Linda Medley
Author of Castle Waiting
About the Author
Series
Works by Linda Medley
Associated Works
Suspended in Language: Niels Bohr's Life, Discoveries, and the Century He Shaped (2004) — Illustrator — 152 copies, 2 reviews
The Big Book of Little Criminals: 63 True Tales of the World's Most Incompetent Jailbirds! (1996) — Illustrator — 102 copies
The Big Book of Thugs: Tough as Nails True Tales of the World's Baddest Mobs, Gangs, and Ne'er do Wells! (Factoid Books) (1996) — Illustrator — 91 copies
Bad Doings & Big Ideas: A Bill Willingham Deluxe Edition (2011) — Illustrator — 48 copies, 3 reviews
Fairy Tales: Puss in Boots / Hansel and Gretel / The Golden Bird / Snow White (1989) — Illustrator — 42 copies
Wonder Woman, Vol. 2 #200 — Illustrator — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1964-05-17
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- Penciller
Inker
painter
Colorist
sculptor - Awards and honors
- Eisner Award (Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition, 1998)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Stockton, California, USA
- Places of residence
- Portland, Oregon, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Information on Castle Waiting (Turtleback) in Book talk (May 2011)
Reviews
On a random trip to the bookstore with my friend, Karen, I spied this and knew I had to buy it immediately. I loved the first book, and after reading the second volume, I have decided that the blurbs for this series are all wrong. They praise Castle Waiting for being a fairy-tale about women, women-centered and women-powered. But really, aren't most fairy tales women-centered?
No. What makes this series exceptional is that even with all the wonderful fairy tale trappings -- demons, dwarves, show more talking animals, haunted castles -- this is a story about everyday heroism. Not the heroism of grand adventures and battles and outsmarting monsters, though those things sometimes happen along the way. It's about compassion, and seeing the worth in people who drive you crazy, and sharing hope and encouragement when it might be easier to be selfish.
And despite two of the standout characters being women, the above characteristics just as often apply to the men. I would say the tale is feminist in that it holds compassion over hierarchies and power, and that it allows both women and men to be fully realized characters. Calling it women-centered and women-powered entirely misses the mark. show less
No. What makes this series exceptional is that even with all the wonderful fairy tale trappings -- demons, dwarves, show more talking animals, haunted castles -- this is a story about everyday heroism. Not the heroism of grand adventures and battles and outsmarting monsters, though those things sometimes happen along the way. It's about compassion, and seeing the worth in people who drive you crazy, and sharing hope and encouragement when it might be easier to be selfish.
And despite two of the standout characters being women, the above characteristics just as often apply to the men. I would say the tale is feminist in that it holds compassion over hierarchies and power, and that it allows both women and men to be fully realized characters. Calling it women-centered and women-powered entirely misses the mark. show less
In the middle of my reading for Fairy Tale Fortnight, I was craving some graphic novels. It had been awhile, and my fingers were itching for them. And then I opened up my Google Reader one day, and the Polish Outlander had posted a bunch of graphic novels; I popped over to Goodreads to mark some of them "to-read" and came across another one she was reading that hadn't been in the post: Castle Waiting, Volume Two. The title - and her enthusiasm for the story - hooked me, and I immediately show more went to my library's request page to see if they had volume One. No. No, they did not. But they had another volume that makes up part of volume one (this series has some of the most confusing, convoluted ordering): Lucky Road.
Request this title? Um, ☑
I didn't even really know what it was about. I just wanted a comic and it had a cool title -- it fit the bill. And y'all - it's about fairy tales. No effing joke. I just now got the full Volume One, and Lucky Road is in about the middle of it, so I did miss a little bit of back story about Castle Waiting and how it came to be, but I actually kind of liked just being plunged in. It made for a quirkier read, and one I thoroughly enjoyed. Basically, Castle Waiting works in some familiar story lines and characters that will be recongnizable to fairy tale lovers, but it is really its own thing. It uses the fairy tale realm as a base for the world, and expands out from it, bringing in a lot of the side characters and everyday people from the fairy tales we grew up with (I love this, btw. I love that Medley didn't just do a straightforward retelling, or feel the need to explain to the reader -- you know the stories or you don't, but she's not going to hold your hand through them -- it all just is, and I love that.)
Lucky Road follows Lady Jain who, pregnant and fleeing from her husband's home, is in search of the fabled Castle Waiting and the sanctuary it is said to offer. I loved everything about her journey to the Castle, her reception there, and getting to know the odd but lovable castle inhabitants. Medley packed so much personality into the characters in such a short time that I came to love them. And they had me continually cracking up. On top of the fairy tale elements that make up their characters - Henry and his heart caged in bands of iron; the handmaidens who slept 100 years alongside their enchanted mistress - they each have their own quirks that made them memorable.
The story and their interactions were so silly and light-hearted and fun, but not frivolous - the reader is always aware that Jain is running from something - and that they probably all are.
But in the meantime, they're going to have fun and make the most of life, and carry on with their little quirks, making fun of each other and being made fun of in return.
