My next two entries are a curious pair: an original novel based on characters from the Marvel Comics Universe, and an Obie Award winning play (that also won the Pulitzer Prize in 2014 for drama). The former is not something that I would usually read, despite my penchant for reading comics. What makes that book unique is its focus on super-heroines, and what’s more, lesser-known super-heroines. And while I read a lot of plays, they seldom make my Top 10 books read!
#7 – Sisters of Sorcery: A Marvel Untold Novel by Marsheila Rockwell (2022)
Being a big fan of the superheroines of the Marvel Comics Universe, I was thrilled to find this original Clea novel among the company’s series of novelizations of comics characters. Clea is the wife, and often adventuring partner of Dr. Strange. In this story, when she is called upon to save a friend from Umar, the current ruler of the Dark Dimension, (and did I mention that Umar is also Clea’s mother?) she enlists the aid of several other powerful, yet obscure sorceresses from the corners of the Marvel Universe. Agatha Harkness — probably the most well known to mainstream audiences due to her recent Marvel TV series — is, at the moment in Marvel chronology that this novelization is set, currently dead, and existing only in the form of a still very powerful ghost. She offers her new disciple Holly as aid to Clea. Margali Szardos, powerful Romani witch and disciple of the Winding Way, is also the adopted mother of the X-Man Nightcrawler, and a women who suffers no fools, reluctantly signs on. And finally, Elizabeth Twoyoungmen, sometimes member of the Canadian band of superheroes called Alpha Flight, who is called Talisman, very reluctantly joins the crew despite her aversion to taking on her sorcerous legacy again.
Author Marsheila Rockwell has a strong handle on the characters’ personalities, expecially placed in a certain moment in time on the convoluted Marvel timeline. Her command of the Marvel way of magic-using is consistent and detailed. Rockwell focuses on the personalities of the characters, and the evolving relationships that emerge after a very rock start. For me it was a delightful read featurig mostly overlooked comic characters, with Clea being one of my favorites. So seeing her take front and center leading this unusual band made for a thrilling read.
#6 – The Flick by Annie Baker (2014)
I’m not sure how or why I missed my several opportunities to see the production of Annie Baker’s The Flick when it played in Boston or beyond. After all, I run an independent film society and am quite passionate about film. Still, I missed Annie’s play about a single-screen, independent movie house in Worcester, MA, so I decided to read it finally. What an amazing work! While exploring the challenges of operating such a cinema through the eyes of three of its employees, she also manages to explore the psyches and interpersonal dynamics between three very different people. I hope to see a full production of this powerful work, or perhaps even direct it if the opportunity presents itself.