Tales from outer turnip head...

Tales from outer turnip head...

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Flying cows, new words, a friend's blog fame, and the sunny skies of pre-storm New England...

Helen Hunt, Flying Cows, Tornadoes: In 1996 a mediocre film came out that brought delight to my world: Twister.

IMDB users give it a 6.2; 57% from Rotten Tomatoes, and Metacritic weighs in with a green 68 (Users of Metacritic also give it a 6.8).

Helen Hunt, Flying Cows, and Tornadoes; What else do you need for "mindless entertainment" as TV Guide labels this movie?

I really loved this movie back in '96, and haven't seen it since. [I worry that it might suck now that I am almost 20 years older and maybe a little more discriminating.] Nah... Helen Hunt, flying cows, tornadoes!

One of the harshest reviews comes from Barbara Shulgasser of the SF Examiner:
...So that's the plot. Big swirls of computer-generated dirt, a bickering couple and the dead certainty that the fiancee will leave and the bickerers will get back together. An exciting night out, or what? 
Anyway, after "Earthquake," "Hurricane" and "Monsoon," it takes more than a simple tornado to thrill me. I look forward to other great moments in meteorological cinema. "Drizzle," "Sleet," and the real challenge to computer jocks, "Partly Cloudy."...
I May Be a Firefighter, But...: I am not an adrenaline junkie. I have fantasized being a storm chaser. I never actually considered it as a job path, but thought I would love to be on a semi-nerdy team that runs into danger while others run away...

"Bring it on.": I have always loved adverse weather that does not hurt me. I feel guilt when I revel in a storm that I find out later hurt someone's property or person, but it does not change how excited I feel while the storm is happening. I really do love nature's way of reminding me that I am small, and only regret that the reminders are so often tragic for others...

Arm Chair Excitement: So movies about crazy weather let me safely and comfortably think about weather without the guilt of the harm that comes from them. I have so many weather related memories that are cinematic in my mind: sitting at my window on Midhurst Rd. with my father watching thunder storms roll in, getting blown over in my back yard by hurricane David in '79 (I was probably only 40-50 pds), a warm summer storm in Baltimore that produced an updraft that turned my umbrella inside out and then ripped it from my hands, jumping into snowbanks from the second floor balcony after several feet of snow was dropped in Garrett Co. MD in The Blizzard of '83, explosively splitting knotty logs in the White Mountains -20˚F on New Year's Eve in '98, and on and on and on...

So here's a partial list...

  • White Squall (1996)
  • Twister (1996)
  • The Perfect Storm (2000)
  • The Day After Tomorrow (2004)
  • Eight Below (2006)

Now, moving on to language...
We love to hype things and we love to make up words. There are so many examples of trendy words, buzz words, and just plainly infuriating "must-not-use" words and phrases. But sometimes we make up hype-like words that just rock. Such is there case with weather words. Here are two of recent hype that make me happy to use, abuse, ridicule and love!

Last year the newspeople of Wether.com, CNN, Fox, and the myriad of local forecasters taught us a new term that conjured up epic columns of cold, Polar Vortices: As much as I grew to resent how often I heard the word by the end of the winter, and began to sarcastically use it for any chilly moment of the year, I never grew tired of saying the words "vortex" and "vortices" myself.

And it reminded me of "The Day After Tomorrow," which I saw on the plane returning from a wedding in Bath, England while everyone one else seemed to sleep. How could people sleep on a plane when such an extreme weather movie was available to watch?

Snark and Sarcasm: Well, today I learned a new word! Bombogenesis: It seems very exciting, a little scary, and is making me feel the rush of panic that will send me to Stop and Shop to get a months supply of burritos for my freezer along with some Breyers Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream. While I am there I will try to look as calm as I can while moving my cart at over 4 MPH to the candy section to get more dark chocolate for my children to sneak when I am not looking. (I find the wrappers stuffed into the cushiness of the couch like somehow no one ever cleans there.) Lest you confuse my intent. The panic is not real, but my like of this new word (provided the news people don't wreck it) is genuine; Bombogenesis! I could write a song about it if I had any punk-rock song writing talent. So. I offer you an explanation of the term from the Weather Channel's pages:
The word sounds ominous, but in reality, the process happens fairly frequently in the world of weather.
"'Bombogenesis' follows from 'cyclogenesis,' which refers to the development of a cyclone (which, in turn, is usually synonymous with a low pressure system, or low)," writes senior meteorologist Stu Ostro.
"Bombs are so-named because of the rapidity with which they develop, which evokes explosiveness, and the power that they usually attain once they have gone through the intensification phase specified in the definition (a central pressure drop of at least 24 millibars, or 24 mbars, in 24 hours)."

