Monday, 29 April 2019

Other Words For Smoke – Book Review



Originally Published On Set The Tape

‘The house at the end of the lane burned down, and Rita Frost and her teenage ward, Bevan, were never seen again. The townspeople never learned what happened. Only Mae and her brother Rossa knew the truth; they spent two summers with Rita and Bevan, two of the strangest summers of their lives… Because nothing in that house was as it seemed: a cat was more than a cat, a dark power called Sweet James that lurked behind the wallpaper, enthralling Bevan with whispers of neon magic and escape.

‘And in the summer heat, Mae became equally as enthralled with Bevan. Desperately in the grips of first love, she’d give the other girl anything. A dangerous offer when all that Sweet James desired was a taste of new flesh…’

In complete honesty, I wasn’t quite sure what to think of Other Words For Smoke when I first began the book. The story begins at the end, before jumping backwards in time a number of years. The narrative flips between third person, and a narrator that puts you in Bevan’s place, not just her telling you how things affected her, but the narrator talking to you as if you are Bevan. Along with this, there are a number of big, fantastical things that are given little explanation, it was all a little confusing.

However, after a short while I began to understand that this was part of the point, that you as the reader are never quite meant to feel comfortable in this strange world of twisted logic and bizarre magic. Even though the book tells the story through three viewpoints, Bevan, Rossa, and Mae, it’s really about Mae, and the mixture of understanding some things whilst still being confused and unsettled mirror her experiences.

In many ways, this confused state, this partial understanding of the world around you, is a perfect metaphor for the journey that Mae and Rossa are going through over the course of the three years the book is set; not their journey into magic and other worlds, but their journey from teens to adults. The book is about growing up, and the two teens go from naive youngsters to young adults who have discovered so much more about themselves, and have had to live through the awfulness of their fractured and hateful home lives.

We get to see Mae go from a shy young girl hidden away in her games and just discovering her sexuality to a young woman who is embracing who she is, the powers that she is starting to tap into, and having to come to terms with how her first love will affect her for the rest of her life. Rossa changes from a boy closed off from the fantastical world around him, content to shy away from the world in his drawings, to a man with a plan, who knows what he wants from life and isn’t afraid to grasp for it, who opens himself up to the magic around him.

Whilst the book is about growing up and discovering the person that you’re going to be, it’s also about addiction. Bevan is addicted to the powers that the mysterious creature in the walls of the house, Sweet James, is willing to give her. At first glance it simply appears that she’s a character who is craving power, and potentially just a very nasty person, but as the book progresses and we see Bevan without the influence of Sweet James for a while it becomes clear that she’s a victim. She discovers this new world full of wonder and wants to learn more about it, as most people would, but it’s twisted for her by the parasitic creature that is luring her in. She becomes a junkie to the powers on offer, willing to lie, steal, hurt, and even kill if need be to get more.

What stands out most about the book however, is how it’s written. Not just jumping through different perspectives, narrative styles, and time periods, the book has a lyrical, almost poetic quality to it. It’s clear that Sarah Maria Griffin spent a great deal of time weaving ideas and themes throughout the tapestry of the book in a way that a lot of writers don’t, and the end result is a book that feels infinitely more than just the sum of its parts. Even come the end there’s mystery and wonder that is never answered, a world left unexplored, and relationships and motivations only partially hinted at. This might bother some, but it feels more real than most books. After all, in life you rarely get all the answers.

Sarah Maria Griffin has crafted a living, breathing world around one house and a handful of characters, a universe that is barely dipped into. She could come back to this time and time again, exploring the wondrous places that she has made, or simply leave it be, forever a mystery. Either scenario would make me happy, as I’d love to spend more time in this universe, but would also be more than happy to let my own imagination fill in these blanks.

It’s not often I finish a book and find myself immediately wanting to return to it and read it again straight away, but Other Words For Smoke had this effect on me. I want to go back and see those connections that I only realised were there at the end, to use the knowledge I gained later on to see if there is more there to be learned. A stunning example of not just a novel, but a work of art that is sure to stick with the reader long after the final page has been read.




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The Witch: Part 1. The Subversion – Review



Originally published on Set The Tape

The Witch (or The Witch: Part 1. The Subversion, aka Manyeo), the first part of a potential trilogy series, tells the story of Ja-Yoon (Da-Mi Kim), a young girl who has grown up living on a small farm with her elderly adoptive parents after escaping some kind of sinister experimentation and murder squad some ten years previously.

The film is very light on details as to what Ja-Yoon went through at the beginning, with opening credits that hint at mysterious experiments on children, but very little else to tell audiences what has happened. Instead, the film spends a good half of its run time teasing out small pieces of this mystery, with secret conversations and mysterious figures that follow Ja-Yoon.

Instead of focusing solely on the mystery of her past, the film chooses to give over a good portion to building Ja-Yoon as a character, letting us get to know her, her parents, friends, and even smaller figures in the periphery of her life. It’s a nice decision on the part of writer/director Hoon-Jung Park, as it helps to build the world and lets us get attached to Ja-Yoon before her world starts to spin out of control.

