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Interview: Ezra Claytan Daniels, Creator of Upgrade Soul, Talks to Lizzy Walker

Ezra Claytan Daniels

We were lucky enough to have the opportunity for one of our reviewers, Lizzy Walker, to interview Ezra Claytan Daniels, the creator of the interactive graphic novel Upgrade Soul, which she just reviewed for Monster Librarian. Thanks so much, Ezra, for taking time for us! We are looking forward to seeing what comes next from you! Check out Lizzy’s review of Upgrade Soul here!

 

Lizzy: Tell Monster Librarian readers about yourself.

Ezra: I’m a writer and illustrator originally from Sioux City, Iowa, and currently based in Los Angeles. I worked for many years as a trial graphics consultant, creating medical and technical illustrations, and charts and graphs for high-stakes trials. I worked with the Department of Justice to help present the case against former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich. That job was a huge influence on my approach to comics and storytelling.

Lizzy: What inspired you to create Upgrade Soul?

Ezra: The seed for Upgrade Soul came to me in my first year of art school. I moved to Portland, OR from a small town in Iowa, where I was kind of THE art kid. Then I started college, where I was suddenly not the best at anything. All the skills and ideas that had defined my identity my whole life, where suddenly not unique to me. So that existential terror of being made obsolete by someone who is better at being me that I was, is what eventually became Upgrade Soul.

Lizzy: What do you want readers to take away from your story?

Ezra: I wanted to challenge people’s ideas not only of what is normal, but what is good or bad, or better or worse. The central conflict in the book involves a person being faced with a clone that is smarter, stronger, and healthier than they are, but is severely disfigured. So the drama is, which version is better? The one that looks like the person we recognize, or that one that’s better in every measurable way, but because of the way they look, won’t be able to move through the world with the same ease? It’s this horror that our lives are governed and restricted by these arbitrary preferences for certain types of bodies, abilities, genders, or skin colors.

Lizzy: One of my favourite sections in the book is when Molly’s bandages are being taken off. The perspective shift is so well done, and the emotional reaction Molly has to her new body is so strong. What is your writing process like to be able to evoke so much emotion in your story?

Ezra: That specific sequence is an homage to a classic sci-fi trope. I think it first entered the lexicon with the “Eye of the Beholder” Twilight Zone episode, but you also see it in Robocop, and Tim Burton’s Batman, and I even just spotted it in that Tarsem Singh movie, Self/Less. But to answer your question, I love working within strict limitations. One of the main challenges I set for myself with this book was that I wanted to try to write a soap opera. I’m not a fan of soap operas, so the challenge was to write a soap opera that I would really love. So from day one, the main spine of Upgrade Soul was really big dramatic moments and heightened emotions.

Lizzy: What was the hardest part about writing Upgrade Soul?

Ezra: Writing Lina was by far the hardest part. She’s a character who was born with a severe disfigurement, which is not my experience. It took a lot of research, interviews, and introspection to write her in a way I felt comfortable with, but it’s still by far the part I’m most self-conscious about.

Lizzy: I have had the chance to explore the first chapter in the new app. It’s fantastic! Can you talk about the creation of the associated app? 

Ezra: The comic was actually originally designed for the app—that’s partly why the panel structure is so rigid and cinematic. But the whole idea with the app is to try to create a more immersive comics reading experience. The developer, Erick Loyer and I spent many, many hours working out how far we could use technology to push a comic before it stopped feeling like a comic. The main rule we established (you can see our whole philosophy at https://screendiver.com/digital-comics-manifesto/) was to never take control of time from the reader. The main immersive feature of our app is the original score, composed by Alexis Gideon. The score is reactive, so it keeps perfect pace with your progress through the story—you’re really controlling the pace of the music in the same way that you control the pace of the story. Every panel transition triggers a change in the music, so every emotional beat in the story is perfectly accompanied by the score, no matter how fast or slow you read.

Lizzy: Why should libraries be interested in this title?

Ezra: It’s an extremely dense book, loaded with references, homages, and entry points to other works. I worked on it off and on for 15 years, and every time I went back to it, I would add more layers from my life experience and current interests. I namedrop authors like Octavia Butler and Samuel Delany; I reference the history of pulp science fiction; I touch on concepts of experimental neurology and genetics; there’re primers for debates about transhumanism and eugenics. I see this book as a gateway to all sorts of other books and fields.

Lizzy: What else would you like librarians to know about your work?

I think about my high school self a lot. I’m constantly judging my progress and accomplishments through the lens of, “would 17 year old Ezra be proud?” I see my 17 year old self as my primary audience. I was a precocious kid who dressed weird, loved weird movies, and didn’t have a lot of friends. If any librarians know a kid who fits this description, I would love nothing more than to get my books into their hands.

Lizzy: What are you working on currently?

Ezra: I’m working on some non-comics stuff in the Upgrade Soul world. I have a new non-fiction zone that will be available at www.radiatorcomics.com in the first week of November, called “Are You at Risk for Empathy Myopia?”

