Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Composer/Cellist Aaron Kerr Talks about music, creativity and musical creations

Hello friends, today I present to you an interview with a musical genius. Aaron Kerr is a composer, a cellist, a thinker most deep, a father, friend, and much more.  I have a great appreciation for him beyond those mentioned areas. We took a goal of producing my poetry, once a day, to his composing music every day, to create a gathering of ideas and music. In August we presented the event, The Pict Cycle for a live audience. And despite my fears and issues of health that make difficult certain things, it went well. Aaron is the reason that happened.

This interview was begun in late summer with emailed questions, and his responses are found below.  Thank you for reading, and thanks to Aaron for his responses.


Hi Aaron, the audience here mostly knows I follow your band, the collective of Swallows, Emperor Penguin Records, J.Briozo and Brett Hansen's Side Effects... But your band Dissonant Creatures is in almost all ways different, than most anything and the other bands in the grouping. Does that difference come from desire, or natural flow, or instinct, and if a band is based upon improv, how does a composer fit into that mix?

Aaron Kerr’s Dissonant Creatures (AKDC) is an extension of my work as a composer and very specific to what I wanted to do with my music. I got a McKnight Composer Fellowship in 2006 and saw this as a turning point. Up to that point I was writing pretty traditional classical music, with a bent towards some of the composers I admired, like Hindemith, Steve Reich, Arvo Part, and all the impressionists.

I had three goals in mind: I wanted something that was easy to pull together with one or more people, I wanted something I could solo over, and I wanted something idiomatic – meaning easy to play in a particular style. So this ended up being four albums of duets, 40 songs total. Each album is inspired by a different kind of music: rock, folk, classical, and jazz. I think of it like my version of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, without the fat lady singing at the end.

Enter Swallows. I had been jamming and playing with these guys for some time before this, mostly as a side man. What I love is that are they kind of into anything weird. I think there is the concept that if you play one kind of music you don’t do anything else, which first of all is not true and secondly I tend to prefer to play with people who have many influences. If you look at the greats: The Beatles, Beach Boys, even Elvis, they were all over the place in terms of their influences, despite their outward facing hits.

So Swallows was totally game to take on my weird instrumental compositions. It definitely started with the simplest pieces – just some melodies and easy changes. Over time I gave them more and more complex arrangements. For a bunch of rock players and songwriters I seriously pushed them into hard stuff – some pieces have no improv and every note is written out. But it was also hard because I wanted them to solo in odd keys and weird rhythms. They ended up learning all the tunes – which is maybe three hours of music, and, yes, we have performed all those tunes in one night.

I’ve got to say it is a real treat as a composer to have that kind of dedication from your players. I’ve got this whole seven piece band that will drop everything to play my music, and that is rare. I often feel like Sun Ra pushing his players past the breaking point in the name of weird music. I do try to treat them well – hotels only and food on the road.

Is that desire, natural flow, or instinct? Maybe all of the above. I think you have to be a bit selfish to be in my position, and if the opportunity presents itself, as it has, then you go for it.

As far as composing versus improv goes, I kind of see them as two building blocks of the same building. Unless you are playing classical, there isn’t a band out there that just plays the written notes. Every musician fleshes out the parts, adds to the arrangement, and tweaks the music somehow, even if most of the notes are written. Even with my classical scores I’m giving the musicians a chance to have input – I keep the instructions pretty basic and see what they do. Sometimes what the musicians do pisses me off – Jeff throws in this damn minor seven note at the end of my greatest piece, The Floor of the Sky. But it’s that tension that makes that part have some flavor, so I shut up and let him do it.

I spoke long ago as well as recently, that your work defies any focused label of genre or of similar work. I won't say unique since I don't have a voluminous memory of bands and styles, but I never heard anything like it. For those curious, yes I liked it too, but does a creator of spontaneous or unlike other music prefer to be thought unique or high quality. And yes I warrant that both are good things.

"Unique" and "high quality" aren't mutually exclusive things. That goes for any type of music, written or improvised.

Let's start with this idea: pure improvisation. There's more to "free form jazz", "avant-garde", or "experimental" than you think. It's the sum of everything that you have done as a performer that you throw into an experimental performance; it includes your history as a player, your chops, your knowledge of genres, and just your simple ability to react in the moment. Think of it like a scientist who has delved into all aspects of science: biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, design, computer science. The output there could be anything and everything. Anything is possible. Then, there's the performer's wisdom. What I mean is the ability to listen, to react to other musicians, to anticipate like a ninja what comes next. Then there is the chemistry between the players - it's got to be there, either through experience or just innate ability to connect. That's a lot going on and should not be underestimated.

Written music has it's own effect and consequences. You have to lay down something really solid for who is performing it. That might be something really simple or something really complex. It doesn't matter, both are good and can be amazing experiences depending on what you've composed and who is playing it. Sometimes a piece of music is a pile of crap until you work on it, sometimes it works right away. A good performer will see that and make the best of any work.

So you can have something unique and bad quality, something not unique and good quality. The ultimate goal is to simply create a great experience. I've heard amazing performances of tired old music that completely blew my mind because it was done so well. And I've heard terrible performances of something I was really anticipating because I thought it was going to be exciting and new. Just keep your mind open people, and it's OK to have an opinion about what you like and don't like!

