Showing posts with label Ernest Hemingway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ernest Hemingway. Show all posts

8.17.2018

That Ten (Make That Twenty) Influential Books Thing


Some friends have tagged me in one of these Ten Life-Changing Books things making the rounds on social media. 
I believe the rules of the game are No Apologies, No Explanations. I can hang with the former but not the latter, so I decided to blog it up here. The more I thought about it, ten grew to twelve, then twenty-five, then settled back to twenty. 

Some rules and caveats. These are not my twenty favorite books - or a list of Twenty Books Everyone Should Read - but an attempt at mapping out the books that altered my trajectory (a) for the better, (b) still so alter. That last one is important. Books that radically changed my worldview but subsequent information and experience rendered less impactful (Howard Zinn, Tom Robbins, Daniel Quinn, The Tao of Pooh, State and Revolution, many others) are not included. Leading me to a different point (c) they had to hold up under questioning. With the exception of number twenty, I've read each book here at least three times. And finally (d) presented in reverse chronological order. I like the idea of working backwards to see how things went from #1 (1983-ish) to #20 (2016). Plotting coordinates on the map of my life.


And away we go!


20.

A wholly absorbing wonderful story with unforgettable characters about the foundation of British Hong Kong. Too much to get into in just a capsule review like this, but a true masterpiece that deftly covers an astonishing amount of ground. Clavell always referred to himself as "only a storyteller" and dismissed fanciful interpretations of his work. I'm willing to take him at this word, there, but if any of his books rise to something more - an insightful take in imperialism and colonization that - miracle of miracles - resists Marxist cliches - it's Tai Pan.



19.

I read sections of it many times while working at the Rhode Island College Writing Center 2000-2003, but I never read it cover to cover until I did the King's Highway business in 2012-2013.


This:


"For years I dreamed of having the sort of massive oak slab that would dominate a room - no more child's desk in a trailer laundry-closet, no more cramped kneehole in a rented house. In 1981 I got the one I wanted and placed it in the middle of a spacious, skylighted study. For six years I sat behind that desk either drunk or wrecked out of my mind, like a ship's captain in charge of a voyage to nowhere.

"A year or two after I sobered up, I got rid of that monstrosity. I got another desk (and) put it at the far west end of the office, in a corner under the eave. I'm sitting under it now, a fifty-three year old man with bad eyes, a gimp leg, and no hangover.

"Put your desk in the corner, and every time you sit down to write, remind yourself why it isn't in the middle of the room. Life isn't a support system for art. It's the other way around
."

had and continues to have a profound effect on how I look at life, art, drink, drugs, writing, personal allocation of time, and external validation. Not just the quote above but the unquoted context around it.

18.

I was a bar manager for the VFW at this point in my life (2009) and we had boxes of donations sitting around the place left over from previous (mis)management. As I was cleaning some of that out, I found this book. For no particular reason I started reading it right there in the room where we had all the donation boxes. Holy moley, what a treasure trove. 


The short story, properly executed, may be my favorite of all written art. (S0 many favorites: Fitzgerald's "Babylon Revisited", Sam Lipyste's "The Wisdom of the Doulas", "Two Guys and a Girl" by Tobias Wolff, Norman Mailer's "The Language of Men," anything by Bobbie Ann Mason, so many more and still more to come in this countdown) These aren't just properly executed; they're perfectly executed. I literally have not looked at life the same way since reading them. This is not an experience unique to Among the Missing - I basically read in order to look at life a different way - but always appreciated when it occurs. That's magic worth noting, and revisiting.

I've yet to read any more of the man's work, which is ridiculous. I will, though.


17.

Although this is a book about architecture, it explains neatly the situation across a variety of disciplines and arenas.



"The creation of this new type of community (the compound) proved absolutely exhilarating to artists and composers, as well as architects, throughout Europe in the early 20th century. We're independent of the bourgeois society around us! (They became enamored of this term bourgeois.) And superior to it! It was the compounds that produced the sort of avant-gardism that makes up so much of the history of 20th century art. The compounds - whether the Cubists, Fauvists, Futurists, or Secessionists - had a natural tendency to be esoteric, to generate theories and forms that would baffle the bourgeoisie. The most perfect device, they soon discovered, was painting, composing, designing in code. The peculiar genius of early Cubists, such as Braque and Picasso, was not in creating "new ways of seeing," but in creating visual codes for the esoteric theories of the compound.

