Chapter By Chapter> How To Completely Lose Your Mind chapter 9

Chapter by Chapter features me reading one chapter of the selected book at the time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as read-along book club.

We’re almost out of states and out of pages. We’re finishing the Pacific Northwest and the Midwest before going to Alaska in this chapter.

The last chapter showed the stress getting to both of them. They aren’t getting the best sleep a lot of the time plus all the time on the road is clearly taking it out of them. They might succeed but you have to wonder what the cost will be? At least they were relying on each other the whole time, which is good for a couple as well as a performance duo.

We’re on chapter 9 of 11. This is shorter than the last chapter at only 39 pages, but that’s still pretty long even by graphic novel chapter numbers. I’m still wondering how they decided to break up the story, but I’ve been wondering that about chapters for a while now. At any rate we’re starting in Wyoming, and Mother Nature has decided to pile on their problems. Let’s check in with Pocket Vinyl.

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Today’s Comic> Sonic The Hedgehog Comics Giveaway Day 2026

It looks cool but it does a number on Sonic’s knees.

Sonic The Hedgehog #1 Comics Giveaway Day 2026

IDW Publishing (May, 2026)

WRITER: Ian Flynn

PENCILER: Tracy Yardley

INKERS: Jim Amash & Bob Smith

COLORIST: Matt Herms

LETTERER: Corey Breen

EDITORS: Joe Hughes & David Mariotte

This is a reprint of the first issue, minus the Skylanders ashcan section. Yes, I looked it up.

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BW’s Daily Video> 5 Stories From History…That Are Totally False

Catch more from Kite & Key Media on YouTube

 

 

Jake & Leon #683> That Darn Truck

I still can’t draw manga style.

That’s why I spared you two panels of that guy. Plus my inconsistency issues.

Over at The Clutter Reports this week I had friends coming over so I didn’t want to do anything that would tire me or not be done on time. So I reluctantly (because I’ve been doing it too often) went through my buffer and reposted my old Scanning My Collection review of G.I. Joe Vs The Transformers II, featuring everybody’s should be favorite Cobra Viper, Percy!

Why didn’t Percy have an ongoing, Devil’s Due? At least bring back in the Energon Universe, Kirkman! On second thought you’d just screw him up by killing him off or grimdarking him up. Never mind.

A few more Free Comic Book Day/Comics Giveaway Day offerings coming up in this week’s comic reviews, including a few I found digitally. Plus I hope to finally read the new Superman/Spider-Man crossover, but they had to make it an anthology. We also have the next chapter of How To Completely Lose Your Mind for Chapter By Chapter and whatever else comes up to discuss. Have a great week, everyone!

Saturday Night Showcase> Star Wars: Clone Wars

Not to be confused with the CG Lucasfilm series (which is technically The Clone Wars), Genndy Tartakovsky’s Clone Wars is Star Wars in his signature action style, on the same level as Samurai Jack. Airing for two seasons on Cartoon Network (which is why I doubt Disney cares if I use someone’s YouTube upload), season one was a “micro-series”, a series of 11 minute shorts exploring some of the bigger battles of the Clone Wars. Season two went full length, taking time to explore the characters closely and leading up to the events of Revenge Of The Sith, including Palpatine’s “kidnapping” and the origin of General Grevious’ weezing.

Tonight we look at volume one. This introduces Asajj Ventress, shows the Jedi being awesome, and featuring threats that wouldn’t have worked in the live-action movies or the CG series due to fitting in with Tartakovsky’s high action formula. Sorry for the shorter intro but I’m not sure what else to say. Enjoy.

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BW’s Saturday Article Link> Schools’ Story Potential

Ah, school. The bain of my teenage existence through a combination of bullies while administration seemed to look the other way, having more interesting things to do, and a school system that wasn’t teaching me anything I wanted to learn and not enough of what I actually needed to learn. I still think of that place as a prison and I graduated at the start of the 1990s. On the other hand, any anime involving anyone under 22 seems to take place in some location of education even if “class” seems to just be a place to sit and talk about events in the story. Turns out Starfleet Academy took the wrong lessons from high school anime.

On the other hand, there are advantages to setting a story with teens in a school setting, as Nate Winchester of Hunting Muses once realized when considering writing his own “light novel”. I still want nothing to do with the place. I served my sentence!

The Realities Of Fantasy Worlds

I should note before we begin that this conversation won’t be restricted to fantasy itself. The same nonsense gets spouted with the two genres I’m more familiar with, science fiction and superheroes. Fantasy just seems to be the better genre to go over the ridiculous arguments that will be presented. Also, I have to apologize to my regular readers as the culture war versus geek and pop culture discussion is going to once again disrupt our happy little home, like an Old West town caught in a border war between two ranches. It’s the way the world works, and it’s helping ruin storytelling in the 21st century, and we’re only 26 years in. Still, if you follow storytelling discussion between culture warriors you know this line:

“You can believe in (insert fantastic element here) but you can’t believe in (out of place marginalized group) being there?”

This isn’t Sam Rami not believing a chemistry whiz with engineering skills building a silly string launcher due to an instinctual need to make webbing. This is a typically European inspired fantasy world with people from other nations (because heaven forbid we tell THOSE people’s own culture and fantasy stories where Europeans would be the out of place ones), a woman beating up dudes a superhero would have trouble with, or a guy in a wheelchair fighting dragons. This is what they say we can’t fathom.

They’re right, we can’t.

The reason isn’t (insert bigotism name here), it’s because of something surface level stereotype driven activists who have never spent real time among the groups they claim to champion but want to look good and push some form of easy extremism in a vain attempt to look like the “good white people” never understand: fantasy has rules. Magic DOES have to be explained. The proverbial and sometime literal devil is in the details. There’s a reason these stereotypes, which actually hurt or insult the very groups they claim to champion, don’t work. A stereotype in storytelling is a starting point. The character has to be built from that stereotype, not embody it in some lame attempt to be an avatar for every member of a certain group regardless of individual views within that group that you only learn when you actually care about other people and not a pat on the back from your peers declaring you on the “right side of history” like some oracle with all the vision-reading skills of Anakin Skywalker. (Hey dummy, the Force is warning you the more you stay on this path the greater odds your wife is going to become one with it.) Okay, that’s out of my system…for now. Let’s take some examples, shall we?

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