As with a lot of YA fiction Ja-Yoon is at the centre of an evil plot headed up by a nefarious organisation that is trying to exploit young people for their own gains. It follows a young girl who is ripped from her happy family life, who has to fight against these corrupt conspirators in order to save herself and her family. What The Witch: Part 1. The Subversion does differently, however, is to bring a Korean revenge thriller twist to the proceedings.


Without spoiling too much of the film, as there are certain expectations it intentionally builds in the audience before quickly pulling the rug out from under you, the sudden shift in its last half is a masterstroke.

The quiet, rural settings of Ja-Yoon’s home life, are gone, replaced with an industrial futurist look, complete with concrete lined labs, corridors with long staircases and high ceilings, and secret bunkers. Ja-Yoon also changes here, revealing a competent heroine beneath the scared teenage girl that we’ve been following. This shift marks a high point in the film, and is sold in large part thanks to the phenomenal acting by Da-Mi Kim, who is able to shift from scared girl to scary killer within seconds.

The other main cast members also bring a lot of great energy to the film, and the villains of the piece are some of the best. Min-Soo Jo is great as the sinister Dr. Baek, the mastermind scientist behind everything that has happened. She’s cold and calculating, trying to manipulate people from behind the scenes, and Min-Soo Jo plays her as a woman used to being the smartest person in the room, and who enjoys flaunting this sense of superiority.

Woo-Sik Choi, referred to in the credits simply as ‘Male English-Speaking Witch’, is great as one of Ja-Yoon’s fellow experimentees, though one raised within the evil organisation. It’s clear that Woo-Sik Choi is having a lot of fun playing the part, and that energy translates into his character, a twisted young man who enjoys being a killer. Both of these characters steal any scene that they’re in, and whilst being used sparingly definitely helped to raise their mystique I would have loved to see more of them.


The highlight, however, is the sudden shift into brutal action that comes within the last half hour, seeing these characters with super-human abilities fighting not just each other, but scores of soldiers too. These scenes have a visceral kind of beauty to them as people are shot, stabbed, and beaten to death in showers of blood, yet done so with such amazingly choreographed movements that it’s almost like watching a brutal ballet. If the film proves to be a success and we do get more entries into the series I can’t wait to see more of this kind of fighting and action.

A story that is really only setting the stage for things to come, we end up with a heroine that we still don’t really know, who is more than just the caring daughter that we saw in the first half of the film, a dangerous, frightening killer hiding just beneath. It’s not clear if she is even really a good person, and it’s possible that those distinctions don’t really exist within this world, opting instead for everyone to being on some kind of spectrum of grey. Despite these questions the film still delivers a great experience even on it’s own, and if the franchise ended here it would still be a great story.

Similar in a lot of ways to The Raid and the Villains novel series by VE Schwab, this is a film that is sure to draw in people who love superhero films, yet want to experience something different, fans of YA stories with strong female leads, and even action junkies who want to see some amazing fights. A brilliant start to what could be a truly amazing trilogy of films.


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Tuesday, 23 April 2019

The Blue Moon by Christopher Webster - Book Review



'It is a hopeless future. Forced to flee a toxic earth, humanity has found a new life among the stars. Some hold out hope that a new home can be found—a planet called Eden Star—but that dream is mostly forgotten. 

'While travelling between space ports, an old laborer with nothing to live for saves two young children when their transport ship is destroyed. Set adrift in a cramped escape pod, they begin to lose hope of rescue until a strange alien moon reveals itself to them. Together, the castaways learn to adapt and survive on the mysterious alien landscape. But what seems like paradise at first, hides many dangers and dark secrets. And as they grow into adulthood, they must confront forces they can barely understand: life, death, and a deep natural love.'

Having previously read Chrtistopher Webster's other work, the YA book New Horizons, I was interested to see what he would be like in the sci-fi genre. The Blue Moon starts off like a lot of sci-fi stories, set in a distant future, aboard a spaceship traversing the endless expanse of space. However, things quickly take a turn when the ship suffers a disaster and the three central characters, an old mechanic called Pin, and two young children Adam and Emma, are forced to escape together.

This shift is a great moment within the narrative. Whilst the future that Webster has crafted here is interesting in itself, the shift to a smaller story focusing on these three characters makes for a much better narrative. Webster is clearly very good at writing smaller, personal stories, and does so to great results here.

New Horizons had a fairly small cast of characters, yet dealt with big concepts and a story that was left unresolved for future books, and as such I never felt completely connected to the characters of that world, yet here I quickly came to care for Pin, Emma, and Adam.


The dangerous situations that the three of them are put into over the course of the book test not only the resolve of the characters, especially the young children, but really put the reader on edge. Whilst I knew that there was no way the three of them were going to suffocate in space with two thirds of the book left it didn't mean that I wasn't worried for them. One of them could still perish and leave the others to continue on without them, or they could suffer some kind of wound or injury that would stay with them.