So what happens when a "weather bomb" strengthens?
Wind speeds increase and precipitation can become more intense, often creating heavy snowfall and potential blizzard conditions during winter storms. Heavy snow rates can also occur during bombogenesis, which is sometimes accompanied by lightning.
This happened in February 2013, when Winter Storm Nemodropped 29 mbars within a span of 24 hours (specifically, a barometric pressure of 1000 mbars was recorded at 4 a.m. on Feb. 8, and it dropped to to 971 mbars at 4 a.m. on Feb. 9). Winter Storm Nemo ultimately "bottomed out" with a minimum barometric pressure reading of 968 mbars at 4 p.m. on Feb. 9.
In 2015, Winter Storm Iola is expected to undergo bombogenesis off the Atlantic coast, possibly impacting the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast over the weekend.
Tropical cyclones can also undergo rapid intensification, which is a particularly unnerving development especially when it occurs near landfall. An example of a tropical cyclone undergoing bombogenesis is Hurricane Charley in 2004.

GSD: A few years ago a colleague began a blog that has received over 400,000 hits to date: Greylock Snow Day. Much of the blog employs a tone of humor, but is anchored in surprisingly well reported weather. Here is a little text from the sidebar of the site:

ABOUT US

The expert weather predictors at Greylocksnowday have been forecasting the likelihood of snow days since the Blizzard of 1978. In that time, we have correctly predicted delays, early dismissals, and full snow days at an amazing 97.65% rate.

DISCLAIMER

Greylocksnowday is only a free service and assumes no legal responsibility for any zeroes you may receive on a botched Snow Day prediction. Users of this site are responsible for their own actions. Any disgruntled users should shake their fists at the Snow Gods and pray harder next time.
Perhaps Bombogenesis will make it into a GSD entry soon... before everyone heads off to the market to get their "bread and milk!"


Sunday, January 18, 2015

I have to grade papers and I have a dog...

Max: When I was seven my parents brought home a cat for the whole family. He name was Maximilian. He was a pure bred Persian... like that meant anything to me; but I guess it made him special. He looked like he was hit in the face with a frying pan; I liked his smushed face...

He became my best friend over night, and I was even willing to share him with the rest of the family as long as they knew he was my cat. We three kids played with Max like he was the family dog, [but he was still a cat]. I figured out as a kid that I was a cat person. I wash't really into dogs. In fact, they often scared me...

Max was bold, independent, and very un-feline; I liked how he would walk into a room like he owned it and would sit down in the middle of everything, unbothered by the chaos of the world. When I was in college he died and I felt more sad than when my grandmother had died f few years earlier. I felt guilty for that, but it was the truth. I do not feel guilty anymore, as I have come to realize what a best-friend-pet means to a child, especially when that child is sad...

Dillon: So two years ago (in March) my wife brought home a dog (I am a cat person you see). The arrival of this dog was against my wishes, but he is now our dog. In fact, "he is the best dog... because he is our dog." I am still a cat person and think the idea of being the crazy cat lady is a pretty cool reincarnation for me.

But our dog is pretty awesome. I found a comic by a women in England named Kelly Angel that sums up "the power of Dillon" on a day when I have to do a lot of work and do not want to... [I think I will choose the dog and family-fun over work today]...














"Natural Remedy"


Sunday, January 11, 2015

"Graphic Novels" Part 4 of 4: Ongoing series (for adults) that I am currently reading...


Let me start by making sure I do not lead people to confuse my blog entries about kid-friendly comics and this week's post. None of the titles that follow are for youngsters unless you wish to offer up sex, violence, horror, and profanity to your young ones. My children have delighted in reading Bone, the work of Shaun Tan, and books like The Invention of Hugo Cabret. They have not read any of the titles below and will have to find their way to them behind my back at the library or at friends' houses at least until they get to high school.

I am currently following five ongoing series of comics. The Unwritten, Saga, Revival, The Manhattan Projects, and The Walking Dead.


The Unwritten: 
Lizzy Hexam is made of words.
The Unwritten  is an American comic book ongoing series written by Mike Carey[1] with art by Peter Gross[2] and published by the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics.[3][4][5][6]The book follows Tom Taylor, who was the inspiration for a series of hugely successful children's fantasy novels in the vein of Harry Potter. The series deals with themes related to fame, celebrity, and the relationship between fiction and human consciousness. (Wikipedia)
The Unwritten was a gift from a co-worker who bought it thinking it was a Harry Potter-esque comic for a young niece. He quickly discovered that it was not age-appropriate and not connected to Rowling's fiction. Although it riffs a Harry Potter theme early on, this is just a device to access a much more complex story about popular fiction, and offers content that is not for young children.

