We are so ready for summer here at Sub-cultured! What better way to meet some of our new writers and contributors than to get a look at their summer reading lists? It’s been great to see what we all have in common as well as how diverse are interest are. Check them out below!
Alex
1. On Writing by Stephen King
2. Redshirt by John Scalzi
3. War Crimes by Christie Golden
4. Matt Fraction and Ed Burbaker’s Iron Fist
5. Rising Steam / Snuff / Thud by Sir Terry Pratchett
Asia
1. Seconds by Bryan O’Malley
2. Hild by Nicola Griffith
3. Gorillas in the Mist by Dian Fossey
4. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
5. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Sam
1.Neuromancer by William Gibson
2. Stormbringer by Michael Moorcock
3.Foundation Series by Issac Asimov
4. Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey
5. Good Omens by Terry Pratchett & Neil Gaiman
6. American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Jen
1. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
2. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
3. Little Women [a re-read] by Louisa May Alcott
4. The Second Sex by Simone de Bouvoir
5. The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster [some of my fellow writers were APALLED upon discovering I’ve never read this book.]
6. Avengers Academy
7. Civil War: Captain America
8. Sandman by Neil Gaiman
9. The Spider-Verse
10. Young Avengers
Tushar
1. Ready Player One by Ernest Clint
2. Reality is Broken by Jane McGonigal
3. Horrorstör by Grady Hendrix
4. Art of War by Sun Tzu
5.GAMP® 5: A Risk-Based Approach to Compliant GxP Computerized Systems / ISPE
Hannah
1) Twelfth Night
2) A Midsummer Night’s Dream
3) Romeo and Juliet
4) The Tempest
5) Henry IV, Part 1
Hilary
1)Leave Your Mark by Aliza Light
2) Fluke by Christopher Moore
Max
1) Return to Augie Hobble by Lane Smith
2) The Goddess Chronicle by Natsuo Kirino
3) Lilliput by Sam Gayton
4) Beastkeeper by Cat Hellisen
5) Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods by Hal Johnson
6) The Ocean At The End of The Lane by Neil Gaiman
Kaitlyn
1) The Winds of Winter by just kidding
2)Star Wars Rep Commando #4 by Karen Travis
3)Backlash (the undeclared war against american women) by Susan Faludi
4)Finders Keepers by Stephen King
5) Go Set the Watchmen
6)Carrion Comfort by Dan Simmons
We’re clearly pretty ambitious. What are you reading this summer?
Kaitlyn D
Senior Staff Writer
Max here for a BEA2015 roundup!
I flew solo at this year’s BookExpo last week from May 27th to the 29th at the Javits Center in NYC. New York City dwellers, you must have legs of steel because wow it’s always a doozy. This is my third year at the Expo, and as such I went in with my usual expectations of what I was familiar with, and while I found what I was looking for, I also came away with a few surprises.
This year the show was seemingly as large as ever but also at the same time felt smaller than previous years. This was most likely due to the giant China pavilion, an entire area clad in white with stunning minimalist bamboo planters dedicated to this year’s Guest of Honor which appeared to take up more space than usual. Unlike other showcase pavilions from the previous two years China was very enthusiastic with their own journalists and a flurry of presentations and small talks which often garnered media attention. I just don’t remember other pavilions being that busy the last two years.
Unfortunately a handful of presses and stands that had been there the first two years I’ve attended that I was always keen visit did not attend or receive spots this year. While that was disappointing, a lot of my favorite publishing haunts were there for me to peruse for you.
Marvel for instance featured a panel presentation on their current record breaking new Star Wars line of comics (the best selling comics in the last twenty years, like wow) and shared the forthcoming reissues of the original movie to comic adaptations from the 70s to 80s in trade form as well as a brand new printing with updated artwork. They showcased their current series like Kanan – The Last Padawan (which has ties to the hit cartoon series Rebels) and minis such as Princess Leia and talked about their forthcoming mini Lando.
Outside of panels I was on the hunt for Sub-cultured #goodbooks to showcase on our twitter; amazing books, comics or series that stood out and you should keep an eye out for. I was also intent to find out “What makes a good book (for you)” asking any who was willing to share their personal opinions, which luckily a handful of people obliged and you’ll get to see their responses soon.
While there I found many, many great forthcoming #goodbooks; books, graphic novels, picture book and comics that I’ll be doing showcases for. Particular Sub-Cultured #goodbooks finds included;
Sam Gayton’s forthcoming American printing of his children’s novel Lilliput from Peachtree Press
Hexed comic series by Michael Alan Nelson from Boom!
