Showing posts with label Raven Belasco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raven Belasco. Show all posts

Sunday, December 24, 2023

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2023, pt. 18: Raven Belasco

 


 

The Pleasures of Reading,
Viewing, and Listening in 2023 

 by Raven Belasco

 

 

 

 

TELEVISION

2023 was a helluva year. But I’ve been very thankful that, at the end of a long day, I’ve had amazing shows to sit down and watch to decompress.

I’m not sure how I found it, but one of the shows that brought me the most pleasure was The Diplomat on Netflix. If you had said you had an “American political thriller series” for me, I would have given you side-eye. But this show is so much more than that. It was created by Debora Cahn, and has a fantastically feminist viewpoint. Keri Russell is Katherine “Kate” Wyler, who against her will ends up as the newly appointed US ambassador to the UK. She must deal not only with the job, but with Rufus Sewell, her husband, who is always putting his thumb on the weights, with sometimes catastrophic results. The rest of the cast is a revelation (and very diverse) but David Gyasi as UK Foreign Secretary Austin Dennison really shines out. The show is witty, delves deep into emotion, and keeps up a delightfully chaotic pace. I am desperate for another season.


Happily, I got a third season of Lupin this year! If you haven’t been watching this French action-mystery thriller starring Omar Sy, well, you have three full seasons of delight ahead of you. Sy is the professional thief Assane Diop, son of a Senegalese immigrant. Assane’s father was framed by his employer, the powerful (and really vile) Hubert Pellegrini, and now Assane is ready to get revenge—but in the style of his hero, gentleman thief Arsène Lupin. The show is full of amazing acting, brilliant effects, and a focus on love and family. My favorite character is actually the dog, J’Accuse, who has been trained to bark whenever the evil Pellegrini’s name is mentioned. I suggest you watch it in the original French with subtitles—the English dubbing is disappointing.

An unexpected delight was White House Plumbers, satirical political drama miniseries starring Watergate masterminds and President Richard Nixon's political operatives E. Howard Hunt (Woody Harrelson) and G. Gordon Liddy (Justin Theroux) who are tasked with plugging press leaks by any means necessary. Through egotistical bungling they accidentally bring down the Presidency they are desperately trying to protect. Excellent acting, costuming/sets, and beautifully written.

All the Light We Cannot See is a four-part limited series on Netflix. Set in WWII in France just as the Americans show up to liberate the country, a blind French girl and a young German soldier  find each other through a shared passion for radio. That romance only really shows up right at the end—before that it’s all a desperate race to keep the radio announcements going despite Nazi efforts to shut it down, because those radio transmissions are guiding the American bombers. It stars Mark Ruffalo, Hugh Laurie, and a brilliant cast of actors who are all bringing their A game.

Another WWII offering on Netflix is Transatlantic, about the historic Emergency Rescue Committee that operated in Marseilles, Spain, and Portugal after the fall of France. Their goal was to get out people the Germans particularly wanted to murder, especially,well-known artists and scholars of the time including Hannah Arendt, Walter Benjamin, Marc Chagall, Marcel Duchamp, Andre Breton, Max Ernst, Peggy Guggenheim, and more. The cast is diverse, the actors are being directed to their very best, and the costuming and set design are brilliant. It will make you laugh and cry—or at least, I laughed and cried. I plan to rewatch it again soon.


Saving the best for last, Fall of the House of Usher is gothic horror miniseries, eight gorgeous and deeply upsetting episodes. Again, amazing writing and acting. The works of Poe all get name-checked or easter-egged as the Usher family comes apart in the most horrific ways. I think Poe would be proud of this show; it is truly unique horror for this age, as his stories were. This little snippet still sends shivers down my spine every time I watch it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIK-q6JoOeU

Just watch that show, dammit! It doesn’t matter if you don’t generally watch horror, this is simply too good to miss!

 

FILMS

As for films, these are the ones I made time to see in the theater this year, and all were worth it:

They Cloned Tyrone

The Harder They Fall

Barbie

All were amazing in their own way. Make time (and a big bowl of popcorn) for them.

 

BOOKS

Most of what I read this past year was nonfiction research for my Blood & Ancient Scrolls series. One of the joys for me in writing about vampires is that I can play around in any part of history I like, and I “have to” do a bunch of research for each story set in the past, or for each character who has a chip on their shoulder from that Thing that happened in Constantinople in 360 AD, etc.

 


Lucky for me, the last novella I wrote in the year had a section set in the khaganate of Khazaria in the 900s. So aside from all the other research I had to do for the rest of it, I got the excuse to read Gentlemen of the Road by Michael Chabon, who is one of my most favoritest authors. The book itself is from 2007 and is set exactly in the same time and place as the end of the novella I wrote. So you see, I “had” to read it! It’s a “swashbuckling adventure” that follows two Jewish bandits (who style themselves “gentlemen of the road”) who become embroiled in a rebellion and a plot to restore a displaced Khazar prince to the throne. It’s a fun little romp, but also as thoughtful and deep as one expects from Chabon. It was a treat for me to get to call this “research.”

I had a couple weeks to read for pleasure this past summer, and used it well by digging into the first three books in the Mycroft Holmes series by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Anna Waterhouse. If you love Holmesania, these books are perfectly satisfying and were just right for a vacation-read.

