2010-08-20

reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2010-08-20 01:26 pm

The Keeper by S.L. Armstrong & K. Piet

The concept of this book was good and also original; I know that it’s not the first time someone suggests that the love between Jesus Christ and his apostles was maybe something more than only theory. Actually in this book, Jesus is not part of the theory, but it’s again highlighted that Jesus said nothing against homosexuality.

Hadi is the last in a long line of male members of his family who inherited the job of being the Keeper; since his great-uncle was the previous one, and Hadi has never met the man, he actually doesn’t know what it means to be a keeper, and he has built a life of his own in Milan, working in the fashion industry. But then suddenly Asif, his uncle, dies, and Hadi has to take his place. Even if a contemporary gay man living in a western modern society, Hadi is from a very traditional eastern family, and the honour of the family is more important than Hadi’s personal life. And then, it’s not like Hadi has some commitment aside his job to bound him to Milan.

When he arrives to Setif, Algeria, to start his job as a keeper, Hadi realizes that there are root in his family he was never aware of, and that the legends he was told when he was a child are truer than what he was thinking. He is the keeper not of a family, but of a man, the same man his family has “kept” for millennia; and the keeping is more than simply protect the man, he has also to feed him, in a very, very personal way.

This is probably the part of the story that I didn’t completely understand; the meaning of the blood exchanging, the turning of religion in myth, the vampirism side of the story. But then, if you dig well, the same Jesus said “Take and eat, this is my body, drink this is my blood ... my body is real food and my blood is true drink ... Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me and I in him ...”. So the “blood” is an important part of the Christian mythology, and the bond deriving from taking the blood is a bond that is impossible to break.

In the end, considering the two men, even if the man Hadi is asked to keep is older (way older), he is like an ascetic, like one of those prophets who prowl the earth but in the end they don’t dig in it, they are detached from ordinary things like sleep, eat, sex… Hadi undertakes the job of being a keeper with a whole new meaning, and maybe also since he is the younger of all who preceded him: Hadi doesn’t want to renounce to his life, to every aspect of his life, even falling in love and having sex, only since he has a higher task to complete; he thinks he can have both, the keeper job and also a normal relationship.

The novel doesn’t go in detail of what will be the outcome of this decision, what will happen in 30-40 years, maybe even 50 if they are lucky. In this moment the most important thing is exactly that, this moment.

http://www.stormmoonpress.com/thekeeper.aspx

Amazon Kindle: The Keeper

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle


Cover Art by Nathie
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2010-08-20 01:26 pm

The Keeper by S.L. Armstrong & K. Piet

The concept of this book was good and also original; I know that it’s not the first time someone suggests that the love between Jesus Christ and his apostles was maybe something more than only theory. Actually in this book, Jesus is not part of the theory, but it’s again highlighted that Jesus said nothing against homosexuality.

Hadi is the last in a long line of male members of his family who inherited the job of being the Keeper; since his great-uncle was the previous one, and Hadi has never met the man, he actually doesn’t know what it means to be a keeper, and he has built a life of his own in Milan, working in the fashion industry. But then suddenly Asif, his uncle, dies, and Hadi has to take his place. Even if a contemporary gay man living in a western modern society, Hadi is from a very traditional eastern family, and the honour of the family is more important than Hadi’s personal life. And then, it’s not like Hadi has some commitment aside his job to bound him to Milan.

When he arrives to Setif, Algeria, to start his job as a keeper, Hadi realizes that there are root in his family he was never aware of, and that the legends he was told when he was a child are truer than what he was thinking. He is the keeper not of a family, but of a man, the same man his family has “kept” for millennia; and the keeping is more than simply protect the man, he has also to feed him, in a very, very personal way.

This is probably the part of the story that I didn’t completely understand; the meaning of the blood exchanging, the turning of religion in myth, the vampirism side of the story. But then, if you dig well, the same Jesus said “Take and eat, this is my body, drink this is my blood ... my body is real food and my blood is true drink ... Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood abides in me and I in him ...”. So the “blood” is an important part of the Christian mythology, and the bond deriving from taking the blood is a bond that is impossible to break.