The Hired Girl by Laura Amy Schlitz, Symphony For The City of the Dead by M.T. Anderson, Baba Yaga’s Assistant by Marika McCoola and Emily Carroll all from Candlewick Press
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland Decoded by David Day from Penguin Random House Canada
Painted Skies by by Carolyn Mallory and Amei Zhao from Inhabit Media (an Inuit-owned publishing company with a fantastic, brilliant line of books)
Red by Jacky Colliss Harvey and Atlas of Cursed Places: A Travel Guide to Dangerous and Mysterious Destinations by Olivier Le Carrer from Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers
Fearsome Creatures of The Lumberwoods by Hal Johnson and Tom Mead and Some Very Interesting Cats Perhaps You Weren’t Aware Of by Doogie Horner from Workman
The Good Dog by Todd Kessler (co-creator and director of Blues Clues!) and Jennifer Gray Olsen from Greenleaf Book Group Press
The picture books of Jenni Desmond from Blue Apple Books
Tales from the Brothers Grimm by Herbert Leupin and There’s a Little Black Spot on the Sun Today by Sven Volker from NorthSouth
Artbooks of artists Lorenzo Mattotti and Ana Juan from Logos Edizioni
The many offerings of Nobrow and Imelda & The Goblin King by Briony May Smith from Flying Eye Books
Windmill Dragons by David Nytra and Little Nemo: Big New Dreams from Toon Books
And even more. There are many exciting forthcoming books I can’t wait to talk more about!
The China pavilion yielded two more #goodbooks. I was captivated by a booth made up of mostly students from the Colleges of Art & Design, Humanities and Tea Culture at Zhejiang A & F University in Lin’an City, Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province in China. They were there promoting tea culture and were there with their dean, Wang Xufeng, whose book The Stories of Tea from Homa & Sekey Books was my first #goodbooks pick from the pavilion. The entire group was extremely nice and while there, the students performed 10 tea ceremonies including Confucian and Buddhist versions. Afterwards I got to interview Wang Xufeng herself which I’ll be returning to in it’s own #goodbooks feature on her book and the school.
My second find was a beautifully illustrated retelling of Wang Shifu‘s Chinese classic romance, The Story of The Western Wing (traditional Chinese: 西廂記; simplified Chinese: 西厢记; pinyin: xīxiāngjì; Wade–Giles: Hsi-hsiang-chi) (also known as West Chamber) by 20th century painter and illustrator Wang Shuhui from People’s Fine Arts Publishing House. Wang Shuhui was extremely popular as an illustrator during the 1950s and 60’s for the very same publisher. I was graciously given a copy of the lushly illustrated book and will designate Wang Shuhui as my first forthcoming “Artist Spotlight” column artist, a new venture where I’ll explore and showcase the art of artists both past and present.
In all it was an extremely fruitful venture, and I can’t wait to share everything with you more. Stay tuned!
Max Eber
Staff Writer
max@sub-cultured.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Last year we compiled for you our summer reading lists. Why? To inspire you? As a form of worship of our uber god, LeVar Burton? No, I respect the bandwagon, but I’ve never seen a single episode of Reading Rainbow. Hopefully this will serve as a non-threatening contract to keep us on task to read read read all summer. Keep us on track, readers.
Kaitlyn
Books, honestly have been failing me lately. I’ve started like 5 and have given exactly zero cares about any of them. Enter: Comics. I want to read classic non-cape series, so if any of you have a suggestion, let me know! So far I have:
- Transmetropolitan by Warren Ellis*
- The Boys by Garth Ennis*
- Miracleman by Alan Moore*
- Swamp Thing by Alan Moore
- Kabuki by David Mack
- Johnny the Homicidal Maniac by Jhonen Vasquez
- Monster by Naoki Urasawa
- Black Hole by Charles Burns
- Criminal by Ed Brubaker
- Invisibles by Grant Morrison
*Already conquered and insist you read
Leia and Kimmie
Our fearless leaders will be focusing all their scholarly pursuits on rereading A Song of Ice and Fire with a fine-tooth comb in order to bring you all some amazing content to quench your Game of Thrones addictions before the next season (and years before the next book). Stay tuned.
Max
Proudly spending the summer reading some great Children’s lit, short story and novels including:
- The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place: The Mysterious Howling by Maryrose Wood,
- Splendors and Glooms by Laura Amy Schlitz
- Sea Monsters, a Voyage Around the World’s Most Beguiling Map by Joseph Nigg (that’s nonfiction)
- The Complete Stories of Evelyn Waugh
- A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh
- The Stranger by Albert Camus
- Why Fairy Tales Stick, The Evolution and Relevance of a Genre by Jack Zipen (nonfiction)
Samuel
Sam will be reading a bunch of stuff that I’ve never heard of. Go, Sam!
- Cibola Burn by James A. Corey
- California Bones by Greg van Eekhout
- The Quick: A Novel by Lauren Owen
- Red Rising by Pierce Brown
- Moth and Spark by Anne Leonard
- The Girl with All the Gifts by M.R. Carey
- Casino Royale by Ian Fleming
Jen
Jen will be playing around in almost every literary corner this summer.
- The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian (re-reading these with a friend);
- Beowulf (also a re-read and one of my favs)
- King Dork (new YA) by Frank Portman
- Alice I Have Been (new-ish adult fiction) by Melanie Benjamin
- American Gods (you may have heard of that one)
- Marie Antoinette: the Journey by Antonia Fraser
- Shockaholic by Carrie Fisher
- Wonderbook (about writing imaginative fiction) by Jeff VanderMeer and Jeremy Zerfoss
- Captain America comics (starting in all his cheesy boy-sidekick glory).
