20. Cathedral Child, by Lea Hernandez
Aug. 15th, 2009 06:51 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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[Note: Tags I would like to add, when it eventually becomes possible: a: hernandez lea, i: hernandez lea, steampunk.]
#20. Cathedral Child, Lea Hernandez
Cyberosia Publishing, 2002 (?)
Cathedral Child is a very curious graphic novel of somewhat confusing provenance. It is also, I think, unfinished. I gather that it was meant to be the first volume of a series that Hernandez called "Texas Steampunk Trilogy," but there were a long series of delays in publishing the book and I don't think the second and third volumes were ever produced.
Which is a pity, because Cathedral Child is full of interesting ideas, and has a unique sensibility and a lot of heart. The ending is very confusing to me, but I don't know how much of that comes from its being supposed to continue on later, or perhaps from the artist having been obliged to cram some extra plot points in where they hadn't been planned. (Babylon 5 season four, anyone?)
So anyway, I can fault this book on several counts of clarity and pacing. On the other hand, conceptually it is fantastic. It is set in nineteenth-century West Texas, where a white engineer, Nikola (I see what you did there!), and his investor/partner, Stuart, have set up shop to build an "analytical engine," which in this setting seems to mean an AI.
They are building their AI inside a mission-style Spanish church, which is referred to as Cathedral, and the "machinists" and "tutors" -- who do the work of teaching and training the young artificial intelligence -- come from among the ranks of the so-called natives, who seem to be Hispanicized Indians. (This is not entirely clear to me, but on the other hand I am not entirely clear on the distinction between "Hispanicized Indians" and the people we now call Mexicans, so maybe that means I have to do some more research myself.) In any case, they are brown people, with Spanish names. And there are really not nearly enough representations of brown people with Spanish names in steampunk at all, much less drawn in a manga-influenced American style, so even if it were just for this I applaud Lea Hernandez a lot.
I won't summarize the whole story here -- I guess I should just recommend reading it yourself, if it seems interesting to you. I do admit I find the book somewhat confusing. Some of the story concepts aren't as clearly brought through as they should have been, and I think that unclearness resides both in the storytelling and in the artwork. On the other hand, I like many of the characters, and some of the ideas are just sublime. It's really too bad the trilogy seems never to have been finished.
(Also: this book, and its writer, raise a "Who's P.O.C.?" question for me. Is Lea Hernandez a writer/artist of color? I am assuming, from her name, her place of origin, and -- here's where it gets really tricky -- from the content of her work, that she is Hispanic, and probably Mexican American. But does that mean she's necessarily a person of color? I don't know. All the (smallish) photos of her I've been able to find online show her with blonde hair. But I don't know if that means anything; many Mexicans have blonde hair... So here I am, including her, but without really knowing. For all I know, I could be wrongly assuming. And we all know what assuming does. I could be making a ming out of my ass.)
#20. Cathedral Child, Lea Hernandez
Cyberosia Publishing, 2002 (?)
Cathedral Child is a very curious graphic novel of somewhat confusing provenance. It is also, I think, unfinished. I gather that it was meant to be the first volume of a series that Hernandez called "Texas Steampunk Trilogy," but there were a long series of delays in publishing the book and I don't think the second and third volumes were ever produced.
Which is a pity, because Cathedral Child is full of interesting ideas, and has a unique sensibility and a lot of heart. The ending is very confusing to me, but I don't know how much of that comes from its being supposed to continue on later, or perhaps from the artist having been obliged to cram some extra plot points in where they hadn't been planned. (Babylon 5 season four, anyone?)
So anyway, I can fault this book on several counts of clarity and pacing. On the other hand, conceptually it is fantastic. It is set in nineteenth-century West Texas, where a white engineer, Nikola (I see what you did there!), and his investor/partner, Stuart, have set up shop to build an "analytical engine," which in this setting seems to mean an AI.
They are building their AI inside a mission-style Spanish church, which is referred to as Cathedral, and the "machinists" and "tutors" -- who do the work of teaching and training the young artificial intelligence -- come from among the ranks of the so-called natives, who seem to be Hispanicized Indians. (This is not entirely clear to me, but on the other hand I am not entirely clear on the distinction between "Hispanicized Indians" and the people we now call Mexicans, so maybe that means I have to do some more research myself.) In any case, they are brown people, with Spanish names. And there are really not nearly enough representations of brown people with Spanish names in steampunk at all, much less drawn in a manga-influenced American style, so even if it were just for this I applaud Lea Hernandez a lot.
I won't summarize the whole story here -- I guess I should just recommend reading it yourself, if it seems interesting to you. I do admit I find the book somewhat confusing. Some of the story concepts aren't as clearly brought through as they should have been, and I think that unclearness resides both in the storytelling and in the artwork. On the other hand, I like many of the characters, and some of the ideas are just sublime. It's really too bad the trilogy seems never to have been finished.
(Also: this book, and its writer, raise a "Who's P.O.C.?" question for me. Is Lea Hernandez a writer/artist of color? I am assuming, from her name, her place of origin, and -- here's where it gets really tricky -- from the content of her work, that she is Hispanic, and probably Mexican American. But does that mean she's necessarily a person of color? I don't know. All the (smallish) photos of her I've been able to find online show her with blonde hair. But I don't know if that means anything; many Mexicans have blonde hair... So here I am, including her, but without really knowing. For all I know, I could be wrongly assuming. And we all know what assuming does. I could be making a ming out of my ass.)
no subject
Date: 2009-08-15 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-25 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-16 05:39 pm (UTC)Lea Hernandez has an LJ, where she can be asked, and also where she says that Hernandez was her husband's name.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-25 03:40 am (UTC)It hadn't even occurred to me that she was married! Maybe I should have thought of that.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-28 04:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-04 05:40 am (UTC)