The story of Tommy Taylor seemed at first to be hugely derivative of J.K. Rowling's work. I was distracted by the parallels as I read, wondering how Mike Carey's work was not copy-write infringement. But by the end of Volume 1, I realized that the story of Tom Taylor was much larger than its initial appearances. All popular fiction became fair game for Mike Carey's story of symbol and fantasy.

The basic theme in The Unwritten is that there is a conflict over who (and why) controls reality. Power lies in the control of "story". Literature is the battleground, and the movement between works of fiction is the mystery that unfolds. Although the reader of The Unwritten does not need to know the plots of Moby Dick, The world of Harry Potter, C.S. Lewis' works, fables and fairytales, Canterbury Tales, etc. It does help to be well read in order to understand the subtlety that Mike Carey employs under a not-so-subtle main plot line.



Saga:
My Wife knew I was enjoying The Unwritten and searched Amazon for what other people who were reading it were purchasing. There were several titles she tried that did not grab my attention, but two seemed interesting enough for me to buy subsequent volumes, Saga, and The Manhattan projects.
Bounty Hunter "The Will" and his sidekick Lying Cat
Saga is an epic space opera/fantasy comic book series written by Brian K. Vaughan and illustrated by Fiona Staples, published monthly by Image Comics. The series is heavily influenced by Star Wars and is based on ideas Vaughan conceived both as a child and as a parent. It depicts a husband and wife from long-warring extraterrestrial races, Alana and Marko, fleeing authorities from both sides of a galactic war as they struggle to care for their newborn daughter, Hazel, who occasionally narrates the series.
The comic was described in solicitations as "Star Wars meets Game of Thrones," and by critics as evocative of both science fiction and fantasy epics such as The Lord of the Rings and classic works like Romeo & Juliet.[1][2][3] It is Vaughan's first creator-owned work to be published through Image Comics, and represents the first time he employs narration in his comics writing.
The first issue of Saga was published on March 14, 2012, to positive reviews and a sold-out first printing. The first six-issue story arc was widely acclaimed, and was published in trade paperback form in October 2012. The series won a number of Eisner Awards in 2013 and 2014, and the first trade paperback collection won the 2013 Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story. (Wikipedia)
Saga is a fun forbidden love story. Young passionate lovers are chased across the galaxy by those who want to impose their constraints on what they see as threatening, true love. The art of Fiona Staples is crisp and colorful, the story soap-operateic, and content naughty, very naughty. There are ample does of sex and violence, sometimes at the same time. Ordinarily my slightly bashful side clashes with my ability to awkwardly deal with moments of others' intimacy in visual stories (watching Game of Thrones pushes me to the edge sometimes). But the almost constant "mature" content of Saga does not bother me as much as I would have guessed. Somehow, it seems whimsical—perhaps due to the fantastic, outer-space, multi-species components of this comic. Nonetheless, this comic is rated "mature" by Image. I do not hang on the arrival of each new volume, but I seem to get re-sucked in to this title every time it arrives.


Note: I struggled to find pages to show that were "safe" for my blog entry. This may pique your interest, but bear in mind... I warned you. :)

The Manhattan Projects:
The Manhattan Projects is also naughty, but mostly as it allows extreme violence in a context of hidden government projects in an alternate, parallel universe to our Cold War history. The characters are real people; historical allusions are real as well; the rest is pure fantasy, and absurd fantasy at that.
The Manhattan Projects
The Manhattan ProjectsThe Manhattan Projects is a comic book series co-created by writer Jonathan Hickman and artist Nick Pitarra published by Image Comics. It is a story about an alternate history of the end of World War II in which the Manhattan Project was a front for other more esoteric science fiction ideas. The series is a monthly ongoing and began in March 2012 to much critical acclaim.
Manhattan Projects will be relaunching as Manhattan Projects: The Sun Beyond The Stars on March 11, 2015.[2] (Wikipedia)
How can you play with a cast of characters who are  genius, whose history is known, whose achievements are documents, and twist it all into something perverse? With science fiction, parallel universe and conspiracy theory: The Manhattan Projects offers just that.

I am not entirely sure why I keep reading this title. I find it interesting as a distraction, but do not look forward to the next issue as I do The Unwritten and my next title, Revival. The Manhattan Projects doesn't offend as much as it seems to lack a plot that moves forward. There is a theme that drives the story forward, but the elements have yet to link up in a way that would make me feel smart for reading it.

