Web-accessible would be nice, but isn't totally necessary. The more visually rich, the better. I wants some pretty cartooning.
Freefall is a humorous Science fiction story detailing the misadventures of the starship Savage Chicken and its crew: Sam Starfall, a lovable alien con artist; Helix, a childlike robot; and Florence Ambrose, a genetically engineered "Bowman's Wolf" (i.e. an anthropomorphic canine). Despite its essential nature as comedy, the story nonetheless frequently delves into philosophical matters such as "what is human?", "how does one best protect humanity from robots?", and the inverse obligation "how does one protect robots from exploitation?".
The plot focuses on the life of Florence, who is by nature hard-working and honest technical engineer, and the less-than-ethical space scavenger Sam Starfall, who has "borrowed" (stolen) her from her intended owner/job post. In doing so, he may inadvertently have saved the planet from disaster.
Sam is a Sqid, a tentacle-bearing semi-aquatic race which lives in a low-technology society on an unknown and unspecified world somewhere in the universe. The unusual spelling of "Sqid" is explained as "U don't wanna get near one". His people are a prey species, and Sam's flesh (when exposed) seems to be irresistable to carnivorous/omnivorous animals; he's never suffered more than minor (comic) nibbling. Sqids are typically very risk-averse, and Sam mostly follows that example. When he does take (conscious) risks, he makes sure the deck is thoroughly stacked first.
Sam stowed away on a human scout ship and found his way to Jean, a recently-terraformed world populated lightly by a mix of humans and terraforming robots and managed with a kind of frontier improvisation that requires people to mix together with other kinds more than they might otherwise do. Outfitted with a human-resembling environment suit that allows him to move around freely, Sam has been blithely ignoring the rules of Jean's civilization for years. Particularly the ones that have to do with property ownership.
Somehow he got his hands on a wreck of a spaceship, and with the help of his friend/worker, a robot named Helix, and with several rolls of duct tape and not a clue between them about how to build, repair or maintain a spaceship, they tried to get the thing spaceworthy. Realizing that the task was beyond even his advanced duct taping skills, Sam turned to bribery and arranged the bureaucratic foulup that brought Florence Ambrose, a highly competent engineer, into his employ.
Technically property and regarded as a wetware AI, Florence was in cold storage on board the Asimov, a transport starship, enroute to her intended job assignment (not the planet Jean). Officially, she's been "misfiled," but instead of making a fuss, she's decided to make the best of it. Her original owner has yet to investigate her failure to arrive, but that may be because not enough time has passed in-universe.
Together, with many misadventures, the trio set to the nearly impossible task of getting the wreck spaceworthy again. By some miracle, they managed it, and Sam rechristened the wreck theSavage Chicken. The repairs weren't perfect, but they got the ship, originally designed for interplanetary commerce, cleared as an orbital shuttle, and have flown two missions into orbit.
Florence is a large carnivore, but she's been specially trained and conditioned not to hurt humans. Sam, while not human, seems to be close enough to qualify; she seems immune to the urge to nibble on him that lesser animals exhibit. But even so, if he pushes her too hard, she gives him a Florence Grin, and Sam finds something better to do.
Do you mean comic books. Or would more like a daily comic strip work for you, along the lines of Dilbert or something?
As an aside holy smokes, single issues are so expensive with the Canadian dollar now. I've had to cut back a lot and am reassessing my pull list.
They really are! v.v anywhere from 5-25$ for a single issue of any comic/GN/Manga. How can a Canadian geeks collection thrive with such prices?!
Yes! I made a thread last year and kept meaning to revive it! Here it is if anyone's interested: https://www.ambercutie.com/forums/threads/comics-graphic-novels-manga.21305/
Giving the peanut-butter-and-chocolate treatment (two great tastes that taste great together)
I love this phrase and I really like the photos on that blog, thanks for sharing!!
Also, the Locke and Key series by Joe Hill are super fascinating. Scary/Dark/Gory (I mean, what do you expect from Stephen King's son?!) and just really cool. I haven't finished the series yet, so no spoilers please!!!
I read the first chapter, and I have to say, I was kind of underwhelmed. Given the Stephen King connection and all the allusions to HP Lovecraft, I guess I was expecting real horror, but that's now what it felt like. I think the best description I've found for how Locke & Key is that it skews more along the lines of a dark fable than it does real horror. It's not bad, but it just doesn't fit what's been advertised. I have the entire series, picked up a while ago from a Humble Books Bundle, but I haven't gotten around to reading it. Maybe I should approach it as fantasy, and allow myself to be surprised if it it ever does turn into horror.
I definitely can agree with you as far as feeling like your expectations weren't met. I hope that coming at it with a different perspective can bring some enjoyment from it. But maybe it's just not for you! And luckily, there are so many more out there!
Man, FCBD was a lot of fun this year! Only two places in town were really doing anything for it -- my local comic shop, and my local Hastings (probably the coolest chain store out there.) Where I live now is really family-oriented, so the families and kids out to get their comics rivaled the geeks, and I have to say, that is a really cool thing! I brought home stacks of old comics along with my little handful of freebies.
I also found out there's a little contingent of small pressers where I live, and they're ambitious enough to be publishing books. That's awesome! I will rule them as their king.
There were tons of kids at FCBD at my shop, too! The shop markets themselves as kid-friendly and pointedly carries lots of kid books. Last time I was there, a kid (maybe 10?) was looking at books with his mom, who was helping him pick something. She was so cute being like "ooooh, the Flash, that looks fun! Darkseid war?! How cool! What's JLA?!" and he was explaining it to her. Another time two little boys were there with their dad looking at figures, and one was like "that's Green Lantern! And he's fighting...um....come on, I know this....SINESTRO!" It's always just precious
I got really sucked into the Harbinger series from Valiant comics! The premise isn't too original, but it's fast paced and has great writing, I could barely put it down!