In the end, considering the two men, even if the man Hadi is asked to keep is older (way older), he is like an ascetic, like one of those prophets who prowl the earth but in the end they don’t dig in it, they are detached from ordinary things like sleep, eat, sex… Hadi undertakes the job of being a keeper with a whole new meaning, and maybe also since he is the younger of all who preceded him: Hadi doesn’t want to renounce to his life, to every aspect of his life, even falling in love and having sex, only since he has a higher task to complete; he thinks he can have both, the keeper job and also a normal relationship.

The novel doesn’t go in detail of what will be the outcome of this decision, what will happen in 30-40 years, maybe even 50 if they are lucky. In this moment the most important thing is exactly that, this moment.

http://www.stormmoonpress.com/thekeeper.aspx

Amazon Kindle: The Keeper

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle


Cover Art by Nathie
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2010-08-20 08:50 pm

Behind the Cover: Barye Phillips

Barye Phillips (1924-1969) started by working for Columbia Pictures' advertising department in the early 1940s and did training booklets and propaganda during WW II. He began painting paperback covers around 1943 and was very prolific, working for several publishers in various styles. His best known work was probably for Gold Medal and other Fawcett imprints.

His work was much in demand, and he did covers for Avon, Bantam, Dell, Pocket Books, and Signet, although he is most remembered for his numerous Gold Medal covers, including some of the early Shell Scott's.

 
From The Paperback Explosion: How Gay Paperbacks Changed America ~ Ian Young: This motif of the Concerned Woman was frequently used: Dean Douglas’s Man Divided (Gold Medal, 1954) and Dyson Taylor’s Bitter Love (Pyramid, 1957) were among many whose covers showed eye-catching dames displaying concern for depressed-looking fellows. The prototype was an early, undated paperback reprint of Richard Meeker’s 1933 novel Better Angel; retitled Torment, it showed a woman reaching out to a man in a suit who appears to be hiding his head in the curtains.

His speed (he consistently turned out four finished paintings a week) and his ability to work in a variety of styles lead to his being referred to throughout the industry as "The King of the Paperbacks".


Poster for Goldfinger

more sketches )

In addition to "Diamond Lil" gem for Sheridan, Barye Phillips did the dustcover for: Case of the Vanishing Beauty by Richard Prather [Fawcett Gold Medal, 1950]; On the Road by Jack Kerouac [Signet, 1958]; The Big Caper by Lionel White [winner of the Frederick Muller Gold Award, 1961]; and the first paperback edition of Casino Royale by Ian Fleming [Signet].

Barye Phillips died in 1969.

more vintage covers )
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2010-08-20 08:50 pm

Behind the Cover: Barye Phillips

Barye Phillips (1924-1969) started by working for Columbia Pictures' advertising department in the early 1940s and did training booklets and propaganda during WW II. He began painting paperback covers around 1943 and was very prolific, working for several publishers in various styles. His best known work was probably for Gold Medal and other Fawcett imprints.

His work was much in demand, and he did covers for Avon, Bantam, Dell, Pocket Books, and Signet, although he is most remembered for his numerous Gold Medal covers, including some of the early Shell Scott's.

 
From The Paperback Explosion: How Gay Paperbacks Changed America ~ Ian Young: This motif of the Concerned Woman was frequently used: Dean Douglas’s Man Divided (Gold Medal, 1954) and Dyson Taylor’s Bitter Love (Pyramid, 1957) were among many whose covers showed eye-catching dames displaying concern for depressed-looking fellows. The prototype was an early, undated paperback reprint of Richard Meeker’s 1933 novel Better Angel; retitled Torment, it showed a woman reaching out to a man in a suit who appears to be hiding his head in the curtains.

His speed (he consistently turned out four finished paintings a week) and his ability to work in a variety of styles lead to his being referred to throughout the industry as "The King of the Paperbacks".


Poster for Goldfinger

more sketches )

In addition to "Diamond Lil" gem for Sheridan, Barye Phillips did the dustcover for: Case of the Vanishing Beauty by Richard Prather [Fawcett Gold Medal, 1950]; On the Road by Jack Kerouac [Signet, 1958]; The Big Caper by Lionel White [winner of the Frederick Muller Gold Award, 1961]; and the first paperback edition of Casino Royale by Ian Fleming [Signet].

Barye Phillips died in 1969.

more vintage covers )