Revival:
I stumbled across the cover art for the first volume of Revival and bought it on a lark. I am liking the story quite a bit so far and look forward to finding out what comes next. It is not complex; it is not terribly deep; it is a page-turner, who-done-it, rural-noir that is just fun reading.
Haunting 1st Cover of Revival
RevivalFor one day in rural central Wisconsin, the dead came back to life. Now it's up to Officer Dana Cypress to deal with the media scrutiny, religious zealots, and government quarantine that has come with them. In a town where the living have to learn to deal with those who are supposed to be dead, Officer Cypress must solve a brutal murder, and everyone, alive or undead, is a suspect. (Amazon Summary)
I found a review on "goodreads" by Tanja Berg that sums up my experience quite a bit:

"Between the age of about 12 and until I turned 35, I did not read comics. I certainly never read comics for grown-ups. Then came "the Walking Dead" - the tv series. Quite soon after I had seen everything there was to see, I ordered the comic volumes and devoured them whole-heartedly. I'm still not an avid fan of comics, but I have begun to see the charm and have rediscovered some of the joy I had with comics as a kid.

"Revival" was recommended to me, for which I am grateful as I do not seek out graphic novels. I was shocked at the fact that it is in color and beautifully illustrated. That added a whole new dimension to the experience."

There are a number of "goodreads" reviews that feel Revival is too derivative of other "zombie" stories that are in vogue these days, but I must disagree. This is a different take entirely of the undead. These are people who come back to life, with their memories and feelings, and personalities. They do not come back the same, though. Revival is more akin to Pet Cemetery by Steven King, than to more traditional brains-eating zombie tales.



The Walking Dead:
Whereas I wait and purchase each new volume of the above titles, I was a little late to The Walking Dead, and so rely on the library and bookstores for this read. The recommendation for this title came to me through a breakdown of pre-formed stereotypes I had. be it resolved that "Parents of my students are supposed to be 'normal' by whatever definition that might mean"... "Parents who are well read are supposed to shun graphic novels"... "Small, sweet, mild-mannered women are supposed to be freaked out by zombie gore"... right? Oops! Well, I stand corrected. A few years ago I feel prey to my preconceived notion that The Walking Dead was for the stereotypical single young man who needs to get off the couch and stop playing his xbox. It seems that well read, sweet, parents of my students can appreciate a good and incredibly well told graphic story. Thank you Mrs. S. for opening my eyes to the world of Robert Kirkman and bringing a love of things zombie into my household.

The walking dead is not a label of the undead, but of the survivors who struggle to deal with the real enemy (other desperate survivors) amidst a backdrop of ever hungry zombies. Desperation, distrust, back-stabbing, always on-the-run survival is what Kirkman has had to offer for twelve years of comic so far.
Issue 50 cover: 10th Anniversary of Walking Dead's Premire 
The Walking Dead is an ongoing black-and-white American comic book series created by writer Robert Kirkman and artist Tony Moore. It chronicles the travels of Rick Grimes, his family and other survivors of a zombie apocalypse.
First issued in 2003 by publisher Image Comics, the comic is written by Kirkman[1] with art by Moore (issues No. 1 - #6) and Charlie Adlard (issue No. 7 onward).[2] Moore continued to do the covers through issue No. 24.[3]
The Walking Dead received the 2010 Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series at San Diego Comic-Con International. The series was adapted into the AMC television series The Walking Dead, which premiered in 2010. The television program loosely follows the storyline of the comic book. The franchise has also spawned multiple additional media properties, including video games (e.g., The Walking Dead video game), webisode series (The Walking Dead: Torn Apart and The Walking Dead: Cold Storage), and various additional publications, including books (e.g., The Walking Dead: Rise of the Governor). (Wikipedia)
Kirkman is currently working on volume 23. Early on he wrote that he had more plot outlines than he would probably ever get into print. But since then the series (both as comic and as TV show) has taken off, and the comic keeps rolling out. Few characters have remained through the whole story and Kirkman says that no one is safe. At times he makes almost complete sweeps of his human survivors, opting for the shock of character decimation over continuity of a single story line. So far, the protagonist Rick Grimes and his son seem to be the only complete constants, but even they are fair game in the zombie apocalypse. Although the plots of TV and comic often crisscross, there are substantial reshuffles and twists to keep fans of the comic still guessing as the show unfolds. There is nothing deep or clever about this series. It is just pure serialized zombie mayhem... and a great distraction from reality...



Well, this is the end of my four part series on Graphic Novels. Any recommendations people have are sincerely wanted and appreciated.

