"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Reading List: As the Crow Flies

As the Crow Flies
by Melanie Gilman

Melanie Gillman’s webcomic about a queer, black teenager who finds herself stranded in a dangerous and unfamiliar place: an all-white Christian youth backpacking camp.

27F161EB-9103-4B9B-88BE-1BE09A23D7DB

As the crow flies is a way of speech, similar in meaning to the expression beeline and equally inaccurate: it’s a way of indicating the most direct path between two points.

The work originates as a webcomic, but it’s available also in paper form for purchase on Amazon. It was launched on kick-starter and generally praised for the way it approaches the main topic of gender and race integration.

As the journey wears on and the rhetoric wears thin, she can’t help but poke holes in the pious obliviousness of this storied sanctuary with little regard for people like herself . . . or her fellow camper, Sydney.

D4B4FDCE-17B5-4777-B5D3-275D32EE1BA5

There’s a beautiful review by Caitlin Rosberg on AVclub, titled As The Crow Flies examines marginalization and how much summer camp can suck in equal measure, which strikes to the point of this book that’s about marginalization from all points of view and discrimination in all ways possible.

52F4DC6A-4FEB-4211-AF78-0A01CBC87CCB

books and literature

Fox Friday: The Fox Woman by Abraham Merritt

The ancient steps wound up the side of the mountain through the tall pines, patience trodden deep into them by the feet of twenty centuries. Some soul of silence, ancient and patient as the steps, brooded over them. They were wide, twenty men could have

Read More »
architecture, engineering and construction

Real-time BIM? Thanks, but no thanks

I know, I know, the new ISO is out and bla bla bla, but I gave you a week of mournful silence last week and, for now, let me quote you Nick Fury. Some weeks ago, I wrote an article on “advanced BIM,” whatever that

Read More »
books and literature

For the Benefit of Mankind

Cixin Liu is one of the most brilliant sci-fi writers of our time and some of his short stories have been adapted into graphic novels.”For the Benefit of Mankind” is a story I found in the collectiontitled after “The Wandering Earrh” and one of the

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
No Comments

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Fox Friday: The Fox Woman by Abraham Merritt

The ancient steps wound up the side of the mountain through the tall pines, patience trodden deep into them by the feet of twenty centuries. Some soul of silence, ancient and patient as the steps, brooded over them. They were wide, twenty men could have

Read More

Real-time BIM? Thanks, but no thanks

I know, I know, the new ISO is out and bla bla bla, but I gave you a week of mournful silence last week and, for now, let me quote you Nick Fury. Some weeks ago, I wrote an article on “advanced BIM,” whatever that

Read More

For the Benefit of Mankind

Cixin Liu is one of the most brilliant sci-fi writers of our time and some of his short stories have been adapted into graphic novels.”For the Benefit of Mankind” is a story I found in the collectiontitled after “The Wandering Earrh” and one of the

Read More