 

AUDIOBOOKS

This part of the recommendations is harder for me, because I mostly listen to audiobooks to fall asleep at night, and I have a bunch of series I just roll through over and over. So let me tell you, I can give you the plot of any Cadfael book in detail that would bore you. Likewise, the Miles Vorkosigan series by Lois McMaster Bujold. However, I do share audiobooks with my partner when we do long drives, and the habit these days to listen to the latest John Scalzi, which, this summer, was The Kaiju Preservation Society. I really cannot sum up the gorgeously ludicrous plot, but all you need to know is this is as well-written, perfectly plotted, and as filled with endlessly fascinating characters as all Scalzi books are—plus huge kaiju stomping about the place causing chaos. Simply: a treat, and read by Wil Wheaton, a double treat!


 Also, The Immortality Key: The Secret History of the Religion with No Name by Brian Muraresku didn’t come out this year (it was 2020) but I got it on audiobook this year, and it’s even better in audiobook than it was reading it—and since it completely rocked my universe when I read it, that’s high praise indeed. If you haven’t found it already, it’s described as “a groundbreaking dive into the role psychedelics have played in the origins of Western civilization” but it becomes so, so much more as Muraresku goes on a quest to discover the literally hidden Mysteries. It’s gorgeously written, and really comes alive when the author reads it to you. I could not recommend this more highly.

 

 Raven Belasco is the pen name of Lisbet Beryl Weir, for the ease of readers to easily distinguish the genres she’s playing with. By now she will answer to either name. She is the author of The Blood & Ancient Scrolls series. She loves cooking, yoga, and her small indignant terrier (who takes her out for walkies when plotting gets tricky). What little spare time she might have had is entirely taken up with sewing ancient garb and hanging out with her fellow geeks in the SCA.She is the editor of Adventures in Bodily Autonomy, which Aqueduct released in October.


 

 

Monday, October 16, 2023

Adventures in Bodily Autonomy, ed. Raven Belasco


 


 I'm pleased to announce the release, in both print and e-book editions of Adventures in Bodily Autonomy, an anthology of science fiction, fantasy and horror stories edited by Raven Belasco. It's available now from Aqueduct Press at  http://aqueductpress.com/.

 

The fourteen tales in Adventures in Bodily Autonomy flow across alternate universes and through space and time to consider the issues of reproductive justice through a fresh perspectives. There is an adventure here for everyone.

 

An astronaut on her way to Mars discovers she’s pregnant — can she keep her baby? Bee-like entities try to force a human to be their queen. In 1930s Philly, a vampire offers a novel form of birth control. From a ghost, lessons learned too late. Women who cannot find a comfortable fit in their mythic realities. Future worlds where reproductive choices are different, but individual choice and external battles for that choice are just as real. 

 On October 16, 1916, in Brooklyn, New York, Margaret Sanger opened the country’s first birth control clinic. Just nine days later police shut down the clinic, and Sanger served 30 days in prison.

For over 50 years, Reproductive Freedom for All (formerly NARAL Pro-Choice America) has fought to protect and advance reproductive freedom at the federal and state levels — including access to abortion care, birth control, pregnancy and postpartum care, and paid family leave—for every body. 

 Authors include Kathleen Alcalá ~ Elizabeth Bear ~ Raven Belasco ~ Tara Campbell ~ Anya De Niro ~ Jaymee Goh ~ Cynthia Gralla ~ K Ibura ~ Ellen Klages ~ Annalee Newitz ~ Nisi Shawl ~ Sonya Taaffe ~ Cecilia Tan ~ Helena María Viramontes

One hundred percent of the royalties from sales of Adventures in Bodily Autonomy are being donated to Reproductive Freedom for All to help them continue their vital fight for women’s bodily autonomy and basic human rights.

Advance Praise

“So satisfying to read a volume of new speculative fiction stories centered on women’s experience, women’s lives, women’s choices! You’ll find a pleasurable variety here: hard sf, fantasy, ghosts, vampires, horror, sweet lyricism and steel- edged noir — stories from well-known names, and stories from writers you've never encountered before. I guarantee that at least one story in this volume will make you punch the air in triumph, and another will work its way into your dreams, and not let go.”
 ——Elizabeth Lynn, World Fantasy Award Winner

“I’m absolutely blown away. Featuring so many authors who I love, this is a stunning anthology with many different approaches to the subject of bodily autonomy. Readers are going to be captivated by its range and variety. This anthology will be a breath of fresh air in the ongoing fight for the right of women to control and make decisions about their own bodies.”
 —Chinelo Onwualu

Adventures in Bodily Autonomy is a fresh and bold collection. In our current political climate, these stories and imaginings are desperately needed.
 —Myriam Gurba, author of Mean and Painting Their Portraits in Winter

Reviews

For this distinctive anthology, the royalties from which will be donated to NARAL Pro-Choice America, Belasco (Blood Ex Libris) brings together 14 thoughtful speculative tales centered on issues of reproductive freedom and female agency. The opener, Nisi Shawl’s stirring “Queen of Dirt,” about a Black teen at summer camp, explores racial bias and questions about what makes a family, demonstrating that the anthology has more on its mind than a medical procedure....Tones vary throughout: some stories are bleak, presenting hard choices or pyrrhic victories, but others sound more hopeful notes. These timely tales both draw readers in and have the potential to advance important conversations.   (Read the whole review)   —Publishers Weekly, July 2023

 Is there anything scarier this Halloween than the loss of reproductive justice and bodily autonomy? (Okay, this may be only one of the scariest things happening right now, but…) Raven Belasco has assembled this inspiring collection....So get yours and one for each of your friends!--Ms. Magazine, October 2023