Skip to content

Tag: Jeff Lemire

Adam Bender reads… Lemire, Hornby and More

What does an author read? Books, obviously. Here are some of my recent highlights! Follow me on Goodreads to see more of what I’ve been reading. Please rate and review my novels while you’re there!

Frogcatchers

Frogcatchers by Jeff Lemire
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A moving, surreal graphic novel about life and death. Jeff Lemire shines again! It’s a short read, but very affecting. Twilight Zone with an emotional core. You’ll want to add it to your collection for later re-reading and to show your friends and family.

State of the Union: A Marriage in Ten Parts

State of the Union: A Marriage in Ten Parts by Nick Hornby
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Sometimes it’s nice to have a quick, breezy read, and that’s what I got in Hornby’s latest.

The author has recently had much success with screenplays, and this novella (about 130 pages) certainly reads like one. It’s mostly dialog, with the few scene descriptions reading like the setups for a theatre production. Given the ad on the cover for a Sundance TV special, maybe a quick translation to screen was the intention.

If the above doesn’t put you off (it didn’t me), you’ll find Hornby’s usual British wit in full force here, this time focusing on marriage and the challenges of maintaining a relationship for many years. It’s easy to read and hard to put down until you reach the end.

Looking forward to seeing the screen version!

The Three-Body Problem (Remembrance of Earth’s Past #1)

The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I’m no scientist, but this book sure raises some intriguing physics conundrums! This was a bit more of a math book than I expected, but the main plot kept things moving.

What really separates this from other sci-fi is the historical detail about China’s Cultural Revolution. That’s not something I learned much about in school as an American student, and reading about it from a Chinese author’s perspective adds welcome authenticity.

I also appreciated the occasional comic relief from the policeman Da Shi to break up what could have been an overly heady affair.

Think I need a break before I get to Book 2, but I probably will continue with this thought-provoking series.

Other Kingdoms

Other Kingdoms by Richard Matheson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I was well entertained by this novel’s unreliable, somewhat senile narrator who delights in simple wordplay. Those seeking an epic fantasy should look elsewhere–I would put this more in the genre of Vonnegut or Joseph Heller. It’s a light and easy read that brought a hearty chortle from time to time.

View all my reviews

Leave a Comment

Haunting ‘Secret Path’ Tells Tragic Indigenous History Through Art and Music

In 1966, an indigenous Canadian boy named Chanie Wenjack ran away from the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School. He attempted a 400-mile walk home along the railroad through freezing weather, without knowing if he was even going the right way.

Through Chanie’s journey, Secret Path — an innovative combination of music and graphic novel available on Amazon as a paperback/MP3 download —  illuminates a darker part of North American twentieth-century history. Gord Downie of Ontario band The Tragically Hip wrote the words and music, while fellow Canadian and breakout comic book star Jeff Lemire drew the sequential art.

The first time I experienced Secret Path, I read the graphic novel with the music on in the background. The book is short enough to read within the album’s 41-minute running time, and is split into sections by song, so it’s easy enough to take this approach. Taken together, the music and art flow together well, with the images enhancing the words sung by Downie and the mostly acoustic folk rock bringing out the emotions in Lemire’s expressive character-work.

Since then, I have listened to the album quite a few times on its own. The music definitely can stand on its own. With the additional talent of Dave Hamelin from The Stills (another Canadian favorite of mine), Downie’s album carries the listener through the emotional highs and lows of Chanie’s walk, effortlessly evoking images of the boy’s tragic walk.

And as I listened, I found myself flashing back to the beautiful artwork by Lemire. I’ve been a fan of Jeff for some time — especially his more indie work like The Underwater Welder and Essex County, but also some of his writing credits for DC Comics including Animal Man. Lemire has a unique art style that I recall actually put me off the first time I laid eyes on it. But when I pushed ahead anyway, Lemire’s haunting compositions transported me to another world. From the first page of Secret Path, Lemire makes readers feel instantly sympathetic to Chanie’s plight. And he leaves us angry with the country that let such tragedies occur.

Angry, perhaps. But also glad that these fine creators have exposed this hidden history through such accessible storytelling. It’s beyond cool to see a project with such important purpose come together into an artistic masterpiece. What’s more, proceeds from the project will be donated to The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.

So don’t wait — take the Secret Path. It’s a road worth traveling.

Leave a Comment
©2023 Adam Bender | adambenderwrites.com | watchadam.blog