What am I trying to do when I compose? Good question. I think I compose in the moment and I'm trying to capture an idea. It doesn't have to be new or different, I just want it to be the most relevant and pure articulation of a concept I can do. Two things I can think of that maybe guide my approach: One, if the music should predictably go right, I go left. Meaning: I'm always trying to surprise people to keep the music interesting. Two: one thing someone said to me was this: "Aaron, your music is like a stick that has been cut down to a sharp point". I love that (not just because I'm a carpenter): I'm a minimalist at heart and I tend to find the perfect thing and leave it at that. No frills, just the meat (I'm also a vegetarian so that saying is, admittedly, not as good).

Did your recent work Scorpio Rising come with a desired focus, in tone, in message or anything? I found the music in person great, as well as wish it had a CD, and listening to individual songs, there was a feeling of a building of power, inevitably raising expectations and anticipation. Was that meant to happen or was that just a happy circumstance. I've been to concerts, much longer even. But for the time spent, the enjoyment of Dissonant Creatures was great, certainly a fine experience, I left however, thoroughly spent. I never had that, even at a Replacements concert that was filled to quite a bit over occupancy and louder than 747's lift off level decibels.

There was absolutely a tone intended for this album, and that tone was: rock. I wanted a very live sound to the album so we did all the songs live in studio, doing multiple takes of each song. It was recorded over two days in one of the best studios in the Cites. I wanted these songs to come off as very heavy and inexcusably loud with screaming guitars, dark vibes, and intense rhythms. We kept turning up the drums in the mix; we began to realize the drums (played incredibly well by our drummer, Jonathan Townsend) were the foundation for the album. We got them in a place where they were punchy and had awesome tone.

AKDC does a bit of everything, and that is on purpose. It's reflective of my past four albums, each one with a focus. Dissonant Creatures (2013) was classical in approach. Union County Forever (2016) is country and folk. Odin (2020) is jazz. Scorpio Rising (2025) is rock. These four albums are my magnum opus - my Wagner ring cycle. For most of our last tour we just played the rock set, but some shows we pull out a wider range of material.

The feeling of power you felt was intended. Every show is different, but that set you saw was meant to take you on a rocket ship to the space station. There are open parts to every song, so some of the anticipation and intention could be spontaneous. But I take these shows seriously and organize the music to be a journey for the audience. I want you to feel spent in a way that is satisfying like a good meal, not like I put you on the rack.

You play in many groups, collectives, and more, does that just come from wanting to play, or do you seek to achieve something greater by it? Is it building a talent by playing in different genres and types of groups?  When describing the three times I saw you in person playing, I mentioned how your solos in songs are pure power and glory, making me feel chilled through my bones and flesh. What is your most desired role, composer, cellist, or something else?

Post college I moved to the Cites and was just taking on anything I could do. At that stage in my career that was a good thing to do, and I'd recommend that to anyone starting out - take on any project you have time for, being honest about your ability to who you are working with. At some point you need to pull back; quit the stuff that doesn't move you anymore and focus on what you are excited about. If something's still on your list then make a decision to try it out, but give it a timeline.

If I hadn't of done that, if I didn't experiment and dive in, the "power and glory" of my solos would not be there. I know, know, know this for sure. A friend and bandmate of mine once said "Aaron, the way you play cello is the most original thing you do. No one else plays like that". It was me taking on all these projects that got me to that place. It was also the intensity of my study - not giving up on an idea because it was hard. I wanted to find my true "sound" and spent my life doing that. This is the sacrifice the great artists take to master what they do.

What's my desired role? I can die happy knowing I've mastered something - my playing and composing. I want to be a bandleader now, and a music organizer. I'll die happier if I can make society better for musicians. I'll do that by setting up shows for AKDC and all the other projects I'm in. I will also fight the shallow bastards trying to control everything too - Spotify and the major labels and the tech capitalists (who are all complicit). If I can make a dent in all of that, I'll be happy. This will be the "something greater" I can aspire to.

Beyond hearing other creators, the music of the past, the new creatives, what inspires your work on Dissonant Creatures the most? Is it trusting where the talents in the group take you, or is it something else?"

What I've done with AKDC is build a machine, and it's a pretty awesome one. If you want a band that takes you on a journey, that can be intensely quiet and mysterious or create a massive explosion of sound, we are there. The musicians are top notch: trained players who have been in the trenches and done every type of music and been in every situation. I've honed my sets to operatic perfection - we will satisfy your most dramatic need.

Now it's simply to play shows. The music is recorded and released. The band stands ready. We can throw down an amazing performance anywhere - I'm convinced of it. This is what inspires me: the knowledge that we have the perfect vehicle for amazing music.


Aaron Kerr and Dissonant Creatures Links
Aaron Kerr.Com
Dissonant Creatures

Contact Aaron Kerr

Monday, January 12, 2026

Reasons For Preferring America and more news

NEWS 

By Alex Ness
January 12, 2026

SAD NEWS FOR ME


I lost a friend from the world of comics, a friend and business associate. Steve Bond, ran COMICS, ETC from the early 80s to later 1990s and was a fixture upon the Minnesota Retail Comic Book store world. From that place he employed me for about 2 years total, in amongst the events of my life, in three different runs. He wasn't necessarily generous, but he wasn't an employer in that world without honor, intelligence, and fair prices per items sold. 

We were reacquainted in about 2015 when I found him and had numerous chats and he spoke to a couple of retailers to carry my works. His help was appreciated. My appreciation for him was from a perspective of love of comics, weekly chats re: outlook on life from a shared experience view. 