 

Interview by Lizzy Walker

Graphic Novel Review: H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness Volume 1 adaptation and artwork by Gou Tanabe, translation by Zack Davisson

H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, The First Volume adaption and artwork by Gou Tanabe, translated by Zack Davisson

Dark Horse, 2019

ISBN13: 978-1506710228

Available: Paperback, Kindle, comiXology

In this Cthulhu mythos tale, an expedition team from Miskatonic University headed by Professor William Dyer travels to Antarctica early in 1931. Lake, a member of the team, becomes increasingly obsessed with discovering the secrets of a rock sample they excavate early in their exploration. He leads a separate team to push forward to find more. They find looming black mountains, seemingly unnaturally formed caverns, and a complete zoological sample of a large creature that resembles a creature described in the famed Necronomicon housed at Miskatonic University. As scientists are wont to do, Lake dissects the specimen. The two camps had been communicating regularly via radio contact, but when Lake stops responding, Dyer and the rest of the team make the trek to Lake’s camp. When they arrive, however, they come across a grisly scene: the crew and sled dogs assigned to the camp are dead, and the bodies are mangled or dissected. The team also finds a star shaped mound of snow near the scene which turns out to contain an inhuman discovery. After recovering the remains of eleven bodies, they find that one of the members of Lake’s camp, Gedney, is missing.

Volume 1 of Gou Tanabe’s manga adaptation of H.P Lovecraft’s novella At the Mountains of Madness is a beautiful and haunting version of this story. Tanabe’s artwork is an interesting and effective balance between the darkness of the caves and confined spaces to vast and breathtaking landscapes. A major difference, which I found to enhance the story, was that it was told from the point of view of both camps. The original was told from the perspective of only the main camp. This, combined with the added dialogue between the camps and artwork depicting the emotional reactions of the characters involved, created more of a sense of fear and foreboding than Lovecraft’s work. I can’t wait to see what Tanabe does with the continuation of this story in Volume 2. I would recommend this title for those who enjoy cosmic horror, manga from the horror genre, or different interpretations of Lovecraft (even those that he clearly based off of other works—in this case, Edgar Allan Poe’s The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket). If you are a purist, this probably isn’t for you. Highly recommended.

 

Contains: corpses, dissected human body

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Graphic Novel Review: Harrow County Volume 2 by Cullen Bunn, illustrated by Tyler Crook, Carla Speed McNeil, Hannah Christensen, and Jenn Manley Lee

Harrow County, Library Edition, Volume 2: Snake Doctor & Family Tree by Cullen Bunn, illustrated by Tyler Crook, Carla Speed McNeil, Hannah Christensen, and Jenn Manley Lee

Dark Horse, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1506710655

Available: Hardcover, Kindle, comiXology

There is so much happening in this second library edition of Harrow County. Eighteen-year-old witch Emmy Crawford feels alone in the world in terms of her abilities, but a group of strangers appear in Harrow County claiming to be her kin. Emmy learns more about her past, opening more questions for her and the reader. Cullen’s storytelling is brilliant, in that the more we find out about not just Emmy, but her friend Bernice, the more intricate and entwined their stories become. I find myself wondering about the future of these young ladies and what their relationship will look like in the future. Finding out more about Hester Beck has also been intriguing. She is a terrifying figure to be sure, especially since we get more than just a glimpse of what she was capable of.

The reader meets the first of these beings when the skinless boy, Emmy’s familiar, is taunted and hounded by a long haired man, Levi, who kills a bird to play it as he walks along. He talks of pickled pigs’ feet being no substitute for his favourite meat, long pig. Levi coaxes the skinless boy to find his home, discovering what he is and who created him. Clinton and Bernice discover there is another witch in Harrow County after the former’s Uncle Early starts acting strangely after confronting a cottonmouth in the berry bushes. When his uncle ends up missing, Clinton goes to Bernice to help find him out at Old Lady Lovey’s cabin. What she finds out about herself in the process will help protect the people of the county. Emmy ventures to Creech’s County after hearing rumors about a haunted house where the children are hunted by something that wishes to do them harm. She soon discovers there is more to the house than she and the family originally thought. Emmy and Bernice hunt for a lost Clinton in the corn field, only to be attacked by the scarecrows. After Bernice is able to fend them off with the help of a gift from Old Lady Lovey, they come face to face with Levi and a hypnotized young Clinton. They are led to the spot by bloody footprints, who Levi introduces as Mildred. He insists they are related to Emmy, but she is a hard one to convince. When he takes her to meet the rest of her kin, her decision to go with him could mean the destruction of Harrow County.

This library edition collects volumes three and four of Harrow County and includes a sketchbook with notes by Crook, McNeil, and Christenson, essays, and more. The short comics under the title “Tales of Harrow County” written by Tyler Crook with art by David Ruben, the amazing Kate Leth, Kel McDonald, Brian Hurt, Matt Kindt, and Jessica Mahon, are a great addition to the second library edition.

Contains: some blood and gore

Highly recommended

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker