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I feel the need for some "escapist" literature (or video), and right now I want to escape into something dreamy and otherworldly. I would love recommendations.

An example of the type of thing would be Angel's Egg, the 1980s short anime. On the fast-paced, action, heartwarming end, maybe the recent movie, Flow. At the intellectual/concrete extreme, maybe A Voyage to Arcturus.

Seeking stories with...

* nature/beauty
* a dreamy or surreal quality - like it may be a dream or metaphor or afterlife or enchantment or something.
* on the slow, quiet end.
* vaguely old-timey in setting, like anywhere from 150-7000 years ago or the rough equivalent in an otherworld.
* some story/plot, though it can be slight, long enough that I get to spend time with the characters: novella or long; hour-ish video or longer.

Don't want...

* anything YA
* anything obviously moralizing;
* any "strong feminist heroine" or anything that smacks of contemporary politics of any kind from any side of the aisle;
* anything fast-paced or action packed. (I'm fine with Flow at the extreme end of fast.)
* anything that "feels" like it was written in and for the 2020s or 2010s;
* anything really short.

Fine with or Fine with Caveats...

* melancholy, dark, horror-tinged if not super dark/depressing/horror
* relatively thin characters, as long as what's there isn't any of the "don't want."
* romance if it's subtle, not the main point, not stereotypical. (Romance will be an easier sell if it's m/m.)
* child, teen characters as long as the story itself doesn't feel aimed at modern kids/teens (see Angel's Egg).
* written/created in pretty much any time period from ancient to present, if it more or less fits the above.

Thanks in advance for rec's!
labingi: (Default)
Sometimes YouTube's algorithm presents me with something lovely, like this "contemplative animation" by Mani (criminally underwatched and underliked):



Along these lines, I'm seeking rec's for movies/series that are basically escapism from this world. I need a break.

Looking for stuff that doesn't feel super engaged (directly) with our major current global/cultural conversations or set in modern times: i.e. not set in the past 100 years or so, in our world or an alternate history/ secondary/ parallel/ near future world that mostly feels like ours culturally. Shorts are cool, but I'd love to find something movie length I could just relax to. (The sweet spot would be "like" Angel's Egg.)
labingi: (Default)
I came across this neat animated sci-fi short (7:33 minutes), "Scavengers" by Charles Huettner. It has a very creative take on an alien biosphere and its ecological interactions. I haven't quite seen anything like it.

labingi: (Default)
This issue:
* Tell me your favorite non-Eurocentric stories.
* Report from the Willamette Writers Conference
* Short story acceptance for anthology of spiritual literature

Full newsletter with links and stuff is here.

What Are Your Favorite Non-Eurocentric Stories?
Question of the month: What are your favorite non-Eurocentric stories? This mean stories that are not primarily from a Western Civilization frame of reference. They might be traditional narratives or recent science fiction, acclaimed best sellers or fan fiction. They might even by authors of Eurocentric descent if the story itself is located in a very different worldview (thinking Le Guin here, for example). Comment and I will put together a summary for the next newsletter.

Willamette Writers Conference, 2020
I was privileged to be part of a panel on worldbuilding at this year's Willamette Writers Conference along with Sarina Dorie, Emily Suvada, and Hannah Mann, all of whom had great insights to offer on worldbuilding and creating setting. As an attendee, I was humbled (this word is overused, but here I mean it) to attend the panel on Privilege, Politics, and Cultural Experience with Claudia F. Saleeby Savage, Kimberly Johnson, Shayla Lawson, and Jenny Forrester. I will not tell a lie: this panel brought me to tears, particularly in the midst of my own struggles with how to be an adequate parent as a white person raising two Black kids. The speakers did some useful, if painful, calling out of our own Portland, Oregon as a very racist space, even by white American standards. Well, we white folx have our work to do.

The conference was all online and went off impressively smoothly. My regards to Greg Gerding, Kate Ristau, and everyone who worked so hard to bring this event to life. It was also great to see Curtis Chen again, who I hear tell was attending two conferences at once!

Story Forthcoming in Anthology of Spiritual Literature
I am pleased as punch to announce that my short story "The Descent of the Wind" has been accepted for publication by This Present Former Glory: An Anthology of Honest Spiritual Literature, published by A Game for Good Christians. This quirky organization of Christians has a serious (humorous, and snarky) interest in delving deep into spiritual, Biblical questions; I might describe their tone as irreverently reverent. It feels like a good home for this particular oddball story, and I'm really looking forward to reading the full anthology. I especially want to thank my pastor, Jeanne Randall-Bodman, for her help with navigating the story's Biblical material, and also my dear friend, Z., who gave it a very encouraging read from a Muslim perspective.
labingi: (Default)
It’s that time again, when I ask for book recs because I can’t find anything (new) that fills my need for catharsis. I’m looking for any written medium (novel, graphic novel, manga, novella, etc.). I appreciate all your recs. Some have given me stories I will treasure for life (like Trigun, Banana Fish, Acid Town). I would love recs that have some of the following characteristics:

* Cultural settings that are not like or set in my own (America/modern global West): this might include creative spec fic societies as exemplifed by Le Guin; historical/fantasy settings that feel like older cultures (ex. A Song of Ice and Fire; Asian/manga; indigenous or Afro-futurism; works that are genuinely older, even ancient.

* Complex characters with complex love relationships with each other. This does not need to be romantic. I tend to be less leery of m/m relationships, but that’s not essential. If they involve relationship/genre clichés, those clichés should be explored so deeply and wisely that they lay bare new insights about being human (ex. Mirage of Blaze). I am always glad of a good friendship story.

* Stories about older, more mature characters, cuz I’m not getting any younger and/or characters I categorize as “saints,” not in a strictly Christian/religious/literal sense, but in the sense of people with a very highly developed sense of conscience and understanding of life, who are importantly motivated by being of service in the world. (Ex’s include Vash and Rem from Trigun, Alyosha from The Brothers Karamazov, Kagetora from Mirage of Blaze (in his tortured, confused way), Yudhishthira from the Mahabharata.) I really want to read more of this ilk.

Here are some titles I have really fallen in love with, and I would love to fall in love with something like this again:

Japanese:
Mirage of Blaze
Trigun
Banana Fish
Acid Town
Gangsta (when it’s about the two principals)

Other
The Left Hand of Darkness
The Brothers Karamazov
Wuthering Heights
The Lord of the Rings (Yeah, everybody who reads fantasy loves it, but I really love it for the low-key straightforwardness of the characters.)
Great Expectations

Works I’m not Necessarily in Love with but Really Please Me
Ai no Kusabi (mainly original novel, 1992 anime)
The Persian Boy (Mary Renault)
The Man Who Fell to Earth (book and movie)
Blade of the Immortal (esp. the parts focused on Anostu, Rin, Makie, Gichi, Hyakurin)
Hedda Gabler (reread this recently, fascinating)
City of Illusion (Le Guin)

Here’s what I do NOT want (but always with exceptions for the brilliant):
Anything that is basically about late-20th, 21st century Western culture, including science fiction stories where we’re colonizing the solar system, etc., but it feels just like 20th-21st-century Western characters grappling with capitalism. And this pretty includes anything about “teenagers” in the modern conception of adolescence, unless it’s truly ingenious, like Buffy. Anything primarily comic, zany, or action-oriented: I’d like enough psychological drama for it to be cathartic. Thank you!!!

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