Showing posts with label Social outcasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social outcasts. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Unwieldy Creatures

 Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Brook Tsai (2022) 296 pages

"Unwieldy Creatures, a biracial, queer, gender-swapped retelling of Mary Shelley's classic novel Frankenstein, follows the story of three beings who all navigate life from the margins." So starts the synopsis that caught my interest. I love the cultural influence Mary Shelley's Frankenstein has had, but it was a novel I didn't finish in high school. I made slow progress through this retelling. The style and method of three people telling us the story is very similar to how Shelley's novel is presented. Dr. Z's dangerous ambition takes up the most pages. Plum, the protege, commands considerably fewer pages. And Ash, the creature, only shares their voice briefly toward the end. Tsai includes some bilingualism with Mandarin characters in Plum's story, so I had to flip to the end of the chapters for translation footnotes. The author also lifts some sentences straight from the original Frankenstein novel. The story is set now, or in the near future, so the science is more up-to-date involving in vitro gestation. However, there are still plot holes that didn't totally make sense to me. I'm glad this version exists. The rejection faced by some queer people from their families is a theme that fits well in this "creature feature" framework. Themes of estranged parents and children still resonate in this context. Tsai writes like the Romantic writers of Mary Shelley's era, and this is the part I struggled with the most. There is a lack of energy moving the plot along in the later part of this book.

Saturday, October 17, 2020

Earthlings

 

Earthlings / Sayaka Murata, translated by Ginny Tapley Takemori, read by Nancy Wu 256 pgs.

I'm not even sure how to start with this book.  Natsuki lives in a bit of a dream world but she has to because she doesn't fit into the real world. Abused by her mom and a teacher, she is just trying to survive.  Her cousin Yuu is similar in nature, he says he is an alien from Popinpobopia waiting for a spaceship to rescue him.  These two aren't destined for lives that celebrate the social norms.  Sure enough, years later they are adults and still not fitting in.  Natsuki has gained a husband, Yuu is living in their grandma's house in the mountains after losing his job.  Toss in a little incest, murder and canibalism and you really have something.  I listened to the audio which is perfectly done by Nancy Wu but that doesn't make the book any less quirky.  At times I wanted to hate this but I think I ended up loving it.