Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Every few months we'll be picking one trade to read and discuss. Join in on the fun and nominate the next book.

Moderators: Thomas Katers, Chris

Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Sal » Tue Mar 10, 2009 3:19 pm

Image

Publishing history

Luther Arkwright made his first appearance in the mid-70s in 'The Papist Affair'[1], a short strip for Brainstorm Comix where Arkwright teamed up with a group of cigar-chewing biker nuns to recover the sacred relics of St Adolf of Nuremberg from 'a buncha male chauvinist priests'.

The first parts of The Adventures of Luther Arkwright followed as a serial in the British underground comic Near Myths in 1978, were later continued in pssst! magazine, then interrupted in 1982, less than half complete. Between 1987 and 1989 Bryan Talbot completed the story, which was published as a series of nine standard comic books by Valkyrie Press, followed, at readers' request, by a tenth issue containing articles about the history and production of the comic and some extended backstory and character information. It was subsequently published in the United States by Dark Horse Comics.

The story is adult in tone, with many mythological, historical and political references, and a little explicit sex. Its genesis owes something to the influence of Michael Moorcock's Jerry Cornelius stories, though Moorcock and Talbot agree that the similarities between the characters are limited. Warren Ellis calls Arkwright "probably the single most influential graphic novel to have come out of Britain to date... probably Anglophone comics' single most important experimental work."

In 1999 Dark Horse published Talbot's sequel to Luther Arkwright, which was called Heart of Empire.

In 2005 the artwork was digitally remastered by Comics Centrum for an edition in Czech (Dobrodružství Luther Arkwrighta), allowing proper reproduction of both light and dark parts of "tonal" pages. The new artwork was also used for a French edition by Kymera Comics. Bryan Talbot has described the Czech edition as "the best ever published".

In 2006 it was republished as a webcomic using the digitally remastered files at the official fanpage at The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Synopsis
Luther Arkwright is a work of apocalyptic science fiction set in parallel universes. The eponymous hero has the unique talent of being able to move between parallels purely by force of will, and is aided by Rose Wylde, a telepath whose many incarnations across the parallels are able to communicate with one another. Luther and Rose are agents of a parallel known as "zero-zero", whose stable position in the multiverse has allowed the development of a world at peace with itself and sufficiently high technology to monitor the parallels for signs of the malign influence of the "Disruptors".

Most of the action in the story is set in a parallel world where the English Civil War has been indefinitely prolonged by the actions of the Disruptors, who are also responsible for unleashing "Firefrost", a legendary artifact which is destabilising the multiverse. Arkwright intervenes on the Royalist side in order to draw out the Disruptors and locate and destroy Firefrost. Along the way he is captured, dies in custody and returns to life with his powers enhanced.

The storytelling of the early episodes is complex, with flashbacks to Arkwright's upbringing by the Disruptors, escape to the parallel of his birth and early missions for zero-zero intermingling with the course of his mission in neo-Cromwellian England, with story-telling techniques and art styles shifting to match. The scenes of Arkwright's death and rebirth are particularly abstract and full of religious and mythological symbolism: the comic is unusual in being one of the few adventure stories where the readers and the protagonist both know from the beginning that he's going to die; the only questions are 'when?', 'where?', 'how?'... and 'what then?'

The later parts of the story have a more straightforward, linear form.

Awards
Bryan Talbot and the Valkyrie Press edition of Arkwright were nominated for eight Eagle Awards in 1988, winning four: Favourite Artist, Best New Comic, Favourite Character for Arkwright himself and Best Comic Cover.

Audio Adaptation
In 2005, The Adventures of Luther Arkwright was made into a full-cast, three-CD audio adventure by Big Finish Productions, starring David Tennant (cast near the time of the CD's release as the Tenth Doctor in Doctor Who) and Paul Darrow (Avon in Blake's 7).

Feature film adaptation
In 2006 it was announced that Benderspink would be creating a live action film with producers Andrew Prowse and Sophie Patrick. [2]

Links
* The Adventures of Luther Arkwright at Bryan Talbot's official fansite
* The Adventures of Luther Arkwright webcomic- samples of the comic available to read online as a webcomic.
* Warren Ellis's review of Arkwright, republished at the official fansite.
* Big Finish's full cast audio adaptation.