2025 IN REFLECTION


I usually write about the previous year as it passes, but I didn't do that this year. I forgot. However, I was able to interview some great talents, in many fields. Along with writing two for blogs, 5 non profit agencies, and preparing 4 books for publication, I performed a reading of my work The Pict cycle, similar in focus to my work with Ed Quinby Sacred Ground. My words were accompanied by new, beautiful, epic live music composed and written and performed by Aaron Kerr, and Laura Harada. The music alone was worth the price of admission. Over the year I interviewed Jolly Blackburn, Peter Andrew Jones, Rich Koslowski, Robert Defendi, Masks by Anbry, Matt Busch, and Stephen R. Bissette. They all were great, and I am thankful for the chance to have interviewed them.

THAT MUSIC THAT I AM MOVED BY

Every time I post show reviews, CD reviews, my outlook on music or otherwise, I receive an enormous amount of interest from readers. Cassini Echoes by Tyson Allison of Emperor Penguin Records, released "The Only Way Out Is Through" Tyson Allison. Aaron Kerr and Dissonant Creatures released Scorpio Rising, and J.Briozo is releasing many groovy songs, in advance of the next CD. The works were each wonderful, displaying the talent and skills it requires to produce so much fine collections of songs.

WAR AND WHY WE FIGHT

In the current world, some have had trouble espousing who we are, what we believe in and why live in America. In 1943 LIFE magazine published four images by Nelson Rockwell, that were used to give life in image to the guiding values of America that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt espoused. In war it is especially important to know why one would choose America's honor in entering and fighting in a war of distinctively different values guiding the principles.

In this time within the United States, when generations, classes, ethnic and racial groups fighting, have our values changed?  I believe we have a reason to understand our values, because when confronted with our different versions of what is America, is one right, is the other wrong, or do we all have the same dream, simply expressed with a perspective earned by life?

I think the four reasons to fight, are perfect. Apply them to the current dystopia aimed conflict, and decide your outlook?

Lastly:

Reviews are generally from hard copy or live performances, but I do consider digital works. However, I have a dislike of the format of digital, as is reflected in the case of my own work, I have given away literally hundreds of ebooks, being a worthless avenue for my artistic work, and not having worth when purchased from Amazon.com. However I would very gladly review CDs, games, books & comics, in any format. Write to 
my email for directions how to make it happen.

LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Sport as Entertainment, Different Generations Think Differently

SPORTS AS ENTERTAINMENT
Or is it something totally different?
By Alex Ness
January 9, 2026


Someone asked me why, if I like sports so much as I seem to them, do I not cover them as a form of entertainment, if I am trying to cover entertainment in many different media? I have always answered that I like many things, and that is good enough without being added to a blog that covers too much already. I review or discuss Film, Television, Music, RPGs, Boardgames, Comics, Novels and on three or four entrees writings about sports. (One was about Colin Kaepernick, another was about Carolina Panthers QB Cam Newton, a piece regarding how RGIII for the Washington team, was treated and how his injuries were from his being used similar to a Gladiator. I also wrote about how he was being seen as property rather than as an individual. I think I did do one that featured Sumo in Japan, but I might have done that for a different site. I didn't think, nor do I, RGIII should be treated like property, just saying it seemed to be the case.)


It has seemed the case that people attend, en masse, events in large numbers that are political, memorial, and sport. The political events are often unifying or single point of view expressive, but are not, as a rule, done for "entertainment". That humans have to assemble has been less the point with the advent of media, electronic, available to the general masses, and as part of the news media. Memorials are far less performed in large groups, but for the countries of royalty, memorials of a beloved leader (even if not important any longer), or of an important leader (even if not beloved). They still do happen, but in larger or more modern nations less so. 

Regarding large gatherings regarding sport? Those are by no means rare. That people gather to see their preferred sport seems natural, even unifying when the matches viewed see foreign teams visiting the site or international events. Football and World Cup is one series of large gatherings, but motor sports and horse racing and performances all see numbers that are still rather enormous.  In Greece when the city states and neighboring countries and nations performed in the Olympics, with individuals and team events, since far back. Some of the best preserved structures of antiquity were those built for "spectator" sports, a term that embodies a large group, but spectacle is something quite different in meaning. It means an event that is memorable for the memory and mental image it presents. However it is interpreted, in the Roman Empire, and many more developed ancient societies and empires, spectacle came from blood sport and was used as a means of making war, on a small scale for the enjoyment of viewers and attendees.

If it is interpreted without judgment, the term spectacle can still mean an audience views a form of sport. But with judgment, Rome, Aztecs, and other societies took sport and used it for the enjoyment of an audience in the behavior that for the individual would be considered murder or mayhem, in that larger setting, it is not only allowed, it is celebrated and ordained by the state. The enjoyment of bloody results is said to be a way that well behaved society uses to allow the overall dark desires that need to be vented. In Western society it is left, mostly, to Hockey, Football (American/Canadian version), Football (World version of the term) and UFC, Boxing, in Japan Sumo, and various less organized sports, or those that are sport entertainment (i.e. professional wrestling). Comedian and Cultural critic George Carlin wrote and performed a routine how American Football is a sport that takes its inspiration from War, while Baseball is a gentleman's version of Cricket, where physical skills and strategy are used, but only rarely ending in violence.

The point of this is to address the idea of sport as entertainment, since sports occupy an enormous place in the amount of money spent on entertainment. Film, and many other passive events have a great role as well.  Are the players and/or team owners similar to those acting or producing/directing? While there are people who believe sports are written and are played to achieve known results, no, not normally. The concept of a sporting event, from the very first event, is to test one team or individual, versus another. Therefore, if the results are known, it is not a test, but a display, perhaps done to cheat those betting upon the outcome. As such, legal betting creates legal and restricted paths for revenue. That triggers a need to create legal understandings of fiscal and time oriented penalties for being caught cheating. Every other form of sport and test, is a contest with the winner resulting in a windfall of funds. Chariot and horse races have long been avenues to make money, far more than to test the skills of participants over a course aimed at a refereed race.