This sense of danger is never really gone during the course of the story, even when the characters seem to be in moments of relative peace. The Blue Moon they find themselves upon is a wondrous, beautiful place, yet seems to constantly be hiding a layer of danger, no matter where they move to.

The moon itself becomes as much a character as Pin and the children, and we learn more and more about it as the story unfolds, discovering it's strange and mysterious secrets along with the humans who must now call it home. Whenever you think that you've got an understanding of what might be going on, or what will come next something new and amazing, and often terrifying, is revealed.

A book about humanity, of the drive and desire to survive in a world that hides its dangers under a layer of beauty. It's a story of survival, and love. The characters grow and develop over their years together, and whilst unable to develop and mature in certain ways due to their isolation, their changes are believable and realistic. A great read that is sure to keep the reader entertained from start to finish.




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Jacqueline Wilson Voices Opinion On Trans Children Bordering On Transphobia



Beloved children's author Jacqueline Wilson has broached the topic of transgender children during a recent interview with The Daily Telegraph. During the interview Wilson said that transgender children receiving treatment makes her 'very worried'.

'Some people, right from the time that they are toddlers, are aware that something is wrong and they wish that they could be the other sex.' She told the Telegraph. 'But I'm also aware that some children feel strongly for a while and then they change their minds. I think it's a decision that has to be left a while until you are utterly mature and utterly certain you know all the actual consequences.'

Having already spoken about the supposed dangers of children de-transitioning, something that rarely happens with trans people but if often used as a scare tactic against allowing people to transition Wilson then proceeded to spread misinformation used by transphobes. She went on to say that she was concerned about the long term effects of 'drugs, hormones, or whatever' being used on children. Something that is not actually done.

'And the whole idea of having major surgery... if you're a young child is not a question of just having bits of you lopped off,' she continued. 'It's really serious, difficult surgery which can have pretty devastating consequences, I would imagine.'

Children in the UK do not have gender reassignment surgery, and it is illegal to do so. Children in the UK also do not undergo hormone treatment, and only receive puberty blockers after thorough assessments with multiple doctors and have no irreversible or dangerous effects.

Wilson also said that she would not include a transgender character in any of her books, stating 'I wouldn't want people to think I jumped on the bandwagon just because it's current and in the news'.

Whether or not Wilson is actually a transphobe or simply misinformed, her statements are extremely damaging and full of false information.

'If only everybody could be and act exactly the way they want to but not actually try to change themselves physically, I think that would be easier.' She added. 'We still have a strange way of putting girls and boys into different slots... I wish we could come to a stage when anybody who fancied could wear a dress and do so-called 'girly' things or anyone who wanted could wear jeans and tinker with car engines.'


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Monday, 22 April 2019

15-Year-Old Child Takes His Own Life Following Homophobic Bullying



Nigel Shelby, a 15-year-old student from Huntsville High School in Huntsville, Alabama, has taken his own life following a series of homophobic bullying from fellow students.

Alabama's local Rocket City Pride group released a statement over the weekend announcing the loss of Nigel.

'We are heartbroken over the death of Nigel Shelby, a 15 year old Freschman at Huntsville High School. Nigel took his life because he was bullied for being gay.' The Statment read. 'There are no words that can be said to make sense of this devastating news.'

The group also set up a GoFundMe page in order to assist Nigel's family at this difficult time. The page has a target of $10,000, but at this time has already exceeded this goal and has raised more then $14,000.


Caila Malone, a drag queen and member of Rocket City Pride said, 'I remember being called terrible words even when I was in elementary school before I knew what they meant. These bullies have to be held accountable, and until our state legislation shows that they have to do that they're able to run a muck and do whatever they want. It's shaken all of us so we just have to bring our LGBTQ community in Huntsville together and let all of these kids know, that they are not alone.'

Studies by the Centre for Social Equity say that 74% of youth claim that they do not feel safe in school.

'We are saddened to learn this morning of the death of Nigel Shelby, one of our 9th grade students.' Said Aaron King, Nigel's school principal. 'Our thoughts and prayers are with the family during this difficult time. Many students have been affected by this news. Teachers and specially trained counselors have talked with students about Nigel and their feelings. Please be sensitive to any changes in your child’s behavior. Over the next few days, encourage your child to express his or her feelings and listen attentively.'

The statement also went on to provide advice to parents on helping their children grieve, and the different reactions their children may have to the news.

One of Nigel's fellow classmates, Nadia M. Richardson, has started a mental health awareness campaign called No More Martyrs.

'I am still processing this loss, we have so much to understand and so much work to do. Racism, sexism, homophobia, classism; all of this plays a part.' She said in a statement. 'Bullying is a byproduct of a world ill-equipped to include that which is deemed different. As a result, psychologically damaging othering occurs and leaves many isolated, self-loathing, and depressed. Don't shy away from the necessary conversations around this. The cost is too high.'


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