rosanicus: (sakhalin)
[personal profile] rosanicus
Having ploughed through (I believe) sixteen issues of The Eagle alongside the *cough* very legitimate *cough* ebook for missing bits, I have officially finished Biggles in the Blue!

It's a mixed bag of a book. On the one hand I do think the mystery is quite fun, and there's a lot of enjoyable rushing about to new exotic locales rather than the occasionally maddening to-ing and fro-ing of lesser plots (I am looking directly at Flies North with extreme ire) and there's a lot of wonderful moments between characters, both within & Co and also between them and EvS, who I think is quite well served here. On the other, there's the W.E. Johns of it all.

This past week I got Biggles! out of the library and had a look at the little defense of the standard criticism of Biggles (jingoistic, racist, misogynistic) and while I agree with the dismissal of accusations of jingoism and - to an extent - the misogyny, I have to say that the authors are VERY quick to dismiss the racism. The words 'product of his time' approach the text's horizon with worrying speed. I do think that on the whole it is good that the black characters in the book have names and - it would seem - independent motivations. However, the way the dialect is written and the level of paternalism in the narration drove me up the wall every time it came up. Personally I hope Susannah Shaw never has to deal with another white man for the rest of her life now that Biggles has got her a job watching flamingoes (a dream job).

Idk this post isn't going to go in depth on this because being honest W.E. Johns has been dead for fifty years and I sincerely doubt his estate are rubbing their hands in glee watching the secondhand market for ratty paperbacks of Biggles Takes A Holiday. Nor is anyone in the fandom (under the age of ooh about 75) touting this book as wall-to-wall perfection. It's not like trying to watch Talons of Weng-Chiang for your Doctor Who podcast (completely random example of course, I say while staring at my Audacity project file for the next episode in procrastinatory dread) in the sure knowledge that a million cunts out in the fandom think it's an unimpeachable masterpiece.

ANYWAY. I liked that there was a big snake :)

The slashiness was, as Philomytha readily assured me some time ago, off the charts. Biggles being so immediately furious that Zorotov would talk to EvS in that way and that EvS would let him... Ginger seeing shame in EvS's face "for the first time" - it's only the first time you've seen it Ginger, I sincerely doubt it's the first time he's felt it - as well as the entire conversation about wine and snakes and Biggles immediately going to bat for EvS just doing his job in difficult circumstances. It's all very good food for the slashy reader. I also think that W.E. Johns is struggling at this point with how much choice EvS has in any of this. We start out by claiming he's a free agent or perhaps spy-of-fortune and then later Biggles notes that not only is Zorotov clearly in charge, any orders coming from behind the Iron Curtain have to be obeyed Or Else. The defection is being set up! Sort of, anyway.

All the setting descriptions were suitably gorgeous, although I continue to note that W.E. Johns will go out of his way to put the characters in a place which we would imagine to be quite nice (for example a wildlife reserve in the Bahamas) and then describe it like a bomb's just gone off. It's a sort of narrative pessimism which works well to make the peril seem realer but I also think it does a bit of a disservice to some of the places. He also fucking hates rainforests so much which I noticed in Takes a Holiday, one wonders how much personal experience he had with them. I personally feel my lungs filling with water whenever I step into the wet biome at the Eden Project but I still think the Amazon is quite beautiful.

I also really like the flamingoes as part of the mystery. Commander Evans and his quest for a scarlet flamingo egg were a nice way to tie the nature thing into the main plot, and also initiated the best scene of action in the book (Biggles & Fishing Rod & Ginger & Other Fishing Rod vs Snake & Armchair) as well as a great tragedy (the egg smashing). I always like a good snake in a book, the bit in Terai with the snake in a bag is a particular highlight.

Overall, I think it's one I'll reread in the future but only by aggressively skim reading parts of it and stubbornly imagining Napoleon Morgan's adventures after the close of the book (they didn't find his body, he's obviously fine and going to go back to his activities of being the best dressed man in the Caribbean). He's a great character stuck in a narrative he doesn't deserve, I think, and incidentally I'd quite like to know more about his and EvS's working relationship. Reading between the lines I think they got along a lot more than Morgan and Zorotov, and one wonders if there was ever a very restrained bitching session over some of EvS's cover identity wine samples.