THE GENERATIONAL WARS OF THOUGHT

I have recently watched a few older tv talk shows after someone said to me, "This new world has a 5 second attention span, an imagination that functions only with concepts it knows, and has the expression on level of a child, untrained and unimaginative." I found that to be perhaps cynical about the current generations. But not necessarily wrong. I thought it best to go a bit deeper.

The Dick Cavett Show was for intellectuals, in retrospect, so if one suggests it as an example of typical society, I think that would be wrong. But I've had people say, such a show could not be successful today. And I don't think it was successful then either. I think long form dialogues and lectures did kick serious ass in the 1960s and 1970s. But even so what everyday people enjoyed was certainly different than the works that appealed to intellect. I've heard critics suggest that the syndicated shows HEE HAW with Lawrence Welk not far behind were top shows based on numbers.

CNN came into being in 1980, and a 24/7 news channel would seem serious. We can decide ourselves what makes for serious or intellectual content, but news itself isn't necessarily serious. Crossfire was one of CNN's most watchable programs for me, and took very seriously a show discussing an issue from two distinctly different sides. In a divided world such as now, wouldn't that be a great show? After a number of attacks from either side, and complaints about the unfairness of the perspectives allowed to speak, it was canceled.

Firing Line was a television show from 1966 to 1999 that was political but not for mainstream right and left, but the intellectual foundations of both sides of the aisle. The host William F. Buckley jr. was an intellectual Right winger, but his intellectual P.O.V. in debate was a distinct and unreachable point. The debates in general were what most centrists and left were far from his view, but nearly so were the typical Republican or non party "conservatives".

Johnny Carson is well known remembered well and highly beloved. He was said to be the voice of my parents generation, That might be true but few people know besides comedy, in the late sixties and early seventies he would have authors and discussed for long periods of time the thesis they wrote upon. The comedy for which Carson is remembered for happened after the serious commentaries were considered, that is, he used the serious aspects of talk shows, to enhance the delivery of comedy. I think the past is a place we often gild with glory in our memory. But generations ought to be looked at seriously because it has an impact upon how we vote, how we think, how we act.


LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Memories of Movies and Games

MEDIA MEMORIES OF MY PAST
By Alex Ness
January 5, 2026

FILMS AND GAMES 


My cousins and good friends contributed to my love of fantasy. For me the best films in the vein of fantasy include a greater story, and the myths born from those stories, guide us. No hero is automatically successful, they must strive, and they do, but heroes fail too. An invulnerable hero, one who never bleeds or cries, is wounded from the very beginning. Who can be moved by a person who is never questioned in their likely victory?

The Black Rose features some anachronistic themes, but tells a story of romance with vigor. It moves me, as I wanted the ending that it comes with. But add Mongols, China, Saxons, and Normans with a very lovely French woman, and it is a match made in Heaven.

Adventures of Robin Hood is an equal, adventure, perhaps some anachronism, but a story told well. In this movie there is jumping from ropes to reach an opponent during battle. Fighting a castle's load of soldiers by a band of thieves and rogues to foil the evil pretender king. And romance, of a sort.

Ivanhoe speaks of a knight and the women, the honor, the code of chivalry that move him. A wonderful work for a gravely limited time about diversity, religious views, and honor. It is a glorious film, and honorable for the questions asked.

Dragonslayer was the first time I saw a Dragon that it looked true. I loved the effects, the story, the feel for a tale. It was frustrating to me that no one I knew then nor now, ever saw it. As it is a mage and his apprentice who must sacrifice all to save the land from a dragon. There are  flaws but I believe it to be a great work. A sequel or additional story in that universe might have done well with a knight who was raised as a Dragonslayer by trade. 

Excalibur is Arthurian legend made unified in stories and sources, with a huge budget, characters who might stray from the original, but for the better, and masterful direction. The role of Uther Pendragon, Arthur's father, is wonderfully played, as is the story of a tryst and lustful act. The director Boorman took great care in the deeper areas, such as the dragon, the grail, loyalty and dishonor. He understood what was so important. To tell an Arthurian story, one must strike the chord of an authentic Kingship.

Arn, the Knight Templar isn't a perfect work, but I like it. And I've done enough research for various reasons, that I am not taken in by the Templar myths, nor the untold story. Ridiculously, after so many years gone by, the true Templars are not treated well by historians, cultural voices, nor even public archives. Arn doesn't address those, it is a tale about a Swedish man, who considers himself a soldier of God.  He pursues his faith and service in a way that interests me. 

I love Ray Harryhausen, 20 years ago I interviewed him, and Jason and the Argonauts is a work he made great! The story, already good, might move a bit slower for modern audiences, but I've loved it for over 45 years. It tells the story of how Jason acquired the golden fleece, and sees great and mythic beasts and battles. 


GAMES 

I grew up in an era when board games were not seen as old fashioned or necessarily boring, by the average person. They might be too difficult or unrewarding, but you'd play them again to get better. And I am not, in fact, saying the board games of then were the all time best or the most interesting things to do. My cousins and best friends taught me the love of games. I was all over RISK, but there were so many different games back when I was in my teens, and they didn't involve platforms or electricity. They required fingers to push the chits from the sheet of markers. And often dice. Sometimes, lots of dice.

