Hello everyone, it’s another episode of Brain Food, and this time around, I’m bringing with me a wonderful little graphic novel from Lucy Bellwood, 100 Demon Dialogues.
Please be sure to check out her website and Twitter and support this amazing artist.
And you can find the ending song here, from the amazing people at Audio Library.
In this episode, I review Esther Frisner’s Chicks in Chainmail feminist minded, fantasy fiction.
Sadly, like a lot of media from the 90s, it does not hold up well to the test of time, especially with its rather narrow application of feminism that, through omission, does not include any other kind of woman who is not white, and so very little who aren’t straight and cisgender.
What I found the most frustrating about the anthology as a whole is that, somehow, there are almost no stories where a woman is single and happy. She almost always has, finds, or has had been in a relationship.
The music for the ending theme came from the No Copyright Music youtube channel, and you can listen to it here.
It’s another week, and another novel review, as this time I delve into one of my comfort reads, the novelization of the Resident Evil 2 game by SD Perry, Resident Evil 2 – City of the Dead!
For more information on SD Perry and the many books she’s worked on, check her out on these places on the Internet.
Wow, it’s been awhile, but here it is, episode 67 of Brain Food!
This time around, I review Crash and Burn, a webcomic about a human and an alien diplomatic delegation that crash lands on an abandoned amusement park planet.
In it, I review Jesse Petterson’s In The Dead Volume 1, an anthology of short stories about zombie survivors so white you’d think someone dropped it in a bag of flour.
I used a different format this time, using stock imagery from Pixels and Unsplash, instead of just filming myself, and I hope everyone likes it.
Yes, I was heavily influenced by Jim Sterling’s videos.