Tushar
“My version of asoiaf:
-‘yo dawg you goin to work?’
-‘ain’t nobody got time for that it’s icy n shit. Buildin me a fire and Makin smores.’
-‘Say word son. Say word.””
Whatever you say, Tushar.
Best of luck to all you readers out there and we hope you accomplish all your literary dreams!
Remember when you were in school and the summer reading lists were handed out? You groaned inwardly as you pictured the summer you had looked forward to crushed in an instant by the prospect of squandered sunny afternoons. Sound familiar? No? Well not to us either. We love summer reading and even without a middle school teacher forcing us to do it, we decided to make up our own list of books to spend our beach days and summer nights with.
Spoiler Alert: We seem to really love Neil Gaiman
Kaitlyn
This is the summer of classics, brand new, and horror. I’m trying to skip rereading things, because that becomes a slippery slope where I just reread A Song of Ice and Fire for the billionth time. Best part so far has been making the summer reading shelf on my e-reader.
NOS4A2 by Joe Hill
First book of the summer? Already finished it. Hill is a horror force all of his own. N0S4A2’s about a bad man with a bad car (and throw some terrifying vampire children in to the mix just for kicks) It’s a bit on the long side, but the pacing is good, the characters are amazing. It was a wild ride.
Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
Due out June 18th, I’m hoping this new effort by Gaiman will hold me over until the new Sandman mini is out. I didn’t really enjoy American Gods but we’ll see.
Lolita- by Vladimir Nabokov
Creepy, right? This is my idea of a break from horror. Go figure.
Player Piano- Kurt Vonnegut
Recommended by a friend who suggested the only other Vonnegut book I’ve read, Mother Night. It’s about a dystopian future where society is almost fully mechanized. Sounds extremely similar to a dope digital comic that I reviewed earlier that everyone whose ears pricked up at the description of Player Piano should check out.
Sati by Christopher Pike
Recommended by our lovely editor, Leia. Sati is about a young hitchhiker who claims she is god. Sounds good, and Leia has rarely steered me wrong before.
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson
This movie terrified me as a child, so it seems right that the books should terrify me as an adult. Not the awful 1990’s version with strange babies and Catherine Zeta Jones, mind you. The 1963 version with the terror artistically done with sound effects and camera tricks. It’s a classic of American Horror and I’m super excited to get in to it.
The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury
For someone who loves Science Fiction, I’m woefully lacking in the classics. This is my solution.
The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett
This is the stuff that dreams are made of…and that’s it. No idea why this is on my list, I’ve never seen the movie but there you go.
At the rate I’m going I’ll be finished with my list before I’m finished with August, so I’m sure I’ll have to add a few books, any suggestions?
Leia
The Silmarillion by J.R.R. Tolkien
Often hailed as the most difficult of the Tolkien works, Silmarillion is one I am glad to devote part of my summer to as it covers EVERYTHING, from the creation of Ea, the world that is, to the Third Age, the time we experience the LOTR series.
NOS4A2 By Joe Hill
NOS4A2 is my third trip into the mind of Joe Hill and excited doesn’t even cover it! This will probably be my second book in the summer as I might need something a bit more livelier after Silmarillion
The Immortals Quartet by Tamora Pierce
The Immortals is a Young Adult series by a favorite author of Deadrabbit92, Tamora Pierce. The books revolve around a young girl who has wild magic and so far, book one is AMAZING. It makes me wish I could talk to whales *sniff*
Marceline and the Scream Queens by Meredith Gran
Marceline and the Scream Queens brings our favorite vampire into a band with the uptight Princess Bubblegum so I can’t wait to see what sort of shenanigans they get into.
Star Wars: Legacy of the Force
Legacy of the Force…I always hear bad things about it and as usual, I’d like to make up my mind itself, so why not give it a go? It’s a series we haven’t quite touched on in the Star Wars book club I run on Facebook, so this will be some supplemental reading
Sam
Sam begins a summer of rereads!
American Gods(author’s preferred edition) by Neil Gaiman
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
Maus by Art Spiegelmen
Saga of the Swamp Thing by Alan Moore
Choke by Chuck Palahniuk
Invisible Monsters by Chuck Palahniuk
Make Love the Bruce Campbell Way by (naturally) Bruce Campbell
Jen
Wise Man’s Fear by Patrick Rothfuss
Marie Antoinette: The Journey by Antonia Fraser
American Gods By Neil Gaiman
Sailor Moon Manga by Naoko Takeuchi
Jen Recommends the work of Patrick Rothfuss for summer readers looking for a series to start.
Lisa
Warm Bodies by Isaac Marion
This is a case where I got such a kick out of the movie, I have to read the book, plus Marion’s own story is pretty funny, too.
The Improbable Adventures of Sherlock Homes edited by John Joseph Adams
This is a compilation of Sherlock stories similar to the one I reviewed, except contributors are “darker” authors like Neil Gaiman, Stephen King and Anthony Burgess.
The Price of Freedom by A.C. Crispin
The first “POTC” Jack Sparrow novel geared toward adult readers
What are you reading this summer?