Wanna know a secret? I really don't give a shit about mountain climbing. Very few people do. Very few people give a shit about any
random pastime you could name -- shuffleboard, mate-swapping,
parasailing, Yahtzee, building boats in bottles -- either as a
participant or a spectator.
But sometimes we can be made to care, through the power of art.
And that's how I came to The Summit of the Gods, Vol. 1,
the first of a five-volume series about Japanese mountain climbers
written by Yumemakura Baku and drawn by Jiro Taniguchi. Well, to be more
honest, I came to it because I'd read Taniguichi's two-book series A Distant Neighborhood
(see my posts on books one and two), and wanted more Taniguchi. I'd
neglected to read the fine print, and hadn't realized that Taniguchi was
just contributing his picture-making abilities here, not his
writing-stories skills.
(There are people who follow artists around comics. I've even been one of them, once in a while. But I'm mainly interested in story,
and I mainly follow people who tell stories. So when a writer-artist I
like starts just writing, it may be a bit sad, but I'm generally happy.
If he starts just drawing, it's a huge calamity.)
Baku
is a good story-teller, and he makes some interesting complex characters
here. His main character is both a world-class asshole and a deeply
compelling protagonist, which is a tough thing to pull off. He's also telling a long story with grace and ease -- it looks like the whole five-volume series is a single, complete story, and I like seeing people who can do that well.
But, frankly, I still don't give a shit about mountain climbing. I thought The Summit of the Gods
would make me care, at least for the length of time to read the book.
But, as it turned out, it didn't. The pictures are breathtaking and the
people are real, but this is just not a story that I ended up caring
about. It's certainly a flaw on my part, and no reflection on the book.
But
I don't expect to go back for the later volumes, and I can say
definitively that climbing mountains is something I will never give a
shit about. As I get older, having those signposts are more and more
useful, to mark off all of the things I don't have to explore any more,
since they've bored me enough already. I recommend that feeling highly,
whatever the things you decide you personally don't give a shit about.
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