Murrin wrote:I just finished reading The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For, a collection of about 20 years of the comic strip by Alison Bechdel. Was entertaining, and a little educational (since the comics were so frequently plugged in to current affairs).
I think what especially stood out was the treatment of differing viewpoints - the majority of the characters are left wing and very liberal, but the character of Cynthia was a stark contrast, starting out as a stereotyped, very vocal evangelical republican, and later coming out as a lesbian but not compromising on her ideology. Rather than take the route of having this character grow by learning to overcome her conservative views, she maintains them, staying true to her established character, and although in the context of the artist's and other characters' views she can come across as naive or deluded, she is neither marginalised nor used as a straw man.
I saw on your blog (yes, some Watchers visit!

) that you were reading
Fun Home and meant to ask you about it. I loved that book, brilliant in many ways. I've also read
The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For and enjoyed it a great deal, mostly for the same reasons you state. I really enjoy the political references she fits into the background of her comic frames and the humour in the progression of frames, even the way she moves pets around, it's so cute and yet so real and tender. For a non-American, I also enjoyed the way it acted as a kind of historical-political timeline.
I pre-ordered her new book -
Are You My Mother? - a while ago and The Book Depository emailed the other day to say it's on its way, so I'm looking forward to that.
On topic, I'm reading.... too much. Does anyone else find the Kindle (or other ebook reader) encourages channel-surf reading. I find myself flicking between books. Anyway, I'm flicking between:
Trauma and the Avoidant Client: Attachment-based Strategies for Healing, by Robert T.T. Muller.
The Impossibility of Sex: Stories of the Intimate Relationship Between Therapist & Patient, by Susie Orbach.
The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: and other stories from a Child Psychiatrist's Notebook, by Bruce D Perry MD.
The Psychopath Test, by John Ronson. (He wrote
Men Who Stare at Goats)
The Spinoza Problem: a novel, by Irvin D. Yalom.
And a stack of books on the coffee table that mysteriously found their way into my bag when I passed the evil $5 book store in Wollongong
I do not have a problem. I do not have a problem. I do not have a problem.
Woops, bloody long post. Sorry!