"Composers, artists, or architects in a compound began to have the instincts of the medieval clergy, much of whose activity was devoted exclusively to separating itself from the mob. For mob, substitute bourgeoisie - and here you have the spirit of avant-gardism in the 20th century. Once inside a compound, an artist became part of the clerisy, to use an old term for the intelligentsia with clerical presumptions
."

Essential info for the disingenuous times in which we toil. As is:


16.

Similarly, although this is about events in Baltimore in the 1980s, you can't fully comprehend understand contemporary American cops and robbers (even if you've seen the author's other masterwork, The Wire) until you've read this book. Which is not to say that I, having read it, comprehend things fully - far from it - only that it's a vital piece of the conversation. When books like this exist out there, it's unforgivable to ignore them in favor of the platitudes offered up in such abundance in 2018.


Led Me To: The Corner, Homicide the TV series (a show very much worth your time), a re-evaluation of the movie Clockers, and a renewed and ongoing appreciation of "It Takes Two" by Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock.


15.

Space precludes everything I find awesome about A Moveable Feast, but if you want to see a bunch of quotes from it paired with 70s Batman illustrations, I've got you covered. And if you want to see a grown man cry, watch me read this book. 


As for Papa Hemingway, I'll just say this: if you like Hemingway's work in any way, you need to read it. If you're not, you might find it interesting, you might not, but you'll definitely get a hell of a lot clearer sense of the man than anywhere else. Not just a love letter from a friend but a very insightful and ego-free representation of Hemingway's last 20 years.


Fun fact: At the end of his life, Hemingway's insistence that the FBI was bugging his phone led partially to his being committed to the electroshock hospital, and (it is argued in some quarters) it was the electroshock that played a part in his suicide. Of course, now we know, the FBI really was bugging his phone; Hemingway was right! So, thanks, J Edgar Asshole, for directly contributing to an American treasure's blowing his brains out.



14.

A writer (and his hard-drinking Australian friend) try and re-create Cook's travels in the early 21st century. I've read better books on Cook (Captain Cook: The Seaman's Seaman - no jokes please - by Alan Villiers), by Horwitz, too (A Voyage Long and Strange), and in the writer-recreates-famed-figure's-footsteps (many), but this one makes the list as the one that led me to my ongoing Age of Sail preoccupation.


I became a Star Trek fan somewhere around 1980 or so, but it took me to reading this in 2003 to realize how much Roddenberry based so many aspects of TOS on Cook's voyages (and crew, and redshirts.) 



13.

Keillor - even before the an alleged * pattern of sexual misconduct over many years - is a polarizing writer. Whenever I tell fellow English majors (or just heavy readers in general) I'm a Keillor fan, I'd say about half of them react like I just told them I was a flat earther. His long-running Prairie Home Companion on NPR is, to some ears, anathema. I get it, truly. But if there was one book I'd say not only rises above whatever else you think of the guy but is also a worthy contender for American canon, it's Wobegon Boy

* "Alleged" not to characterize the complaints as dubious - I have no idea what did or didn't happen. I'm a Keillor fan, though, so I for one would appreciate some sensible closure on the subject.


I read this (or listened to it, rather, on audiocassette) on my 2nd visit to Chicago in 2002. (My 3rd was 2 years later when I moved here). I revisited it (this time on audio-CD) on a recent work trip. Not only does it hold up, it thrives. 



12.

Read this name aloud: Patrul Rinpoche. Patrul Rinpoche? Patrul Rinpoche


There! You've just been saved from rebirth in inferior realms. Don't say I didn't do anything for you.


I read this (and Jean-Claude Carrier's book-length interview with the Dalai Lama, Violence and Compassion) a hundred times apiece back in the late 90s. I'd say this spell of Buddhist reading peaked (at least outside the classroom; there was a Zen and the Art of the Literary Experience class still to come) around 2000. Wonderful meditations in here. 



11.5


I thought about including The Psychic Soviet by Ian Sevonius or Society of the Spectacle by Guy DeBord here but decided against it. Well, kind of. 



