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āA Glorious Libertyā by Damon Root, Marvel Comicsā wonderfully weird start, & the redemption of Carly Rae Jepsen: The July 2021 Prestigious Awards

The Prestigious Ashurbanipal Award: āA Glorious Libertyā by Damon Root
Back in April, I put this book on my honorable mentions list, but that gnawed at me. This was such a great and important book, I decided I had to make it the July book award winner.
As a general rule, if you are interested in Frederick Douglass, read . While many 19th-century writers can be a chore to read, Douglass is a delight ā crisp and clear, filled with gripping story telling and timeless wisdom, and jokes that actually land, even today.

Books about Douglass rarely add more than the great man could convey in better prose. But ās āā is a rare exception.
āA Glorious Libertyā is about Douglassā transformation on the value of the Constitution. The abolitionists led by William Lloyd Garrison believed the document was evil for permitting slavery, and Douglass agreed. But over time, Douglass came to believe that the Constitution was, in fact, a key weapon in the battle against slavery, and as the title suggests, a āglorious liberty document.ā For this, he was bitterly denounced by Garrison and other abolitionists.
The book follows Douglass up through the Civil War, tells the story of the first black regiment (featured in the still impressive 1989 film āā), and Douglassā fight against the rise of Jim Crow and lynchings after the Civil War. The final chapters introduce the great Ida B. Wells, who would carry the fight against Jim Crow into the 20th century, and, as every First Amendment advocate knows, renamed the crusading Memphis newspaper she edited and co-owned to the ā.ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;&²Ō²ś²õ±č;&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
This short book is relevant today for those of you who wonder how liberalism could be squared with detestable institution of slavery: The answer was it couldnāt.
[John C.] Calhoun would ponder the Declarationās implications for his beloved slave system. In 1848 he finally followed his proslavery logic to its conclusion and denounced both the Declaration and its author, Thomas Jefferson. In fact, Calhoun went even further than that. He denounced the entire liberal tradition dating back to the English political theorist John Locke, who famously argued that government was instituted for the purpose of protecting humanityās preexisting natural rights.
Indeed, Douglass and Calhoun actually agreed on one thing: The institution of slavery could not long survive either liberalism or freedom of speech, properly understood.
As readers might have noticed, I always review books with audio versions. This is sadly my first exception, but I think we should bang the drum until this excellent book gets not only an audio version but the recognition it deserves.
The Prestigious Jack Kirby Award: Marvel (Mystery) Comics, 1939, 1-9

Thanks to my habit of reading comics before bed every night, I have now finished all of āThe Fantastic Fourā and all of āThe Incredible Hulk.ā I decided to go back to the very start and read the VERY first Marvel comics that came out shortly after the runaway success of Superman in 1938. Although the company wouldnāt be known as Marvel until the 1960s, the start of the Marvel Universe came in the 1939 issue 1 of Marvel Comics, which was promptly changed as of issue two to the name Marvel Mystery comics.
You have to put your anthropologist hat on, as you are looking at comics from a time when people had no really fixed idea of what a superhero comic was supposed to look like.

You will run into offensive and racist stereotypes if you read Ka-Zar, a Tarzan rip off. I skipped him anyway, as Iāve never cared for cowboy or Tarzan stories, but this frame was one of the weirdest things Iād ever seen in a comic.
The main two characters in Marvel Mystery Comics are the Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner. Torch starts off as an android (despite the āHumanā moniker) who bursts into flame when exposed to air. His creator is urged to destroy him but others want to use him for nefarious ends. The Human Torch turns on them and goes a bit overboard, delighting in burning down a mobsterās house for no good reason. But Sub-Mariner is even darker. He pretty much murders humans on sight at first, but then starts helping them fight against the Nazis, falls in love with a lady cop, and tries to reform, seeking to become a real superhero ā cape and all.
But thereās a twistā¦those murders didnāt just go away. He is tried and sentenced to the electric chair.

He survives but vows to destroy New York. This is all to bring him into conflict with the Human Torch who is now a NYC policeman for some reason. Possibly the first and biggest superhero crossover battle takes place. Getting two superheroes to fight is a Marvel staple and they did it right from the start, but the road there is wonderfully bizarre, haphazard, and, at times, kind of warped.
You will also get to meet the Masked Raider, a mustachioed vigilante named The Angel, and the least threatening looking robot superhero of all time, ELECTRO.
Enjoy my fellow nerds; the past truly is a different country.
The Prestigious Fats Waller Award: āā by Carly Rae Jepsen
Guest award selected and written by Ryne Weiss
When F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote āThere are no second acts in American lives,ā he may have been right, but only on the technicality that Angeleno pop musician Carly Rae Jepsen is Canadian by birth. āOh no,ā you might be saying, ānot the āCall Me Maybeā girl.ā And youād be right, kinda. It took me years to give Jepsenās 2015 album āEmotionā a chance, prejudiced as I was against her diabetes-inducing bubblegum pop hit from 2011.

But Iām here to tell you that there are darker and more complex layers to Jepsen, and my years spent with āEmotionā in my queue were wasted because āā is one of the greatest pop albums of all time.
Want to dive in? Start with the first track, āRun Away With Me,ā with its towering and saxophone riff. (You may have already heard it in the tenth episode of Mr. Robotās final season during its delightful subversion of the running-through-the-airport-to-catch-your-leaving-lover clichĆ©.) Itās not just catchy, itās , and has led to some truly fantastic arrangements and .
But make sure you at least get to the track ā,ā a personal favorite of mine, and a perfect call-back to ā90s club hits like Robin S.ās āā and Everything But the Girlās āā with modern flair. The track āā (and the cut tracks that wound up forming the albumās also-excellent āā EP) call back to the great ā80s new wave and synthpop music from bands like Depeche Mode, New Order, and OMD.
(I would be remiss not to mention the albumās lead single, ā.ā Itās one of the weaker tracks, but the music video features all-time-greatest-human Tom Hanks.)
I implore you, even if you hate the painfully catchy āCall Me Maybe,ā if you have affection for any pop music of the last 40 years, āEmotion,ā its āSide Bā EP, and its follow-up āā are all essential listening.

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