Sunday, January 4, 2015

A New Year's Break...

Although I was supposed to write part four of a series on Graphic Novels, I am choosing to take the week off. It is only a few days into 2015 and I am behind in my work already... and so I will steal a few hours from writing to catch up before I fall down.  

Here is a 20 year old ditty in lieu of the scheduled post...

 

the million hands which craft our lives 
exist unaware of our sufferings
and triumphs –
in a feeble attempt we reach up… (but 
to where?)… and fall forward 
on our identities…
– all for a glimmer of hope that 
one hand will reach out…
the one which is foreign… 
to help steady the fall… or if not…
at least to wipe the gravel from our smiles…




Happy New Year folks. Don't forget to be the reachers and steadiers for those who need a smile...

Sunday, December 28, 2014

"Graphic Novels" Part 3 of 4: Complete Collections Recommendations (for adults)....


It is hard to draw a firm line between Graphic Novels, Ongoing Serialized Comics, and Finished Series. For instance, Watchmen—clearly a complete story presented in "1 book" and found in lists of "Graphic Novels"—was released originally over a year's time, and is called a "Limited Series" in places:
limited series is a comic book series with a predetermined number of installments. A limited series differs from an ongoing series in that the number of issues is determined before production and it differs from a one shot in that it is composed of multiple issues.
To add to the confusion, there are stories that are presented in a fictional world that allows for spin-offs. Story arcs within these comics are completed, but they intersect with other stories, or follow completely different characters through the same world. I am currently reading The Unwritten, a fantastic story (I will come back to The Unwritten next week in part 4 of 4 in this series on Graphic Novels) that had one entire volume that crisscrossed through Fables by Bill Willingham (slated to be finished as a series this coming spring). There was a great conceptual connection and so the authors had an opportunity to connect their stories, something that novelists rarely get the opportunity to do. And it worked brilliantly.

So here are a few attempts to list a few of the more complete stories that I have read:

DMZ by Brian Wood (72 issues):

Note: I wrote a review of DMZ in a different post and so will not re-review it here. 

Here is a link to that post.



Sandman by Neil Gaiman (75 issues plus one Special and a handful os spinoffs):

I have mentioned Sandman more than any other title in my blog. Neil Gaiman's work is critical to the genre, and the story is unique enough that there is something for almost everyone. There are various threads though out the story, some violent, some intellectual, some allusion-al. Anything that intersects the world of sleep or dream is fair game for Gaiman's character, Morpheus. Numerous artists ink and pencil the series lending various story arcs different tone and feel, but the writing is consistently Gaiman's. This prolific author has written for adults and children alike (including the Newbury winning children's title: The Graveyard Book), sometimes confusing would be gift buyers. Sandman is decidedly a grown-up title. Here is a quick summary from Wikipedia:
The main character of The Sandman is Dream, also known as Morpheus and other names, who is one of the seven Endless. The other Endless are DestinyDeathDesireDespairDelirium who was once Delight, and Destruction who turned his back on his duties. Each of the brothers and sisters inhabit and are the anthropomorphic personifications of their concepts.[1] The Sandman is a story about stories and how Morpheus, the Lord of Dreams, is captured and subsequently learns that sometimes change is inevitable.[2] The Sandman was Vertigo's flagship title, and is available as a series of ten trade paperbacks, a recolored five-volume Absolute hardcover edition with slipcase, in a black-and-white Annotated edition, and is available for digital download. Critically acclaimed, The Sandman was one of the first few graphic novels ever to be on the New York Times Best Seller list, along with MausWatchmen and The Dark Knight Returns. It was one of five graphic novels to make Entertainment Weekly's "100 best reads from 1983 to 2008", ranking at #46.[3] Norman Mailer described the series as "a comic strip for intellectuals."[4]

Y: The Last Man by Brian K. Vaughan (60 issues):

Brian Vaughan is currently writing Saga (included in next week's post) and in the early 2000s finished a story about the single last man left on the planet.

Both titles have a hefty dose of sex and violence (not often mixed together). Both are absolutely adult only titles.
Y: The Last Man is a dystopian science fiction comic book series by Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra published by Vertigo beginning in 2002. The series is about the seemingly only man who survives the apparent simultaneous death of every malemammal (barring the same man's pet monkey) on Earth. The series was published in sixty issues by Vertigo and collected in a series of ten paperback volumes (and later a series of five hardcover "Deluxe" volumes). The series's covers were primarily by J. G. Jones and Massimo Carnevale. The series received five Eisner Awards.
At first I was prepared to be offended by Y: The Last Man, worried that it was glorified hetero-male wish-fufillment fantasy written by a man for a genre consumed predominantly by men. And then reasonably quickly it's min male character outed himself, criticizing that very aspect of his own existence. Although the title flirts with the wish-fufillment fantasy of how great it would be to be the only man in a world of women, Vaughan quickly paints certain "realities" that spoil moment after moment while driving a more interesting story than sex; what caused all the mammal's of the world with a Y chromosome to die except one man and his pet monkey? Implausible and fun, you never forget that Vaughan is a guy writing a story mostly for guys, but he has a few surprises in his story that provoke some thought and conversation.

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by Alan Moore (12  issues and a whole lot more):

Alan Moore, like Gaiman, is definitional for this genre, getting lots of mention in my posts. V for Vendetta and Watchmen were released as limited series, and thus each feel like Novels, in that they have a clear beginning, middle and end with complex character development. The titles in this week's post are more drawn out stories with numerous threads, arcs, etc. They have more a feel like The Tale of Genji, written in the Heian period of medieval Japan and often named "the first novel"—complex story arcs that end as others start, more like a Mexican soap-opera: complex, ongoing, but with an eventual end.

I have cheated by adding The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. It was originally released in two volumes each with six issues, but has continued to become something much larger...
Volume I: In the aftermath of the events of the novel Dracula, a now disgraced and divorced Mina Harker (née Murray) is recruited by Campion Bond on behalf of British Intelligence and asked to assemble a league of other extraordinary individuals to protect the interests of the Empire. Together with Captain Nemo, Mina travels to Cairo to locate Allan Quatermain, then on to Paris in search of Dr. Jekyll; finally in London she forcibly recruits Hawley GriffinThe Invisible Man, who completes this incarnation of the League. Meeting with Professor Cavor, the League is sent against Fu Manchu in his Limehouse lair, who has stolen the only known sample of cavorite and plans to use it to build an armed airship, against which Britain would have little defence. Having eventually retrieved the cavorite, the League delivers it into the hands of their employer — none other than Professor Moriarty (nemesis of Sherlock Holmes), who plans to use it in an airship of his own, with which he will bomb his adversary's Limehouse lair flat, taking large parts of London and the League itself with it. An aerial battle above London commences, and the League eventually triumphs. Mycroft Holmes replaces Moriarty as the League's employer, and the extraordinary individuals are given the task of remaining in the service of the Crown, awaiting England's call. It is shown some kind of a meteor shower, leading up to the events in Volume II. 
Volume II: Placed during the events of H. G. Wells's The War of the Worlds, Volume II opens on Mars, where John Carter and Lt. Gullivar Jones (of Edwin Lester Arnold's Gullivar of Mars) have assembled an alliance to fight against Martian invaders. When the invaders are forced off Mars and land on Earth, they begin to build their tripods. Griffin leaves the League under cover of invisibility to form an alliance with the invaders before betraying it outright, stealing plans for the defence of London as well as physically and emotionally assaulting Mina.
Mycroft Holmes deploys Nemo and Hyde to defend the capital by patrolling London's rivers in the Nautilus. Meanwhile Murray and Quatermain meet up with Dr. Moreau in his secret hideout in the forest, and tell him that MI5 has asked for something known as H-142. Hyde returns to the British Museum and tortures Griffin; breaking Griffin's leg and raping him before murdering him. Hyde dies fighting a tripod, allowing time for MI5 to launch H-142. However, before he goes to fight the tripods, he asks Mina for two things: for her to give him a kiss, and permission to touch her breast.
MI5 then launches H-142: a hybrid bacterium, made up of anthrax and streptococcus. Nemo is infuriated about H-142, and Bond coolly replies that they will claim that, officially, the Martians died of the common cold, whilst any humans found dead will have been killed by Martians. Angered by the British government's heartless use of biological weaponry, Nemo leaves in the Nautilus and tells Quatermain and Murray to "never seek [him] again", mistakenly believing that they knew the details of the British plan. 
Moore went on to release The Black Dossier, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Volume III: Century, and is currently writing Nemo. These are sort of continuations of the League characters' stories, sort of spin-offs. I have only read Volume I and II, found the story complete, and have not ventured further. It feels like collecting live Grateful Dead shows or amassing "essential" Motown recordings: the floodgates open and obsession ensues. I am trying to proceed cautiously...

Fables by Bill Willingham (150 issues complete in the spring 2015):

Willingham started a interesting story in 2002 with numerous arcs that transect each other. As Sandman finds material in all things "sleep and dream", Fables finds story in all things "fairy tale and folklore".