11.

This is a terrific and moving work. I haven't actually read this one in awhile. I read it a lot in 1998 - 2003 and again in 2006 or 2007. But I've thought about this quote a lot over the years: 



"I was living in that awful stage of life between twenty-six to and thirty-seven known as stupidity. It's when you don't know anything, not even as much as you did when you were younger, and you don't even have a philosophy about all the things you don't know, the way you did when you were twenty or would again when you were thirty-eight."

Truth. It makes me wonder, too, what the thirty-eight to (blank) stage is called. It might even be in Anagrams. Homework for myself. 



10.

Here's another I also haven't read in at least 10 years. Many other opinions of mine have evolved in the past decade; I really should read this again to see what I think of it. But its place on this list is assured either way, as it had such a profound effect at the time I read it. The basic ideas it imparted on me I still believe.


I saw this quoted in a review on Goodreads: "[The book] not only explodes some pervasive beliefs, it affords an invigorating reading of American culture through the last three decades." Hear, hear.


9.5

Crikey, almost forgot this one. I paired a bunch of quotes from it (mostly) with Trek photos if such things float your boat. 


9.

Vonnegut was my favorite writer through various stages of late adolescence and throughout my 20s. But, he hasn't held up too well for me since. The exception is this one (and its kinda sorta sequel Timequake) which is a masterpiece. It's been reviewed and analyzed a million ways in a million places by many more mindful than me. You yourself have likely read it; you likely love it.


The first time I read it I was 18, which seems unfathomable to me, not just being 18 but it seems both too old/ too young for me to have first read it. I got it from the North Smithfield Library - the same place from which I checked out The Stand (the Expanded edition) and a dozen other King books only 18 months before - and read most of it in one afternoon in the park directly behind it. 


Well, it's a park now (below) - it was a bit more rough and tumble in 1993. Where that bridge is in the picture( on the right used to be a rotted-away causeway left over from the Industrial Revolution. You used to have to cross it to get to the other side, and there was no fence and lots of loose stones and a precipitous drop. 


Having set the scene to such a tedious degree, there I am propped up against the library side of said-causeway reading Slaughterhouse Five. Dog Star Omnibus has come unstuck in time!


8.

Oops. I read Brief Lives after Slaugherhouse Five, for sure. I screwed up my chronological backwards journey goes. 


If you haven't read Sandman, you're probably sick of hearing people tell you you should read it. I sympathize. My personal advice would be to override your desire to start from the beginning and read these two things: first the Sandman special above-right (collected in Fables and Reflections, tho you can pick up an inexpensive copy of the Special alone easy enough) and then the Brief Lives tpb. 

Orpheus is an ancient story and has been continually rediscovered from Monteverdi's L'Orfeo right down to the present, as this work bears witness. Gaiman adds both a new twist to the old tale and a sequel. It is a pivotal chapter in the whole Sandman saga that Gaiman wove over seventy-odd issues, but it also works completely as a standalone tale. It's that most improbable, once-in-an-age sort of things: a re-invocation of ancient myth in modern guise.


7.

We've reached 1992 in my countdown. I went to URI that fall and went to the bookstore to get my books and walked out with mostly stuff that wasn't on my book syllabus. This was one of those off-syllabus books.


An essential narrative of the American experience, but definitely worth reading for anyone, white or black, American or non-American. It did a number on my head back then - race politics in this country have become so weaponized that it's sometimes difficult to learn about the past without the distorting lens of 21st century narrative. An account like this (or many others, to be sure) told in the author's own voice and free of such a lens is critical.


6.

I couldn't even begin to describe my love of this book. I've read it so many times over the years that every sentence has become a Zen koan that explains why I love anything. I talked about my love of short fiction up there with Among the Missing; it all could very well have come from my love of The Pat Hobby Stories. They are the Pink Panther Strikes Back of literary short fiction. 


"'Authors get a tough break out here,' Pat said sympathetically. 'They don't want authors. They want writers--like me.'"


5.

