takahashi and Rupa Khanna.  Vanessa’s discovered […]

The Tomb of Dracula #54: “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas”

Horror-themed holiday stories, whether filmed or penned, are nothing new, but clearly, I’m obsessed with 1970s Marvel horror comics and can’t resist talking about them.  I own all available omnibus collections, and I’ve written multiple articles where I mention how during the early 1970s the Comics Code Authority loosened its restrictions against horror comics, making […]

Whisper Down the Lane by Clay McLeod Chapman

In 1983, seven teachers from the McMartin Preschool were alleged to have abused more than 100 children.  The case lasted seven years and cost $15 million, making it the longest and most expensive American legal proceeding ever, but no convictions occurred.  Bruna Calado, Henry Otgaar, Timothy J. Luke, and Sara Landström with The Inquisitive Mind […]

Five Classic Suicidology Texts

Suicide is the tenth leading cause of death in the United States.  It’s the second leading cause of death for those 15-24-years-old.  In 2019, the latest year for which we have data available, 47, 511 individuals completed suicide with firearms accounting for 23,941 of these.  The national suicide rate, again for 2019, was 13.9 per […]