Mostly, especially with the sort of games shown below, the greatest requirement was a strategic mind, and an imagination. I liked Ogre and all the editions that followed. Ice War was, however, my favorite. Having said that, I like video games too. I just find when people were more patient, the build up and reward were significantly better.


Note well, none of these are role playing games, (RPGs) and I note this because some people assume if I say game, it usually means RPG. Or so I've been told.  I have many RPGs that I like, just saying for the people who like one or the other but not both, or for those who make no distinction. 

The Micro Game from Metagaming Image above is shown not for playing all of those shown, (but still many) were insanely cheap for what you received for the money to buy and play them. Collecting them was not always easy, since we didn't have Ebay or Amazon at the time.

Lastly:

I would very gladly review CDs, games, books & comics.  
Write to 
my email for directions how to make it happen.

LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.


Tuesday, December 30, 2025

BOOKS TO READ FOR WINTER BREAK (Northern Hemisphere only)

OFFERINGS FOR THE END OF THE YEAR
By Alex Ness
December 31, 2025


WHY DO IT?


While I've had year end articles, even gave out "best of the year" awards, but I'd prefer to not label these as best work, or best work about romance or epic heroics... I haven't read enough books for anything to be meaningful. But in this piece I am aiming specifically at works that are worthy of a long look, or, books by specific authors worthy of reading more than a single work. I am doing this in the way of a group of works where the concept is a completed story without extraneous books to find and follow, or, the works of a particular writer of talent. And at the end, a surprise entry.

Someone told me how much they like reviews or offerings of works that speak about the emotional pay back of the work. They also mentioned appreciating the likely readers who would enjoy the works the most, and the kind of work within the genre, that they were. For instance, Ursula K. LeGuin wrote a series that I include here, where there is magic and fantasy, but not swords and constant action. LeGuin's works are often delivered in subtle yet well established ways, whereas most other fantasy creative talents utilize action to remove all doubt. Which is about, for me anyway, how some view fantasy. But it is such a great genre, I love each of the wings of it, and know it has many different ways of looking at it.

INVESTING TIME AND BEING REWARDED

First, Fritz Leiber's Fafhrd and Gray Mouser adventures in Lankhmar. The pair are friends, adventurous comrades, one is a massive giant of a man, another small and quick, naughty and able. The two are deadly in combat, and they fight wizards, cold monsters, undead and more. If you dislike buddy comedies of the deep past, you might call this sexist. But it isn't in how women are portrayed, but instead, how the two heroes are male and the world swirls about them. It is a very fun work if you pay attention to the story at hand.

One of my heroes of weird fiction is Lord Dunsany. In the two volumes shown he weaves a tapestry of luxurious prose, lush wording in a distant fantasy world, elves and humans, in expertly told events. His view of the past and of the medieval world of Ireland has a legacy born from myth and legend, and Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene. It reminds some folks of Edmund Spenser in that it is a wielder of words who doesn't worry to show his roots, to write with more words perhaps than fewer, such as past writers.  But Dunsany's heart is honorable, his goals beautiful, and his words well thought.

Evangeline Walton's Mabinogion novels tells a tale of a prince going to Annwn, the Welsh underworld, and explores a heroes journey in doing so. For quite awhile, I had chosen the Arthurian Legacy view of the underworld and Celtic mythology, but it was of the Welsh legends, and great Gwyn Ap Nudd is the king of the underworld only in Annwn, where the days are golden and none shall age. The writer Watson's words are truly beautiful, and she makes the legends live, and her written work is easy upon the mind and lovely.

Ursula K. LeGuin Earthsea Trilogy tells the tales of a world of islands, magic, and short stories each focusing on the layers of wonder and beauty, in LeGuin's world. That this might be perceived as not epic prose, is false, it tells just as large of tales as so named or described works. But what brings the impact in this trilogy, is how much is told and how much is implied. The writing is purely fantasy, but written in such ways, it captures all human intuitions.

My first Leigh Brackett work read was a Science Fiction novel and it was brilliant. The Long Tomorrow rightly imagines a world gone to hell due to nuclear wars. But she had written works in various genres, but her work is unique in each genre. Her fantasy tales are rich in details and human dialogues. Her works capture well the sort of setting in fantasy, despite being found upon a Mars of her imagining. This is a lighthearted work, worth reading.

Hope Mirrless was a poet, who tells a story that is also an allegory for our existence's meaning. It is absolutely unique and might strike the reader powerfully, or the reader might miss the point. Like her, I am a poet, and I found it brilliantly written, along with deeply considered. She makes use of the desires of humans, the failures of humans, and tries to create an illusion, which is fantasy, while trying to ask much deeper questions. As such, it blew me away.


AUTHORS TO INVEST TIME IN


DENNIS McKIERNAN When an officer in the military was accidentally run over, he spent months in casts and recovering from surgery. During that time he chose to challenge his ability to write, and created a world of fantasy that was moving, and rather emotive. I loved it.

KEN ST. ANDRE  You've seen me mention Ken, and his works, Tunnels & Trolls, Monsters! Monsters! and more, being games set in the fantasy worlds of his making. He also worked on other systems, primarily the 3rd Edition of Stormbringer. But those books shown below are for reading, while they have some connection to the games of Ken's making, as prose and near poetry they actually shine.

MICHAEL STACKPOLE  I haven't actually, that I remember, have done any consideration of the works of Michael Stackpole, but it wasn't due to anything bad. There is a lot more I can cover in any genre than of a fine author. And I did play a game he inspired, SW Rogue Squadron.  Stackpole's writing is very steady, ready to go off to war, it does well as military fiction in both Fantasy and Science fiction genres.


