ANALOGY OF AN ANTHOLOGY |
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ver wonder if the Gypsy's cursed the wrong guy? Or how did Wesley go from being a prissy Watcher boy to modern-day Loki? What does Jasmine have in common with your everyday street evangelists? Exactly what did the writers think they were doing with Cordelia? And what is the Wolfram & Hart policy on interoffice dating? These are just some of the questions posed in the new book Five Seasons of Angel: Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Discuss Their Favorite Vampire published by BenBella Books. Within its pages those questions are answered in the most enlightening of ways. Intelligently argued, thought-provokingly analyzed and at times downright funny, Five Seasons of Angel is a compelling collection of 21 short essays written with the sole aim to discuss and dissect the legacy of the vampire with a soul with some very interesting results as this CityofAngel.com review will reveal.
FIVE SEASONS OF ANGEL ~ THE REVIEW
This enlightening trend and persecution theory continues in Victim Triumphant written by Jacqueline Lichtenberg, a novelist more usually associated with Star Trek fiction, as she boldly states that Angel's 'hero' status is one of the biggest misconceptions ever and in fact Angel isn't even a hero at all. To support her slightly controversial statement, Jacqueline compares Angel to perhaps the ultimate hero in the Whedonverse, Buffy, Vampyr Slayer Extraordinaire. "Her [Buffy's] heroism lies in her ability to take the cards she's dealt and refuse to play the hand," Jacqueline writes, "when faced with an unacceptable choice, she doesn't choose the lesser of two evils - she finds another way. Buffy is a hero because she makes her own rules."
Every memorable and successful television series has to have characters that its audience can relate to and get enraptured with and fortunately Angel was blessed with an abundance of the very same. Most of the major players from the series, during the course of this book, end up being put under the microscope in some way - It's Not Easy Being Green And Nonjudgmental by Abbie Bernstein, Why We Love Lindsay by Michelle Sagara West, and The Assassination of Cordelia Chase by Jennifer Cruise to name but a few. Dark World columnist Amy Berner chose the character of the former Watcher turned Rogue Demon Hunter as the central point for her piece in The Path of Wesley Wyndham-Pryce. The journey that Wesley has taken since his early days in Sunnydale has been fraught with tragedy and unspoken loyalty and has been one of the most visible on-screen transformations. Amy's essay plots the changes in the bumbling Englishman and highlights the turning points and his changing relationships with those around him, "Wesley was a good man," she states, "who wanted to do what was right. We grieved with him. We witnessed him repeatedly continue the good fight when he could have walked away. We watched him be just and we watched him be good, if not necessarily at the same time. Wesley always strove for light, even when he did so from a dark place." Angel, of course, gets his fair share of column inches. That Angel Doen't Live Here Anymore by Laura Resnick suggests that there is someone else stirring inside Angel than just Angelus and that since his separation from Buffy, Angel has become a more 'adult and complex character'. Within her piece, she states the differences between Buffy's Angel and Angel's Angel. His Champion status once again is discussed in Where Have All The Good Guys Gone by K Stoddard Hayes where the author suggests that in order to be a Champion of the Good, it helps if you have intimate and first hand knowledge on how to be bad! There's My Boy puts Angel on the psychologist's couch as his relationship with His Sire is scrutinized by sextologist Joy Davidson. "Angel may be one of the small screen's most sexually confused heroes. He's torn by sadistic impulses, terrified of the consequences of intimacy and driven to redeem tortured women - all because a consuming relationship with one of them framed his destiny," she begins. " We could easily mistake Buffy for the most important femme in Angel's life, considering they had the forbidden love of all time but another relationship was better than forbidden, it was formative." She is of course talking about the elegant Darla and her analysis of the history of her relationship with Angel certainly explains a few things about the original vampire with a soul. Inevitably Spike had to make an appearance in the book, it just wouldn't be the same without the platinum blonde vamp and he is the pivotal subject matter in Death Becomes Him: Blondie Bear by Nancy Holder. This chapter basically identifies and differentiates the five different versions of Spike that have appeared on our screens since crashing into the Sunnydale sign back in Season 2 of Buffy. There's Big Bad Spike, Emasculated, Snarky Spike, Lovelorn but Getting Some Spike, Puppy Spike and Angel season five Spike. You'd have to read the feature to see which you prefer, if you don't know already. There is also the inevitable comparison between Angel and Spike in The Good Vampire: Spike and Angel by Peter S Beagle which does so much more than try to identify who Buffy should be with using excellent character analysis of both vampires and cites not only their differences but their striking similarities.
The key reason why this book is such an enjoyable read is that it is written from a fan's perspective and discusses subjects that other fans have talked about on forums and chat rooms for some time. However, that doesn't mean that the conversation is cold. On the contrary, the authors have managed to add a new twist to an old stake and have put a different spin on some topics taken for granted. It is amusing, not too heavy with the dialogue and full of back-story history to support theories. On the downside, there are some pretty obvious omissions from the book as pivotal characters Gunn and Fred warrant nothing more than a mere brief mention in a couple of chapters and that seems a little undeserving for two of the series major players especially as Spike who has appeared in just one season, has two chapters dedicated to him. Not everyone will agree with the theories raised in this book, but it certainly opens the mind a little. Five Seasons of Angel is more than a fitting tribute to the Angel series and should be most definitely added to any Angel fan's collection. I give Five Seasons of Angel, 4 out of 5 Stakes! Written by CoA Staff Writer, Sue Grimshaw
CityofAngel.com would like to Thank Nicole Basurto (Marketing and Publicity Assistant) at BenBella Books for allowing us the opportunity of this review.
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