I can't say Brave New World was my first dystopian-future book I read. Marvel Comics (and 1984, and many others) got to me first, there. It - like War of the Worlds or The Time Machine or another book still to come in our countdown - is a fascinating look at the British Empire looking at itself. The Victorian and Edwardian eras produced such fascinating literature. Very clear-eyed on many of the contradictions of Empire but still maintaining more than a whiff of a completely outdated (to modern eyes) sensibility. 


Brave New World Revisited is something else entirely. More than any other, it opened my mind up to the possibilities of mass conditioning through media and the knowing application of that through the 20th century. My ongoing interest in its radically increased pace in the 21st is a direct result of reading this (entirely by accident) back in 1991.


4.

A ww2 vet becomes involved in a scientific experiment that successfully establishes contact with a mirror Earth on the other side of the sun. Cool idea - like the Mars Needs Woman sort of stories of this era of sci-fi, made somewhat obsolete by improved technologies, but who cares. What has stuck with me over the years is how much reading this book provided me with a useful, Cold-War-specific (alas) morality. 


It's a very moving book that I read every few years. I love updating the film I'd make from it in my head. Same goes for:


3.


I had to read this in 11th grade English, so we're at the 1990-1991 mark here. Here's another one that had a deep and long-lasting effect on my philosophical attitudes. 

I was always spellbound by the whole experience at Shangri-La, and in particular, the attitude of the protagonist, Conway, but there was always something else tugging on my mind about it, too - a darker undercurrent. I finally read a take on it (David Mamet from his book The Secret Knowledge, excerpted below) that spoke to this dichotomy: 



"In this beautiful fantasy, a British civil servant is blown off course and crashes in the Himalayas. He is rescued and taken to a mysterious, inaccessible lamasery in Tibet. Here he discovers a perfect land - all its inhabitants are artists and philosophers, there is no disease, a person can - indeed, live as long as he wishes and there is no want. The people of the Valley for millennia devoted themselves to the care, physical, material, and sexual, of the folks on the Mountain.

"This is a sweet tale by a great storyteller. It is also, less admirably, a fascist tract. For Mr. Hilton's paradise (he understands, if only subconsciously) can exist only if there are slaves. Here we see the progression from good ideas to horror. The sweet ideas are encumbered in execution by the realization that someone, finally, has to do the work; their adamant practice will quite soon reveal this: "Oh, we will need slaves."

"These slaves may be called (various thing) but they are chosen not for their odious qualities but for their supine or defenseless nature. And they are enslaved to allow the elite not only exemption from work but exemption from thought.

"Originally they are enlisted (fellow travelers or "useful idiots") or convinced (taxpayers) in order to allow the ideological and exemption from toil and the malleable exemption from thought. As the money dries up, the ideologues are easily supplanted by tyrants and the malleable chained to their oars. History provides no counter-example. A country which will not work will fall.

"Our hero in Lost Horizon discovers, midway through the book, that it was no accident which led him to the lamasery; he, like all the inhabitants, was originally kidnapped - chosen for his "readiness" to unquestioningly accept this new, changeless, and perfect life."

Mamet's take provides a whole new spin on the last lines of the book, "Do you think he will ever find it?" Is it a subversive book, after all, looking ahead out of empire and past the war on the horizon? Or an eloquent rationalization of it? I have spent a good portion of my life trying to work that out.

As such, not too bad for a meditation given to me 27 years ago. Come to think of it, I'm still thinking about Ivanhoe, too. I guess Mr. Brodeur for 11th Grade English was all right.


2.

Now we skip all the way back to 1984, the actual year not the novel, when I first read this. It was the first reading assignment in a special reading program in Frau Scharnweber's class. We had to traipse across Rhein Main AFB where they then hooked us up to machines and fed us ingenious potions to make us even smarter, levitate objects with our minds, or set them n fire.


Why Flowers? It could easily have been The Stand in the 6th and 7th grade, a few years later. But this was the first book I consciously remember telling people was my favorite book, the one I tried to engage adults about, etc. It's still a great book. I'm probably due for a re-read actually. 

Years and years later I saw the much-heralded movie and was quite disappointed. The movie in my head while reading it is much better. 


1.

Speaking of firsts here are two of the first non-kindergarten-y books I remember reading over and over. 


You ever read The Babysitter's Guide book? It rocks. There are pictures and descriptions in there that I still mentally reference in 2018. I remember looking at this - and Terror Castle - a lot in 1983, so thereabouts is where we end this little reverie.

