Monday, June 14, 2021
Dreams of the Golden Age
by Carrie Vaughn
This one's a sequel to After the Golden Age. Years have passed since that adventure. Celia West is now married, the president of West Corp, and the mother of two teenage daughters. Her eldest, Anna, is acting moody and secretive. Is it just plain adolescence? Or has Anna developed super powers and a compulsion to don a costume and fight crime? After all, it does run in her family...
Overall, the book was pleasant to read. But, like most sequels, it doesn't quite live up to the original.
Check it out.
LibraryThing link
Labels: CarrieVaughn, CheckItOut
Tuesday, July 09, 2019
After the Golden Age
by Carrie Vaughn
Superhero comic books tell the stories of superheroes. (The notable exception being the excellent, go-read-it series Astro City.) After the Golden Age tells the story of Celia West, the non-powered daughter of a superhero couple. Hers has been a challenging life. Not only does she have to put of with the usual pressures of having famous parents, but she also has to deal with being a targeted hostage of any supervillain in Commerce City. In recent years, she's managed to build a more pedestrian life for herself, with a strained and distant relationship with her parents. But then circumstances draw her back into their crazy world and force her to confront her parents and one of the biggest mistakes of her youth. It's a good story. Ms. Vaughn gets superhero comics, and creates characters that satisfy the tropes of the genre but are also interesting people. The plot kept me reading, wondering what happens next. The ending was good but, alas, didn't lend itself to an ongoing series. Then again, when it comes to superheroes, anything can happen.
Keeping it on my shelf
LibraryThing link
Superhero comic books tell the stories of superheroes. (The notable exception being the excellent, go-read-it series Astro City.) After the Golden Age tells the story of Celia West, the non-powered daughter of a superhero couple. Hers has been a challenging life. Not only does she have to put of with the usual pressures of having famous parents, but she also has to deal with being a targeted hostage of any supervillain in Commerce City. In recent years, she's managed to build a more pedestrian life for herself, with a strained and distant relationship with her parents. But then circumstances draw her back into their crazy world and force her to confront her parents and one of the biggest mistakes of her youth. It's a good story. Ms. Vaughn gets superhero comics, and creates characters that satisfy the tropes of the genre but are also interesting people. The plot kept me reading, wondering what happens next. The ending was good but, alas, didn't lend itself to an ongoing series. Then again, when it comes to superheroes, anything can happen.
Keeping it on my shelf
LibraryThing link
Labels: CarrieVaughn, OnMyShelf
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