Saturday, November 21, 2009

Lee Lela: Angry Little Girls

Here's a real entry, the kind of author I love to see more!

As a college student, Lela Lee got frustrated with her contemporary comics and animations. She found them to be so "racist and sexist" that she started making her own cartoon about herself.  Now, "the Angry Little Asian Girl" has fully developed into the following five graphic novels. 









  • Angry little girls (2005)
  • Still angry little girls (2006)
  • Angry little girls! : a little book of friendship (2007)
  • Angry little girls in love (2008)
  • Angry little girls!: a little book of love (2009)

When her, Angry little girl was first  released in 2005, she received quite a coverage in mass media and public support.  She even appeared in AMERICAN EXPRESS card commercial.  Chris Chan Lee's widely acclaimed drama, YELLOW, and PBS featured her.

Meet her characters, by the order of appearance,



Disenchanted Deborah,  Angry Kim, Crazy Maria, Fresh Wanda, Gloomy Xyla, well can't identify the last one!


Her website angrylittlegirls.com 
  1. Well maintained with surprising lists of merchandise she has created
  2. Her comic strips are daily updated

Friday, November 13, 2009

"The Danger of a Single Story": Why I fuss about Multicultural Literature


Starting over a new life in a new country, I had a good time to think over what I wanted to do with my second life, a second chance.  Doing it all over, I wanted to do it right.  A career in a library caught my attention.

Sitting and watching people and librarians for hours, I felt I could do some contributions.  Fresh from a different country, I did not have any concrete plans but a lot of aspirations.  Then, I found books by and about people like me, new comers in the country.

 The following story is the one that makes my heart beats faster.  So closely and so powerfully,  Chimamanda Adichie talks about "The danger of a single story,"  about the things that I was not able to articulate.





That's is why I strongly believe that minority librarians should make it their business to promote good multicultural literature, books of their stories, other stories.  In a way, librarians provide the general public open access to "more balanced stories" of the world.

The author's website is at http://www.l3.ulg.ac.be/adichie/



Monday, November 9, 2009

Jim Lee




Here is Jim Lee, who baffled me a lot by appearing behind all major American comic heroes: Superman, Batman, X-man.  After a little research, I am learning that over 20 regular writers and 40 regular pencillers have been involving in creating the Uncanny X-man comic series, alone.

Mr. Lee was born in Seoul, Korea but grew up in Missouri to be one of the most popular American comic writers.  As his high school classmates predicted him would be a commic writer, even after he went to Princeton Univ. following tracks to be a medical doctor, he started his career by  penciling Uncanny X-man #248.


He started gaining reputations after his involvement in critically acclaimed series The Authority and Planetary for "breaking out stereotype of comics" with "substance."



Wiki credits the following works to him.
  • Alpha Flight #51,53,55–64 (Marvel, 1987–88)
  • War Journal #1–13, 17-19 (Marvel, 1988–89)
  • Uncanny X-Men #248, 256–258, 267–277 (Marvel, 1990–91)
  • X-Men (vol. 2) #1–11 (Marvel, 1991–92)
  • WildC.A.T.s #1–13 (Image/Wildstorm, 1992–94)
  • Fantastic Four (Heroes Reborn) #1–6 (pencils) #7–12 (co-plotter) (Marvel, 1996–97)
  • Divine Right #1–12 (Image/Wildstorm, 1997-99)
  • Batman #608–619 (DC Comics, 2002–03)
  • Superman (vol. 2) #204–215 (DC Comics, 2004–05)
  • All-Star Batman and Robin #1—9 (DC Comics, 2005— )

It is disappointing to see that he does not elaborate his life or works in any of his MyfaceTwitter nor author's page at ComicBookDB.com.



Monday, November 2, 2009

Korean Ninjas and the Korean Wave

Here are new entries in the American Ninja revolution and its Korean connections.

A Korean actor, Byung-hun Lee is The Storm Shadow in the movie version of G.I Joe: the rise of cobra.



Rain, a Korean actor and singer, is playing the ninja in upcoming movie, Ninja Assassin. Its trailer at Youtube has already got 2,000,000 hits.


This mega singer and actor with a Master's degree  is one of the Korean pop stars trying out a new land over the Pacific: hope to write an entry about him in this Blog when Ninja Assassin is released and gets any attentions.

There's something called "The Korean Wave,"  which Wiki explains to be "popularity of South Korean culture that rapidly expanding toward world."   By the time I was packing to come here in 2004, I did not understand why Greyhounds packed with Japanese or Taiwanese tourists were milling into my hometown just to visit a movie set they had been watching on TV.  Still then, I underestimated it as a little fuss of Korean pop culture just for the Millennial Generation.




Now that Korean teenagers (17 to 21) are naming themselves as Wonder Girls and climbing up Billborad chart with their title song "Nobody"and Korean actors are starring major roles in the Hollywood movies,  I am wondering if this Korean Wave will make a change: living in US as a Korean American, I've always tempted to fix people thinking all Asians are either Chinese or Japanese.  I am wishfully thinking that this Korean Wave has a Tunami effect to awaken people about a fact that Asia is a big continent with more than two countries.