The further I delved in, the more I wanted more. Some story arcs were less compelling than others, but each offered a different perspective on stories that are near and dear to anyone who grew up reading collections of fairy tales.
Fables is a comic book series published by DC Comics's Vertigo imprint beginning in 2002. The series deals with various people from fairy tales and folklore – referring to themselves as "Fables" – who have been forced out of their Homelands by "The Adversary" who has conquered the realm. The Fables have traveled to our world and formed a clandestine community in New York City known as Fabletown. Fables who are unable to blend in with human society (such as monsters and anthropomorphic animals) live at "the Farm" in upstate New York.[1]
There are so many twists of character. The Fables know of their story status in our lives, but are not always the part they played. For example The Big Bad Wolf was a pig chasing bad guy in the Homelands, but is head detective in Fabletown; but because of his past, is not allowed to visit "the Farm" in upstate New York where the Three Little Pigs live. The series is an adult spin on children's tales. The story arcs are complex and as numerous as there are fictional characters to draw from.
Story arcs [edit] (from Wikipedia):

  • Legends in Exile (issues 1 to 5): The introduction to Fabletown. Sheriff Bigby Wolf investigates the apparent murder of Rose Red.
  • Animal Farm (issues 6 to 10): A revolt occurs on the Farm, a place for non-human Fables.
  • Bag 'O Bones (issue 11): A tale set during the American Civil War in which Jack Horner finds a way to cheat Death.
  • A Two-Part Caper (issues 12 and 13): A mundane journalist finds out about the Fables and they have to decide how to react.
  • Storybook Love (issues 14 to 17): Bluebeard hatches a plot to rid himself of Bigby and Snow by enchanting them, and the homicidal Goldilocks attempts to kill the pair. Prince Charming decides to run for Fabletown Mayor.
  • Barleycorn Brides (issue 18): Bigby tells Flycatcher the story of a Smalltown tradition.
  • March of the Wooden Soldiers (issues 19 to 21 and 23 to 27): Prince Charming runs for Mayor of Fabletown while the community deals with the apparent escape from the Homelands of Red Riding Hood. The Adversary sends his first troops into Fabletown to begin an assault.
  • Cinderella Libertine (issue 22): Cinderella's apparently frivolous lifestyle is revealed to be a front.
  • War Stories (issues 28 and 29): Bigby's adventures during World War II.
  • The Long Year (issues 30 to 33): Snow gives birth and realizes she must relocate to the Farm. Bigby isn't allowed there and instead exiles himself. Snow encounters Bigby's estranged father, the North Wind. One of her children is revealed to be quite different than the others, so she sends him to find his father. This story arc is retitled "The Mean Seasons" in the Trade Paperback of the same name.
  • Jack Be Nimble (issues 34 and 35): Jack goes to Hollywood and sets up a film studio. Spins off into Jack of Fables.
  • Homelands (issues 36 to 38 and 40 and 41): Boy Blue goes on a mission to the Homelands with the aim of assassinating the Adversary and learns the Adversary's identity.
  • Meanwhile (issue 39): What has been going on in Fabletown during Blue's adventures.
  • Arabian Nights (and Days) (issues 42 to 45): A delegation of Arabian Fables led by Sinbad visits Fabletown to discuss an alliance against the Adversary.
  • The Ballad of Rodney and June (issues 46 and 47): A side story of the seemingly ill-fated love of Rodney and June, two members of the Adversary's forces.
  • Wolves (issues 48 and 49): Mowgli searches for the missing Bigby and brings him a message from Fabletown.
  • Happily Ever After (issue 50): Bigby returns, delivers a warning to the Adversary and marries Snow.
  • Big and Small (issue 51): Cinderella continues her mission in the Cloud Kingdom, but must be turned into a mouse and enlist the aid of Smalltown's resident medic in order to treat a sick giant king.
  • Sons of Empire (issues 52 to 55): The Adversary calls a conference of the Imperial elite to decide what to do about Fabletown. Pinocchio has to face up to his divided loyalties.
  • Jiminy Christmas (issue 56): Santa Claus' existence as a Fable is addressed.
  • Father and Son (issues 57 and 58): Bigby decides that the time has come to square things with his father, the North Wind. On a hunt, his children encounter Bigby's siblings, who have become more beasts than men.
  • Burning Questions (issue 59): Readers were invited to participate in a contest by asking Willingham questions of unresolved events in the series. Here, they are answered in a series of one to four page short stories.
