29 April 2018

Books: The Rules and Regulations for Mediating Myths & Magic By F.T. Lukens (2017)




"Assisting an intermediary between the worlds of myths and humans is easier than asking the football hero to homecoming. High school senior Bridger Whitt is determined to escape humdrum Midden, Michigan, so he can finally be himself (read: determine his hetero-, homo-, or bisexuality far from familiar faces). When he is accepted by a Florida college, he realizes the only way he and his single mom can afford it is to fatten his coffers via part-time employment. Answering a very peculiar ad, he’s hired to assist the terminally tackily attired Pavel Chudinov, who is charged with ensuring humans don’t mix with cryptids. And the sudden abnormal influx of creatures in Midden (troll, unicorn, mermaids, etc.) has them burning the mythic candle at both ends. As if dodging toxic troll spit while maintaining his GPA wasn’t challenge enough, Bridger must also contend with his burgeoning feelings for dreamy Puerto Rican neighbor Leo, who just might also be into him." 
 
At last weekend’s Los Angeles Times Festival of Books event at USC, I stumbled into a small booth for Duet Books, a publisher of young adult LGBTQ novels. The persons running were some genuinely charming women who were more than helpful talking about the small line-up of books be presented here. One of the ladies was really excited about F.T. Lukens' The Rules and Regulations For Mediating Myths and Magic. It was on her enthusiastic love for the book that made me decide to get it.

Now, I don’t read much in this genre, which despite some mainstream publishers releasing books in this genre; a lot comes from indie-publishers like Duet Books or self-published houses like Jay Bell’s Something Like…series). Part of the reasons is that these tales have a tendency to lightly written with cliché ridden characters and well worn tropes that romance novels (both straight and gay) fall into. There may also be some internal homophobia from me, as well, so I've found myself passing up a lot of gay fiction. But still, even when I do read this genre, I’m always looking for something that can me offer something different, while still bringing something new to the table.

While there is some repetitive clichés that (maybe) these type of books can’t escape from (Oh, I do long for a gay male character who also has a plutonic relationship with a straight male one; I’ve grown weary with the idea that every gay male character in this genre has to have straight gal-pal like Astrid here), but the book is surprisingly warm, funny, and charming. But Lukens does constantly remind us that Bridger is an odd-ball (not a weirdo per se) and knows way too much convenient bits of trivia (the TV game show Jeopardy is named-dropped a lot here). Still, what really works here is the pacing and believability of the main characters, which I liked. I also appreciated that Bridger’s struggle with his sexuality was set more or less on the fringes of the book (and the fact that he's not sure if he's bi or gay is refreshing), along with Luken’s choice to make the supernatural aspect more prominent (and while she does some World Building here, she also chooses to limit this, which is fairly refreshing in fantasy novels these days). So those strengths outweigh some minor quibbles with the structure. 

Pavel Chudinov and his band of merry-odd co-workers (that includes two pixies and werewolf) are all well drawn out but as I read the book, I could not help but ship the main characters of Bridger and Leo. I could see both Grant Davis and Davi Santos (the stars of Something Like Summer) playing those two boys. Perhaps because I’m so close to the film, the cast, crew and Jay Bell, that this is unavoidable? And I could genuinely see Jana Lee Hamblin (who was also in that film and played Ben Bentley’s Mom) playing Bridger’s mother here as well. Play what you know?

The book does have a beginning, a middle, and an end, but I kind of hope that Lukens' writes another book featuring these characters. I like what she’s created here and would enjoy the further adventures of Bridger and Leo. 

Is it me, or does the silhouette character of Bridger on the book cover look like the cover artist is also a huge fan of The Venture Bros

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