ELIZABETH MOON My wife and I used to read the same books and in the case of Elizabeth Moon, the person opening our eyes to her, was Gregory Pinter, a high school friend in the Air Force for 30 years. Moon's characterization felt real, a woman sheepherder who becomes a hero, has fantasy in it, but it is as much a book of a rebellion or call to arms against a great foe. The action felt entirely right. Moon's science fiction works are amazing. She writes and my wife and I enjoyed the ride.

KIM CORMACK Ms. Cormack's works are about beings who live again, as vampires or warriors, each still retaining lustful desires, while being restricted by whatever house they belong to. The constant rivalries, battles and tests all seem to be made greater by the fact that the world was hard enough, now, some live, but have to fight their way through eternity. Kim Cormack is also quite funny, as an author, and her humor does make it to the pages of her works. 

DIEDRE DRAKE I am saddened to share this a bit, as my friend Diedre Drake contracted Covid  and suffered long covid, and passed away from a stroke a year or two after I interviewed her. We often spoke on Twitter/X and I miss her. Her stories are how in her telling, vampires and elves have similar qualities, and so, took that and created a 6 book series about how a world lives without knowing, the competitive trade and wars, between rival houses of power. Eternals in life span, but not entirely invulnerable to damage or pain. Lots of sexual/romantic aspects to this, and still, despite my few issues with lots of lust, passion, romantic emotion in my reading her writing is superb.


ONE LAST GREAT AUTHOR and a lovely work
Mike Grell and Warlord


DC Comics is making a very fine attempt to reprint all of the works of Mike Grell as a creator. His lovely Green Arrow works were first, now his Warlord seems to beckon reprinting all of the works he did while he was one of the great creative stars while at DC. 

I have heard some voices of dissent saying they didn't get enough, the issues covered, and the look of these reprinted works. The audience who have already purchased their copy need to understand that they received something very good, even if they had fewer issues.  Having not had money to order, I will have to find out myself. But the series for me was a very favorite in the lifetime of a guy who is now 62 years old. I know that I will like it.  I'll be ordering my copy on Amazon.


LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Thursday, December 25, 2025

END OF THE YEAR Offerings: Comics Edition

GREAT WORKS TO READ in the coming year!
By Alex Ness
December 22, 2025

WHAT THE HELL AM I DOING HERE?


It is one thing to support creative artists I like, but this is not aimed at that. Almost certainly I initially reviewed each work because I wanted to share good works or to announce the beginnings of what had a portent of future greatness. It might have been a decade ago that I wrote the review or considered the series in general, but the time since the original piece by me has only reveled in the work's excellence and timeless qualities.

Overall currently, I wanted, with this, to have a list of works that should work if you read them for fun, for quality, or for the themes they celebrate.  That is, if Mice Templar worked currently, it has lingered in the fact that it is high quality and has themes that have a timeless quality about it. Not every work is great for every reader. That is how taste works. However, it probably is true that a work so good will have something to say for every reader.

APPLESEED by Masamune Shirow Published by Eclipse, Viz, & Dark Horse


Appleseed is in my list of my very favorite Manga works. It shows how loyalty is able to trump nationalism, malice or glory in the combat teams allow for greater success by bonding each team. In Appleseed the particular pair Deunan Knute and Briareos Hecatonchires fight to allow the other to succeed. In the dystopia presented, the power of a state is gone, but there remained apocalyptic dangers, and rare but dedicated cities of technological greatness. The wars go on and on in a grinder of human weakness. The various anime adaptations and new works in animated form, are relatively excellent, if slightly trying to retell the origin stories. I bought all the Eclipse/Viz works way back when, but added to my library with Dark Horse collections.

MICE TEMPLAR by Bryan JL Glass, Mike Oeming, & Victor Santos, Published by Image Comics

While Mice Templar may look like a fantasy book with adventure in mind, it is far more than that. The Templar order, the driven seekers of holiness and military oaths, have fallen. A split over the goals, beliefs and destiny has led to chaos within the order, and the world outside of its reach. This story is bound within the seeking of truth, discipline and knowing the voice calling each of them to take up the cause. Like the experience of many different pilgrims and followers, the world has little clarity, and the chapters of this order cannot immediately resolve the issues of hope and fear of loss. One character might be the returned Messiah, it is his direct response which the reader follows, and sympathizes. This work is an honorable effort and features the depth that accompanies the drive to find truth.

JULE'S VERNE'S LIGHTHOUSE By David Hine, Brian Haberlin, & Geirrod Van Dyke Published by Image Comics

My discovery of David Hine and Brian Haberlin was a moment of deepening my love for sequential story telling. David Hine is also a fine storyteller, but here as the interpreter of words of Jules Verne, a pioneer author of science fiction, he is utterly perfect. Meanwhile, the images and adaptation of the story by Brian Haberlin, also a fine storyteller, is imaginative, serious in his depiction of characters, and revels in the opportunity to make new an idea that has had over 100 years to ferment. An outpost in space, a massive watch tower of calm cast into a sea of wild and dangerous wormholes is a sanctuary, meant to guide spacefaring races to safety. But into this place comes pirates, eager to use technology to create a disaster in the form of bombs and missiles, and inflicting damage, fear and despair. The keepers of the lighthouse face grave danger for themselves, and all people and planets. It is a unique work, worth every read taken. 