Terror Castle is one of the best Three Investigators books of them all. I was in love with that series in elementary school. They started making movies based on them a few years back, but the franchise stalled. Too bad. The Terror Castle movie that was made strays signifcantly from the text, but it had its moments. (Ditto for the Skeleton Island one. I actually quite liked that movie, though; they nailed the spirit of it all quite nicely.) 


~
And in the background of at least #s 1-8: comics both newspaper (The Far Side, Calvin and Hobbes, Bloom County) and four-color (all the Marvels and half the DCs).

There you have it, my friends. The full story. I'm sorry I can't just answer a question like a normal person.

6.04.2014

Batman in the Bronze Age: Coda

For the past two months I've read nothing but 1970s Batman and Ernest Hemingway.


I didn't plan it that way, that's just how it played out. It actually allowed me to see some connections between the two that I never would have considered otherwise. Some enterprising autodidact out there should take up this line of inquiry - there's a surprising overlap of thematic concerns, shrugging off unbelievable and relentless personal injuries, PTSD, obsession and drive, colorful rogues galleries, and plenty more. I wish I'd taken notes as I went along, but it didn't make itself apparent to me until only a few days ago.

I originally wrote - or tried to write - an entirely different intro than the above, one where I did not mention Hemingway at all and where I tried desperately to work in a description of the Bronze Age as "those brackish waters between the seas of the Silver and Copper ages..." without sounding like Bob Costas (or whomever you like - grandiose instead of grand.) But I failed.

Besides, who needs another definition of the Bronze Age? The internet's full of 'em.
But then I read something from one of these Hemingway-on-writing sites that resonated with me about this series of blogs, and here it is:

All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you: the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was.

Better explorations of both the Bronze Age and the Caped Crusader's journey through it are out there, but I hope you got some sense of the good and the bad and how the weather was from these things. I discovered at least for myself that the Batman works quite well as a two-dimensional diving suit for Bronze Age immersion, suitable for operation at any and all depths.


Though I stopped at the end of 1979, the Bronze Age Batman continued for a few more years, until (most agree) either The Dark Knight Returns or Batman: Year One.

Image from here.
At Marvel, the passing of the Bronze Age was more subtle; later, it began rebooting its characters and compartmentalizing its history, but in the early-to-mid 80s, the characters you read in Amazing Spider-Man or Thor or Fantastic Four looked and sounded "more modern" but retained more or less the same continuity / personality as they had in the Silver Age. DC, on the other hand - and of course that includes Batman - celebrated the change in eras by explicitly dismantling everything that existed before to re-set the clock entirely post-Crisis, the once-in-a-lifetime move the company has repeated 5 times in the 30 years since.

As with heroin, rebooting in such a manner seems to require stronger and more frequently-administered doses once the first one is absorbed by the system.
Which means that all the stories we've looked at over the past two months were erased completely. Remember that for later in the program, if you would.

Unlike many of his cohorts, Bronze Age Batman received a few honorary burials before being relegated to non-existence. We've already seen one of those - the Adventure Comics storyline that killed off Earth-2 Batman - but for this last post, I'd like to look at 3 stories written by Alan Brennert, each of which comments on the passing of the Bronze Age in its own unique way. 


To amuse myself, I'm taking a page from Charles Dickens and presenting these as the Ghosts of Batman (Batmen?) Past, Present, and Future.

Let's begin logically enough with the Ghost of Batman Past:

Illustrated by Joe Staton and George Freeman. (Cover by Jim Aparo)
Possibly my all-time favorite stand-alone Batman story. Both Earth-2 Catwoman and Earth-2 Batman had been dead a few years when this came out in April 1983, so this was a bit of an anomaly at the time and still is. 


I know what you're thinking. "Hey! That says Golden Age Batman. What gives, you f**king lunkhead?!" First, really, so quick to anger! Eat more fiber. Second, yes it is a tale of Golden Age Batman, which is another way of saying "Earth 2 Batman." Third, it is very much a late Bronze Age reflection of all Batman, despite that Golden Age tag. Still friends? Good.

