(no subject)
Jan. 11th, 2019 08:33 pmI've started recording my hugo nominations, which means a lot of googling for word counts and checking author's websites for publishing dates, plus suddenly being unable to remember anything that I've read or watched in the past year. I really would have sworn that I watched television last year, but then I remembered that I watched a lot of television that didn't first air in 2018 (Black Sails, Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries, Due South . . .).
EDIT: While writing this down I remembered Steven Universe and She-Ra. Well, that settles that category.
I think the empty category that surprises me the most is graphic novels - because I did read a bunch of comics that I thought were amazing, but they weren't Sci-fi/Fantasy. Fence, Prince and the Dressmaker, Twisted Romance, Bingo Love - this was a very strong year for romance comics, apparently. I was half thinking of nominating Sex Machine because at least it was SFF. I nominated Paper Girls, because I still love them, but other than that, there were a few tie-in comics that I'd read, and a few more series I started and lost interest in.
So which SFF comics had a trade paperback come out in 2018? What should I read?
EDIT: While writing this down I remembered Steven Universe and She-Ra. Well, that settles that category.
I think the empty category that surprises me the most is graphic novels - because I did read a bunch of comics that I thought were amazing, but they weren't Sci-fi/Fantasy. Fence, Prince and the Dressmaker, Twisted Romance, Bingo Love - this was a very strong year for romance comics, apparently. I was half thinking of nominating Sex Machine because at least it was SFF. I nominated Paper Girls, because I still love them, but other than that, there were a few tie-in comics that I'd read, and a few more series I started and lost interest in.
So which SFF comics had a trade paperback come out in 2018? What should I read?
no subject
Date: 2019-01-15 12:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-01-15 12:46 am (UTC)I'd count it! Also, it's fantastic, so it's got that going for it. Someone else was trying to talk me into the Prince and the Dressmaker, which I feel more awkward about - the only sort of fantastic element are the fact that the French monarchy did not last that long, and there's enough vaguely regency romances about made up Dukes that I wouldn't count as fantasy.