* Buy it at InStockTrades.com
Image Image ImageImage

"My greatest strength is my humility. My greatest weakness is that I am a little too awesome."
User avatar
Sal
Administrator
Administrator
 
Posts: 1499
Joined: Fri Sep 14, 2007 9:30 am
Location: Chicago

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby scott c. » Wed Mar 11, 2009 2:14 pm

Great. I've been looking for a reason to reread this book. It's been a few years since I've cracked it open.
User avatar
scott c.
Adventurer
Adventurer
 
Posts: 152
Joined: Mon Sep 24, 2007 6:50 am

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby scott_H_pdx » Thu Mar 12, 2009 10:14 pm

Nice. Loved the little bit I've read so far.
scott_H_pdx
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 18
Joined: Thu Feb 12, 2009 12:09 pm

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby bean6344 » Sun Mar 15, 2009 1:44 pm

I read "Heart of Empire" when it came out. I have an unread copy of this on my stack/shelf. I guess its time to jump in. I've flipped through it a couple of times and only remember the very Starlinesque 70's feathered haircuts.
Thanks for a nice off center pick Tom!
Bean
User avatar
bean6344
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 6
Joined: Sun Mar 08, 2009 12:45 pm
Location: Indian Rocks Beach FL

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Jeffrey » Mon Mar 16, 2009 8:57 pm

Great choice for the book club! While I loooooove Grant Morrison's, he owes a debt of gratitude to this mind-blowing work. It seems so cliche to say that a book is ahead of its time, but Talbot's work is amazing for now. While I enjoyed Heart of Empire, I enjoyed this work that much more.

I will definitely have to stop by for this discussion.
User avatar
Jeffrey
Sidekick
Sidekick
 
Posts: 148
Joined: Sun Sep 23, 2007 8:36 pm
Location: Chicago!

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Stephanie » Tue Mar 17, 2009 5:32 pm

I've never heard of this...nice choice. I was looking for something new to read!
User avatar
Stephanie
Superhero
Superhero
 
Posts: 507
Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 1:43 pm
Location: Bloomington, Indiana

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby DanGP » Thu Mar 26, 2009 6:53 pm

Great choice. Along with Grendel this was one of the first indie books I ever picked up back in the late 80's and it blew me away. I can't wait to hear what everyone thinks of it.
User avatar
DanGP
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 12
Joined: Sat Jan 17, 2009 5:15 am
Location: London

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Spooky » Sat Apr 04, 2009 10:37 am

Uhm..I have a question. So, how does this whole Book Club thing work?
Should we use this thread for discussion now, or after the episode with your discussion is released?
Spooky
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 23
Joined: Sun Jan 25, 2009 7:16 am

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Thomas Katers » Thu Apr 09, 2009 7:18 am

Spooky wrote:Uhm..I have a question. So, how does this whole Book Club thing work?
Should we use this thread for discussion now, or after the episode with your discussion is released?



Sure...go for it. Start talking.
User avatar
Thomas Katers
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 1498
Joined: Fri Sep 14, 2007 9:30 am

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby john42 » Wed Apr 22, 2009 10:33 pm

This book blew my brains out. Here are 17 awesome things about The Adventures of Luther Arkwright (page #s referenced are from the 2007 Dark Horse):

1. First- An S.A.T. analogy: Talbot is to Grant Morrison as the Stooges are to the Sex Pistols, or the Pixies to Nirvana. For all Morrison’s complaining about the Matrix taking from the Invisibles, the Invisibles took a lot from this.

I suppose the difference is the Matrix made millions. But I like the Matrix and I love Morrison. Makes me fantasize about a utopian post-monetary society with a free flow of influences. Para-000?

2. The art is awesome, and it gets better as the book progresses. In fact, it got really awesome at just about the time I started to figure out what was going on with the plot. So the world coalesced visually at the same time it coalesced conceptually.

This book can be tough to get into, but if you dive in whole-heart and put in the intellectual effort, you’ll get rare rewards.

3. Pg. 79: Arkwright says “The purpose of life? In asking that you are supposing that there is a purpose.” Existentialism in two lines! Take that, Action Philosophers! Don’t try to find the answer- question the question. Don’t try to find your meaning, MAKE your meaning.

4. The Motorcyle Corps: Awesome parallel modern Calvary! Really scary.

5. Talbot does ‘glow’ really will with just pencil and ink. Otherworldly light-sources look genuinely otherworldly, more so than many current digital techniques.

6. Scott McCloud would go crazy talking about the control of time in this book. The slow-down violence predates decompression by a couple decades.

7. Treatment of sexuality- Luther saying “You have an unhealthy attitude about sex” might as well be talking to mainstream media.

8. The depiction of urban warfare between a massive military superpower and a guerilla insurgency is particularly relevant, which leads to…

9. Pg. 98… whoa… Perfect sequential horror. The billy-clubs flood across the panels from right-to-left (heroes traditionally move left-to-right, so this really feels like bad guys winning). Each successive panel has more detail, then you look closer and realize that ‘detail’ means ‘brain bits’.
I just read Jason Lutes’ Berlin, and I was really amazed at how much Talbot’s depiction of this fantasy battle helped me viscerally appreciate Lutes’ ultra-researched depiction of a the real-life May Day Massacre.