THE PUMA BLUES: By Stephen Murphy & Michael Zulli, Published by Aardvark One International & Dover Publications, Inc


I think people forget that the 1980s and 1990s even, were a moment of great new offerings. The explosion of excellence happened when independent creators worked in black and white, or from the big 2, DC & Marvel, using the new comic market distribution, new paper, new technology, and a new awareness by all creators that they could try anything. Puma Blues was published by the same publisher of Cerebus, a ground breaking series by Dave Sim. It didn't care if it fit any market, it just created. Stephen Murphy and Michael Zulli told a story of the coming world, through eyes of nature, using the spectre of real villains and real humans, there is a moment of pause, to say, hmm, it might work better with a wholly fictional bad guy, but then embracing the story regardless. Now collected in one giant bastich of a book, it is gorgeous, and still apt.


SAVAGE DRAGON By Erik Larsen Published by Image Comics


A reader here, since as far back as 2002, would know that I think Erik Larsen is a great story teller, and that Savage Dragon is a fun read. I consider him an inheritor of the mantle of great story teller over many bigger names. He doesn't homage without notice, he doesn't ape other works telling his stories, but they celebrate the best of Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, and many more fine writer artists. His Savage World arc was/is a well remembered work, being unleashed in the Jack Kirby Kamandi glory. He uses real time, despite being a comic, so the father's son is currently the featured star of the book, with the original Savage Dragon being off world paying for his evil deeds in his previous life. The three omnibus works released so far have been pure fun. If you are looking for serious, you probably can find something of that nature elsewhere, but I don't read Savage Dragon for that.

BIG GUY AND RUSTY THE BOY ROBOT By Frank Miller, Geoff Darrow, Published by Dark Horse

It used to be, if you wanted giant robots, you had to go to Japanese manga or anime, or even Kaiju films. Go Nagai and all those taking up the challenge since created memorable characters and giant robots. Pacific Rim reminded us all of that kind of fun. But in the 1990s the greatest work about such characters came from Frank Miller and Geoff Darrow, from America and France, although Darrow is an expat. Iron Giant of kid's film fame is a similar burst of joy.

The story here reminds of the amazing Astro Boy and Mazinger, but plays with themes of youthful optimism, heroic and duty filled honor. Although the characters are made of metal and wires, they are the heroes we might never be. I think they deserve sympathy, for to be so powerful and have such a difficult job, they need to be made of the hardest metal, the most intricate and perfectly designed minds, to endure. Humans use machines, and these two work for human survival. And while I missed them, they were interpreted into animated stories. I loved this series, and found it moving.


SANCTUM: By  Xavier Dorison & Christophe Bec Published by Humanoids

Combining the lure of ancient cultures, artifacts and relics of a dark sect or unknown powerful gods, that are in the present found only in caverns, Sanctum begins with wonder, and ends in a wonderful sense of dread. While there might be small tics of imperfection, the work from Humanoids is truly worth the price of entry.  Few comics come close to the manner of inducing horror. I shared my copies with various artists and writers, and twice had to reacquire copies for my self. If you are looking to borrow my copies, the answer is no.

ARTESIA: By Mark Smylie Published by Sirius Entertainment and Archaia Studio Press

The story of Artesia is more than about warriors and battle, it is more about what alternate powers, of magic, of persuasion, reveal the layers of effort it takes to win a war. How this work does more than so many others, is in the unflinching view it takes, unfiltered for the audience, showing all kinds of gifts, talents and intellect of the character it follows, Artesia, beautiful, powerful, intelligent leader of warriors, and her court and throne. It is, on occasion for mature audiences. But it is prurient in that telling, and if anything, it reveals how even in discourse of lovers reveals negotiation and the expression of power. Mark Smylie is an amazingly talented fellow, his art is gorgeous to behold, but the eloquence of written word and telling the tale, reveals an excellent writer.  


ULTRAMAN By Eiichi Shimizu and Tomohiro Shimoguchi


As readers of this page know, I adore the Ultraman Animated series appearing upon Netflix. They might not know that that series is based upon, adapted closely to the most recent Ultraman series found at Viz comics. It is a knowing glance to the original Ultraman, the tv series, and closely follows the origins and later lives of people given the opportunity to fight for earth, in the guise of Ultraman, bearing all the powers and limitations. As series go, I thought the Netflix work was great, and I found that the books, shown below, are an even better work. 


LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

My Point of Departure: A Bit of Everything

WHY WRITE ABOUT MEDIA
By Alex Ness
December 11, 2025


Criticism of Popular Media Considered

I am not complaining, I am trying to explain my experience. A while ago I was contacted and asked multiple times to consider a work of fiction that was ultimately turned into a successful HBO series. A friend who follows my work sent me a copy of the book, the first of what turned into a very long series, as yet unfinished. I had begun to read the first book and realized it would be unfinished by the author as its own projections of the plot and of characters suggested to me, at least, that it would be a while before it even began to take shape. I said no, I didn't want to read more, and I won't watch the series, first because I can't pay for tv or cable, and second I was not a fan of what I read with regards to the flavor or concepts, as such I had no reason to view the series. It was of great quality in writing, but I don't have the ability keep my attention on super long series when I am not reading for pleasure. I read or listen to 50 things a month. I can't give more attention for non-personal products.

Hence my appreciation for Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith, HP Lovecraft and Lord Dunsany. They wrote lush poetry, short prose, serialized content. As I read them, I get enough, can get more, and they satisfy.

So my friend didn't understand why I didn't want to invest time in the products, asking, Isn't it the point of criticism to consider new media? I said, it is far more about one's exposure to a piece of media, and the response to how that media worked on me. Therefore the point is to share a creative work's ability to move one. The person asking said, could you just consider it because I'd like to hear what you thought?  I said, it is a work of great writing quality, but I don't want to go further since I have had enough interest or like the flavor enough to know it wouldn't work in my brain. They said why can't you just write that to open up the discussion. Finally I said, you already did that. I find my addressing the work done, you received a personal version.