What I'm really here to do, however, is to share some of the illustrations from both in the Blue and in the Gobi, which was serialised directedly after Blue concluded. Both were illustrated by Edwin Phillips, who varied in his interpretation of the characters but never wavered in making them just slightly more twinky than Stead, which I appreciate as a twinky Biggles fan.

First of all we have a lovely group shot from Gobi, which begins the ongoing issue that in a black and white medium Phillips doesn't know how to distinguish Ginger. He's recognisable in contrast to the others here but in solo shots he could be Bertie or Algy quite easily. Still handsome though!



Also from Gobi we have some mechanical fiddling along with a nice profile of Bertie, who comes off pretty well here.



Onto in the Blue. I adore Ginger's expression here, it made me laugh quite hard when I opened the comic. It's a very perplexing egg, and also clear that the illustrator hadn't really paid attention to the text (or possibly hadn't even seen it) and just drew a hen's egg when the whole point is that it's way too big to be one. The whole egg conversation had me in stitches to be honest, it was a nice moment of Biggles and Ginger having a bit of a joke together in the midst of an investigation. I like it when characters are friends!



I really like this one. It's a good action shot and the composition is interesting with Biggles in the foreground. And of course the evidence that & Co. are once again dressed in an insane way for trekking through the forest and various lagoons. Ginger immediately regrets this and to be honest I think later illustrations missed a trick not having him in a shirt which is ripped to shreds considering how often WEJ mentioned the thorn bushes he's getting tangled in.



Here we have Algy, shot in the thigh about an hour before, having landed his plane on a narrow sand-bar, apologising for all the fuss. I like the composition again and also the generally dishevelled and worried vibes from the gang. Oh and this time it's Algy in the flying cap and goggles to show he's been flying a plane, because the visual evidence of the plane wasn't enough.



Another good Bertie in this one. Honestly I think Bertie might be best served by this artist, he's much more handsome than one might otherwise imagine (I tend to think of him a bit gawkier than this). This is also a better angle for Ginger, who in the unseen illos for this story is almost comically chiselled. Not how I imagine our beloved Northern protege at all!



The last image I'll put here isn't Biggles at all. It is instead an advertisement for Colman's Mustard, because as it turns out in the fifties the advertisers liked to put a bit of thought into what type of print their ad would appear in and so suit it to the medium. In the case of The Eagle, this resulted in the ongoing adventures of Jimmy Walls (one strip has him rescuing a fawn from a literal towering inferno) where every strip ends with him eating a Walls Ice Cream, and also The Three Mustardeers and their arch nemesis the Slipper (because he always slips away, you see). The advert which had me actually reading these alongside in the Blue was one in which the Slipper tricks them into following him into a series of catacombs full of skeletons and then abandoning them in the dark. Then it turns out one of the children (the Mustardeers are at most thirteen or fourteen years old) has thoughtfully brought some chalk and a pocket torch, so they manage to escape the catacombs quite easily. And then they have sandwiches with Colman's Mustard, although they don't say what else they contain so for all I know the sandwiches are just bread and an inch of mustard.

This strip is not that strip. But it's also bonkers!


 
I must know the entire saga of The Three Mustardeers. Is there a D'Artagnan of Mustard? D'Artadijon? It's almost too much to consider.

Date: 2023-08-22 04:48 pm (UTC)
philomytha: "Hark!" exclaimed Biggles. (Hark Biggles)
From: [personal profile] philomytha
Skimming No Rest for the shippy bits is definitely the best way to read it. I'm working my way through all the Biggles/EvS books and that's the one that's up next, which is why I'm reading something totally different instead... it does have the truly amazing scene where EvS dares Biggles to shoot him, which I can't help but adore, and the Bertie whump, but a lot of it is best flipped through very fast without paying much attention.

Delivers the Goods has one of the best Algy/Biggles scenes, and also a great bit where Li Chi calls Biggles out for his definitions of 'civilised' and 'uncivilised' :-DDD

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