You know that warm feeling you get when you read a new book and you know it was meant for you? You've made a new friend, and you're going to be together forever? As light and silly as this was, that was how I felt. It was exactly what I wanted, even if it was only a fragment of the story.
I just got the full Volume One (and Vol Two is on request), so I will definitely be continuing my adventures with Castle Waiting. I understand that the story as a whole has some feminist aspects, and gets compared a lot to Chaucer, and I can see bits of that in Lucky Road. I bring this up for 2 reasons:
If you're thinking, I'm not going to read that, it's fluff - know there is more to it. Feminism! Chaucer!
If you're thinking, Feminism? Chaucer? - know that it's fluff! It's fun, and it's not going to beat you over the head just because it's got some subtle heft to it!
(speaking of heft - the full Vol 1 clocks in at about 500 pages)
So, to stop rambling so I can get back to reading, I just want to leave you with this last thought: I think this will be one of the few graphic novels I feel the need to buy - if that doesn't recommend show less
Request this title? Um, ☑
I didn't even really know what it was about. I just wanted a comic and it had a cool title -- it fit the bill. And y'all - it's about fairy tales. No effing joke. I just now got the full Volume One, and Lucky Road is in about the middle of it, so I did miss a little bit of back story about Castle Waiting and how it came to be, but I actually kind of liked just being plunged in. It made for a quirkier read, and one I thoroughly enjoyed. Basically, Castle Waiting works in some familiar story lines and characters that will be recongnizable to fairy tale lovers, but it is really its own thing. It uses the fairy tale realm as a base for the world, and expands out from it, bringing in a lot of the side characters and everyday people from the fairy tales we grew up with (I love this, btw. I love that Medley didn't just do a straightforward retelling, or feel the need to explain to the reader -- you know the stories or you don't, but she's not going to hold your hand through them -- it all just is, and I love that.)
Lucky Road follows Lady Jain who, pregnant and fleeing from her husband's home, is in search of the fabled Castle Waiting and the sanctuary it is said to offer. I loved everything about her journey to the Castle, her reception there, and getting to know the odd but lovable castle inhabitants. Medley packed so much personality into the characters in such a short time that I came to love them. And they had me continually cracking up. On top of the fairy tale elements that make up their characters - Henry and his heart caged in bands of iron; the handmaidens who slept 100 years alongside their enchanted mistress - they each have their own quirks that made them memorable.
The story and their interactions were so silly and light-hearted and fun, but not frivolous - the reader is always aware that Jain is running from something - and that they probably all are.
But in the meantime, they're going to have fun and make the most of life, and carry on with their little quirks, making fun of each other and being made fun of in return.
You know that warm feeling you get when you read a new book and you know it was meant for you? You've made a new friend, and you're going to be together forever? As light and silly as this was, that was how I felt. It was exactly what I wanted, even if it was only a fragment of the story.
I just got the full Volume One (and Vol Two is on request), so I will definitely be continuing my adventures with Castle Waiting. I understand that the story as a whole has some feminist aspects, and gets compared a lot to Chaucer, and I can see bits of that in Lucky Road. I bring this up for 2 reasons:
If you're thinking, I'm not going to read that, it's fluff - know there is more to it. Feminism! Chaucer!
If you're thinking, Feminism? Chaucer? - know that it's fluff! It's fun, and it's not going to beat you over the head just because it's got some subtle heft to it!
(speaking of heft - the full Vol 1 clocks in at about 500 pages)
So, to stop rambling so I can get back to reading, I just want to leave you with this last thought: I think this will be one of the few graphic novels I feel the need to buy - if that doesn't recommend show less
Oh, excellent. The same rich story as the first volume - and this version rounds things off _much_ better than the original Volume 2. Quite a lot of Dr. Fell's story, we learn more about Pindar and his abilities (and the purr does have a point), and peace with the varmints and the castle ghost. Excellent! Tolly is great, and I love the epilogue explaining the new fosterling. Henry and Chess both start to open up, in different ways. The yule thing was funny, too. Lovely. Definitely worth show more rereading, and I'm already looking forward to more of the story.
On yet another reread - And the same - it's such a great story (stories). I really hope she can come out with vol 3 sometime - I'd love to read more. show less
On yet another reread - And the same - it's such a great story (stories). I really hope she can come out with vol 3 sometime - I'd love to read more. show less
Picture Sleeping Beauty’s castle, just after the princess is awakened by True Love’s Kiss. When the prince and princess ride off into the sunset... what happens to the castle and the rest of its inhabitants? In Medley’s graphic novel, it becomes a sort of refuge for all kinds of quirky characters. Few of them get to share their full stories in this volume, and the narrative rambles all over the place, with the last seven chapters dedicated to a story within the story about an show more unconventional order of bearded nuns. It’s a charming world, and I wouldn’t mind spending more time there, but the peripatetic nature of the story meant that I felt no urgency to keep reading, and I put this book down several times in favor of more compelling reads. Still, if you like fantasy stories and graphic novels, you might want to give this a try. show less
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