As such, that was I think 15 or more years ago, perhaps 20 years, and the series is still unfinished in book form, and I think it was completed in series, but since I didn't watch, I don't know if it concluded well, or said, here it is for now, we'll come back if necessary.

RECENT BOOK READS

Here are 5 books I've invested time and interests in a fashion the above mentioned book didn't inspire the same. That isn't a complaint, my purpose was not the same.

I have been told that people do not read what they consider to be archaic in tone. Or about subjects they no longer fear or wonder about. Buy each of these and give them your attention. From works done long ago, these books stir your imagination, or your love for heroes, or villains, joy or sorrow, grace or selfishness.

I collect copies of BEOWULF, for profit or trading, rather to find and acquire all the copies I do not already own. This version is probably to me, the most beautiful. Barry Tharaud's verse adaptation and translation sings, and it is easier to perceive the culture, the events and dialogues. Rockwell Kent is magnificent 

One of the first fictional fantasy novels ever, THE MAGIC RING by Baron De La Motte Fouque is indeed a hard read. Yet, I love it though for the reasons it exists. It is clearly trying to express a new form, capturing fiction and imagination. Amy H. Sturgis makes the prose more readable, and clear. And the art is well done.

Similar to the Magic Ring, the Magic Goblet by Emilie Flygare-Carlen, also edited by Amy H. Sturgis once again, tells the tale of a wedding, a gift of a goblet, bad luck or curses, and divorce. It was brilliant for the day, as divorce was not a well tread path, nor was it commonly assumed that woman should be authors. Which is baloney, quite honestly.

The Last Man has been discussed hear before, and this is a repeat read over the last 3 years. The reason for such is that Mary Shelley wrote about something that was barely understood by science minds of the day and for a long time thereafter. By breaking new ground, she made it into a subject of thought by common folks, and without being being a scientist. It also considers the consequences of a world pandemic, in the early 1800s.

The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe is notable for how it explains, examines and expresses in prose and poetry the ideas of an unique thinker, and creative writer. It is a commonly known fact of the life of Poe that he wasn't well supported by sales, as his work, exceptionally good for the day and beyond was thought odd. But every pioneer of an art form is almost surely limited by the reader shock in the face of a new work. His talents of presenting information in a fashion that will directly challenge the conforming society, and of their ideals of normal.

Find them on Amazon

Beowulf  tranlated by Barry Tharaud, edited by Tharaud & illustrations by Rockwell Kent

The Magic Ring 
by Baron De La Motte Fouque edited by Amy H. Sturgis, & 
Jef Murray (Illustrator)
The Magic Goblet by  by Emilie Flygare-Carlen (Author),  Amy H Sturgis (Editor)
The Last Man by Mary Shelley
The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe

RECENT RPGs CONSIDERED

This is less of a statement of purpose by me, as an appreciation. I don't have a gaming group, I don't game much since, but those times when I tried to introduce my players to a new work, it almost inevitably ended in failure. They never wanted to change the flavor, and the two most constant players were decidedly in favor of battle first, killing if possible, and leaving scorched earth behind them. The two or three best players, who enjoyed new systems and settings weren't involved when I had the most time to devote, but make gaming more fun than with anyone else.

HarnWorld from Columbia Games is a self contained massively detailed setting, and it can be explored without game specifics and using your own stats. Many go further and utilize the Harnmaster Fantasy Roleplaying game engine, and as a GM go with a gaming group to explore the setting, with a game engine that aims to enhance play. I find Harn a brilliant concept, a wonderful achievement, and worth digesting as an example how populations interact, geography, climate, ocean currents and species exist in a setting. I am not likely to use Harnmaster with new players, as I find it less useful than D&D, T&T, Monsters!Monsters! or similar game systems.

HARN's Designer's website

HARNMaster from Columbia Games



LINKS

MY POETRY AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com 
HERE: Poplitiko.Blogspot.Com 
MY PUBLISHED WORKS 

Social Media
https://bsky.app/profile/alexanderness63.bsky.social 
https://x.com/alexnesspoetry

All works shown and/or considered are copyright the respective owners, fair use is the sole means of use asserted.

Monday, December 8, 2025

TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS: NEW RELEASES



 
New Top Shelf Releases!
 
Cadets now!
 
Cheese later!
 



There’s been a brazen theft, and all signs point to the Cadets’ guilt! Blast off to a colorful adventure full of mystery and intrigue!


Cosmic Cadets (Book 2): Accused!
by Ben Crane and Andy Alves

$14.99 (US) | ISBN 978-1-60309-570-9
156 pages | 6.5” x 7.5”
Full-color softcover graphic novel
Browse preview pages
Available Now!


ARRIVING IN FEBRUARY 2026
Return to the crackling, critically acclaimed series that combines vintage comic-book energy and unbeatable 21st-century vibes! In the second volume of Kevin Alvir’s raw, relatable, and rambunctious graphic novel series, Lisa Cheese and Ghost Guitar must team up like never before—to smash jerks, navigate frenemies, shop for magic crystals, and save the world!


Lisa Cheese and Ghost Guitar (Book 2): The Rock God Complex
by Kevin Alvir

$19.99 (US) | ISBN 978-1-60309-584-6
216 pages | 6 1/2" x 9 1/4"
Full-color, softcover graphic novel
Browse preview pages
Release Date: February 24, 2026