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Before the Golden Age

By Carrie Vaughn

A lot of people have been asking me about comic books.  After the Golden Age is so obviously inspired by the classic comic-book superheroes, surely I must have a lifelong love for them.  But I have a terrible confession:  I didn’t really read comic books when I was growing up, and didn’t start until college, when I encountered Watchmen and Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and all those seminal graphic novels that changed everything.  Instead, I watched a lot of TV, and that’s how I fell in love with superheroes.

I grew up in a golden age of TV superheroes:  Wonder Woman, the Incredible Hulk, the Bionic Woman and Six Million Dollar Man, not to mention those Spider-Man shorts on The Electric Company, the Super Friends cartoon, Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends (I was shocked, shocked I tell you, to find out that Bobby/Iceman was supposed to be part of the X-Men.  I thought, he doesn’t have time for that, he’s off saving the world with Spider-Man and Firestar!), and a bunch of others I’ve probably forgotten.  I even adored The Greatest American Hero, which was on some level a spoof—but a spoof that remained true to the spirit of superheroism.  Ralph really did have powers, and he really did help people, however goofy he was while doing it.

I had Wonder Woman and Supergirl Underoos.  My second time trick-or-treating on Halloween, I dressed up as Wonder Woman.  I spent a lot of time on the playground in preschool pretending to be Wonder Woman, including getting into a knock-down argument with the other kids about what she would really look like flying in her invisible jet.  (I insisted on sticking my arms out and running around making airplane noises.  I was informed that this was incorrect, and that she would merely scoot through the air in a seated position.  Well, sure, I said.  But my way is more fun.)  I would spin around and pretend that my costume changed, just like Lynda Carter’s.  Spin Wonder Woman!  Spin Scuba Wonder Woman!  Spin Motorcycle Wonder Woman!  It was awesome.  And dizzy.

I tried reading comic books—my brother’s, not mine.  Girls were not supposed to read comic books, so nobody gave me any.  Fortunately, Rob shared his.  I gotta tell you, early 1980′s runs of Superman and X-Men and such were kind of…boring.  Not nearly as interesting as what I was watching on TV.  I later found out from comic-guru friends that it wasn’t just me—this was not the best time to be reading comic books.  It was the lull before Alan Moore and Frank Miller knocked the stuffings out of the genre.

These days, I have boxes of my own comic books.  It’s even okay for girls to read them now, which is awesome.  I came to comics as an adult, for the most part.  But my true love has always been for the superheroes rather than the medium they first appeared in.  Which is why, I think, I wrote a novel about them instead of a comic book.  I didn’t need the pictures.  I wanted the hows and whys and thoughts and meaning.  The “what if?” questions that made me daydream as a kid.  That still make me daydream.

‘Cause you know, I still occasionally dress up as Wonder Woman.

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Filed under: News

Posted on May 1st, 2011 by torforge in After the Golden Age, Carrie Vaughn, Tor newsletter, news |

Fall from Grace receives is Library Journal’s Mystery Debut of the Month!

Fall from Grace by Wayne Arthurson is Library Journal‘s Mystery Debut of the Month and receives a starred review in their April 1st issue!  Below is the full review.

“Edmonton, Alberta, reporter Leo Desroches gets the inside scoop on the dead body story handed to him, but after that he fights hard for every clue. The victim—a local prostitute of Native heritage—was strangled and dumped, and not a lot more is known. Leo, a deeply flawed, recovering gambling addict, questions the system when he realizes a serial killer has been knocking off prostitutes and disposing of them for at least 20 years in fields around the region. Seemingly, no one in law enforcement has cared enough to investigate a possible pattern. As Leo obsesses about the victims, grapples with his own Native heritage, and interviews sources, his own life is threatened more than once. Arthurson slowly pulls in all the elements to conjure the writing of a feature story, but his pace picks up exponentially, and this makes for a very satisfying debut. Leo’s gambling addiction is alive and well, which adds yet another unsettling element. VERDICT Think Nancy Pickard for region and atmosphere, Brad Parks for journalism, and Timothy Hallinan for social concerns and attitude. Highly recommended.”

Fall from Grace is available now.

Filed under: News

Posted on Apr 7th, 2011 by torforge in Book Review, Fall from Grace, Forge Books, Wayne Arthurson, mystery, news |

Gay sex restored to From Here to Eternity

from-here-to-eternity2Some censored gay sex references from the original and never published version of From Here to Eternity by James Jones are to be restored to the text for a new edition, reports The Guardian. The passages that were cut out were pretty tame by modern standards. I can’t see why it taken this long but life was rather different in 1951.

Jones’s editor at Scribner refused to allow the scenes to be included, and also excised various swear words originally intended to be included in the dialogue. In America at the time the US postal service would not carry material it considered obscene, making it impossible for books the organisation thought offensive to be distributed.

Posted on Apr 6th, 2011 by Richard Davies in author, books, news |

Halo Giveaway: Spartan Armor for your Xbox Avatar

Suit up, soldier. We’ve got Covenant dropships inbound and need every able man or woman equipped for battle.

So head on over to the Tor Books Facebook page where we’ve got some codes to award that’ll unlock some Halo: Reach themed Spartan armor for your Xbox Avatar. Each winner will also receive a hardcover copy of Halo: Cryptum by Greg Bear.

Prize Pack 1: MALE Spartan Armor – Red and a copy of Halo: Cryptum

Prize Pack 2: FEMALE Spartan Armor – Red and a copy of Halo: Cryptum

There are eight prizes to award (four per gender). Limit one per person. All codes are region free.

And keep your eyes on Tor.com for more opportunities to win some sweet Halo gear for your Xbox Avatar and other Halo prizes. Hoo-rah.

Read more about Halo: Cryptum

Halo: Waypoint – The official site for all Halo news, including information and media on the games, books and merchandise.

Filed under: News

Posted on Apr 5th, 2011 by torforge in Halo, Halo: Cryptum, Xbox, books, master chief, news, videogames |

It’s a crime: Jennifer Garner is Miss Marple

jennifer-garner1I see Jennifer Garner is going to play Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple is a new Disney movie. How can I put this? Garner is 38 and as fit as a butcher’s dog. Miss Marple is…well… an old crone. Remember Margaret Rutherford playing Miss Marple!

Miss Marple is supposed to be a spinster who lives in the English village of St. Mary Mead. Jennifer Garner is going to toss that old maid thing out the window.

No doubt we’ll be seeing Miss Marple in a bikini or using some kick boxing techniques on the bad guys. I hope there isn’t a Miss Marple sex scene because it’s just wrong and makes me feel rather queasy.

miss-marples-final-caseAgatha Christie is turning in her grave and I can think of few folks at Disney who should join her.

Posted on Apr 1st, 2011 by Richard Davies in author, books, crime, movies, news |

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