10. “Blood like napalm: Sweat like acid, skin bound by barbed wire and fish hooks, eyes slashed by razors of light.” Best bad hangover description ever!

11. Pg 120- 125: Arkwright dies and is reborn while imagining sex with Rose with HUGE blocks of text. You can either gloss over those streams of consciousness or you can really read them deeply and soak in the images and get: Joseph Campbell in 5 pages! Totally sold me on the relationship between sex and death. They’re both ultimate experiences! To approach an adequate description of sex with someone you love you need that much text, that many mythical references, that many historical references, that many images. I love that all the craziness in the book all comes down to a love story. The greatest rock band of all time spent most of their songs trying to describe love. The greatest writer of all time spent most of his plays and sonnets trying to describe love. Good for them!

12. SuperTanks named Gog and MaGog!

13. The Queen just delivered twins while leading a battle. With a baby on each breast, she says “Bring me my sword and my mascara.” fuck yeah!

14. I love how ‘our’ earth holds no special importance in this multiverse. The DCU designation Earth-1, and the notion that it was central to the multiverse, bothers me because it seems geocentrist and incongruous with our current scientific understanding of our place in the universe. Carl Sagan articulated this best with his 'Great Demotions' http://books.google.com/books?id=9hzqn9gWtAcC&pg=PA20&lpg=PA20&dq=carl+sagan+great+demotions&source=bl&ots=KaWq9e-f-8&sig=wC72tV7tDZDrJ2jEExANJkC96bs&hl=en&ei=UOrvSb2fEpiWlAfGgK27DA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#PPA22,M1.

15. The emphasis on perspective- there are a lot of different ‘observer’ characters, from the objective W.O.T.A.N. computer god to the journalist who overcomes objectivity. Makes you think about the story in a lot of different ways.

16. Made me think about continuity. This book has its own intricate continuity, and fully understanding it is dependent on fully understanding that continuity. I don’t fully understand it, just like I don’t fully understand Final Crisis. But I understand enough of it to get a whole lot out of it.

Why do we love continuity? I don’t think it’s just some nerd OCD thing. I think it shows a real appreciation of the complexity of history. If you want to understand why a nation does what it does, you need to look at its history. If you want to understand why your best friend does what s/he does, you need to look at his/her personal history.

17. Made me think a lot about parallel worlds. Why do we love them? For me, just like Arkwright’s question about the meaning of life, parallel worlds make me question my assumptions. What if history had turned out differently? What if Cromwell won the English Civil War? What if all the W.O.T.A.N. updates about the different paras happened? Thinking about how things could have been helps us think about how things could be. Questioning our interpretation of the past shakes up our fatality about the future. And that’s a great thing about fiction in general, right? It helps us imagine.
User avatar
john42
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 13
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:12 pm
Location: Brooklyn

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Spooky » Sun Apr 26, 2009 5:28 am

I hate my internet provider....

So, after having finished the series I have some thoughts.
First of all, the fact that the art looked flat didn't make much sense to me at first, but with further reading it made sense. At least when Talbot was going for that style, because the art looked like a melange of historic Woodcut, especially like those from the dark ages, and independet comics.
5. Talbot does ‘glow’ really will with just pencil and ink. Otherworldly light-sources look genuinely otherworldly, more so than many current digital techniques.
Agreed.
Even though I had to accustom to Octobrianna at first, I liked her after reading the article in the back about the character. She was definitly a unique and interesting character I would like to see in other series. Only flaw was the tearing paragraphs off text at some points. I read them and I think to understand what he was trying to say, but it brought me out of the story. Nevertheless, I appreciated the series overall, and I will probably revisit it after some months.
Nice pick, Tom!
Spooky
Citizen
Citizen
 
Posts: 23
Joined: Sun Jan 25, 2009 7:16 am

Re: Book Club - Apr 2009 - The Adventures of Luther Arkwright

Postby Thomas Katers » Thu Apr 30, 2009 12:32 pm

I am glad people are digging it.
User avatar
Thomas Katers
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 1498
Joined: Fri Sep 14, 2007 9:30 am


Return to AC Book Club

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron
 

Who is online

In total there is 1 user online :: 0 registered, 0 hidden and 1 guest (based on users active over the past 15 minutes)
Most users ever online was 57 on Wed Dec 30, 2009 9:43 am

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

Current time

It is currently Wed Sep 08, 2010 3:29 pm
RocketTheme Joomla Templates