  • The Good Prince (issues 60 to 63 and 65 to 69): Flycatcher, who has never fully accepted the death of his wife, must face up to his past.
  • The Birthday Secret (issue 64): Preparation for war begins at the Farm and the birthday of Bigby's children.
  • Kingdom Come (issue 70): Boy Blue and Rose Red discuss their relationship. Flycatcher's offer is brought to the Farm. Plans are made to begin the war.
  • Skullduggery (issues 71 and 72): Cinderella repays her debt to Frau Totenkinder by going on a mission down South.
  • War and Pieces (issues 73 to 75): Fabletown and the Empire go to war.
  • Around the Town (issue 76): Fabletown's newest member is given a tour, much to the displeasure of some of the other residents.
  • The Dark Ages (issues 77 to 81): A new era begins as the residents of Fabletown face the aftermath of the war. New challenges arise at home and in a distant land a dark power is awakened.
  • Waiting for the Blues (issue 82): An epilogue to "The Dark Ages".
  • The Great Fables Crossover (issues 83 to 85): Bigby and Beast get into a violent fight that demonstrates the influence of the dark powers present. Rose Red sinks deeper and deeper into depression. Stinky starts a religion foretelling Boy Blue's heroic return, which a returning Jack Horner takes advantage of before encountering his son, the new Jack Frost. In an interesting twist, the issues are more focused on Jack than on the other Fables. (Note: Includes Jack of Fables issues 33 to 35 and The Literals issues 1 to 3.)
  • Boxing Days (issue 86): Mister Dark relates how he came to be trapped in a magical box by a group of imperial warlocks, and the rise of their leader Dunster Happ.
  • Witches (issues 87 to 91): The leaders and witches of Fabletown discuss how to defeat Mister Dark. Meanwhile Bufkin finds himself trapped in the lost business office with Baba Yaga and many other monsters.
  • Out to the Ball Game (issues 92 and 93): A story set in Haven, where the local baseball game leads to a murder.
  • Rose Red (issues 94 to 98): The Farm is in chaos, as various factions vie for control. To restore order, Rose Red must face her greatest foe - herself.
  • Dark City (issue 99): Mr. Dark uses his power to construct a new citadel in New York City.
  • Single Combat (issue 100): The final confrontation between Frau Totenkinder and Mister Dark.
  • The Ascent (issue 101): Bufkin climbs the Business Office's tree and finds himself in Ev (a neighbor to the Land of Oz).
  • Super Team (issues 102 to 106): Ozma puts together a team of Fables to mimic the superheroics of comic books.
  • Waking Beauty (issue 107): The fate of the defeated Empire's thorn-covered capital.
  • Inherit the Wind (issues 108 to 111):The North Wind's successor is chosen among Snow and Bigby's Cubs. In Ev, Bufkin forms a resistance movement in order to overthrow the evil Nome King.
  • "All in a Single Night" (issue 112): A Fables take on A Christmas Carol, focusing on Rose Red.
  • In Those Days (issue 113): A collection of short, short Fables stories.
  • Cubs in Toyland (issues 114 to 121): Snow and Bigby's cub Therese is taken to a bleak, mysterious land inhabited by discarded toys, inciting a series of soul-crushing events. This storyline has a backup feature that follows Bufkin's (mis)adventures in Oz.
  • The Destiny Game (issues 122 and 123): A look at how fate works in the Fable universe. Bufkin and Lily's adventures continue in the story's backup feature.
  • After (issue 124): Bufkin and Lily’s heroic adventures comes to its grand finale.
  • Snow White (issues 125 to 129): A man from Snow White's past claims her as his legal wife.
  • June Bug (issue 130): The daughter of Rodney and June, the Adversary wooden soldiers that became human, explores Castle Black.
  • Camelot (issues 131 to 133 and 135 to 137): A new dark age calls for a new Round Table, with modern knights willing to take on a sacred quest to reassemble the shattered pieces of Fabletown.
  • Deeper into the Woods (issue 134): Bigby Wolf wanders a heaven resembling the woods he used to hunt in, where he meets a long-lost friend.
  • Root and Branch (issue 138): Geppetto is up to his naughty tricks in a stand-alone story that fills in the gaps of an event that happened in Fabletown long ago.
  • The Boys in the Band (issues 139 and 140): Peter Piper, Joe Shepherd, Puss in Boots and Briar Rose - the members of Boy Blue's band - set out on a quest to free one tiny Fable Homeland.
  • Happily Ever After (issues 141 to 150 ): Good knight vs. bad knight. King Arthur vs. Morgan le Fay. Rose Red vs. Snow White. The two sisters are caught up in the roles Camelot has set for them, and now they’re ready for battle.

Next week: "Graphic Novels" Part 4: Ongoing series (for adults) that I am currently reading...