The story is told as an excerpt from Bruce Wayne's autobiography, written two years after the death of his wife, Earth-2 Catwoman. It has a "Reflection from Beyond the Grave" quality to it, aided considerably by the Silver Age look of the art. (Sidenote: Joe Staton never looked better than he does in this issue. It's almost as if he felt burdened by the hack deaths he illustrated in AC and felt the need to pay proper tribute in this Brave and the Bold. But I could be reading into things.)

He does an especially good job conveying the various phobias the Scarecrow throws our heroes' way.

If you recall, it was revealed that Bruce and a reformed Selina Kyle married and had a child (the Huntress) in a few panels of Adventure Comics before it was also revealed that Selina was killed, thus providing the Huntress a convenient tombstone over which to swear her oath to fighting crime. Brennert obviously felt these deaths needed a little fleshing out and justification, bless him, and so we get this poignant, lavishly-illustrated tribute that masquerades as an "unknown case of Batman."

He performed the same kindness for Batwoman in The Brave and the Bold 182, which I decided not to cover, but there's a good write-up here.
The story (after a prelude with Commissioner Gordon, where we discover the Scarecrow is out and about) begins with Bruce Wayne at former girlfriend Linda Page's society wedding, where he entertains the sort of soul-searching familiar to anyone who spent their adolesence listening to The Smiths or The Cure.


The Scarecrow disrupts proceedings and releases his trademark hallucinogenic gas, causing anyone who inhales it to live their deepest fear. The Batman gets a good whiff of it and begins to have a full-on Beverly-Crusher-from-"Remember-Me" style freakout.

It's all handled pretty well, with omnipresent narration alternating with the Batman's pov in the captions.

If it was just this Scarecrow / Batman's inner-fears-made-manifest story, it would still be cool, but as we see at story's end, this Scarecrow plot is simply the hook for the story of how the Batman and Catwoman got together. He recruits her as an ally since everyone he knows and loves has "disappeared."

As we saw with all the concussions, this sort of thing wasn't talked about a lot in Batman back then, so it was ahead of its time.

When Catwoman begins to disappear, too, the Batman is forced to make a choice. It's tempting to read this whole bit as literalizing the perceived out-of-step-ness of Golden Age characters in a Bronze Age set-up.

As the Batman notes, they don't even bother finishing the chase for the Scarecrow. Which is perhaps a dereliction of duty on the Batman's part, but he's earned it.
I found all of this very romantic when I first read it, and I still enjoy it as one of the better depictions of comic book romances. All the more remarkable in that it existed in just two single issues: proverbial grains of sand on the beach. (A sidenote: whenever I say "proverbial" to myself, I hear it in my head as if Leonard Nimoy was saying it. I don't know. There it is.)

And these last few panels bring it all home:


It is precisely because of all of the above that when Catwoman #1 (2011) premiered, I was particularly offended by how stupidly the topic was re-introduced in New 52 continuity. Let's have a quick look. (Enlarge for an exasperating a better view.)


Good lord, where to begin... First the art. Horrendous. Anatomy itself is insulted, or at least I am on its behalf. Second, the Sex and the City style of narration: so ridiculous to put these characters in that context. Third, if anyone thinks for a moment that it is at all appropriate - not from a moral standpoint but from a characterization one - to write the Batman as the sort of guy who's going to have a rooftop quickie, that person belongs absolutely nowhere near the Batman. It fits the Catwoman's character a bit more - she seems like the sort who might get a thrill out of such a thing and hey more power to her, whatever - but the Batman? Particularly in the shadow of all the above? ** Massive fail at every level from Dan Didio on down to the editor (Rachel Gluckstern) to the writer (Judd Winnick) to the artist (Guillem March).

** Not that it really was - lot of water under the Bat-bridge between The Brave and the Bold # 197 and Catwoman #1.

I remember reading at the time that people who objected were simply "slut-shaming." Maybe. But not the Catwoman, dumdum. And it was more "dumbass-shaming." Because maybe the World's Greatest Detective shouldn't be acting like one of these dudes you see on "Caught on Camera." (And maybe Selina and Bruce deserve better than some Brazzers sketch? I don't know. Maybe I'm missing the joke and sound ridiculous. It's been known to happen.)

Anyway, back to the Ghosts business. Superman got a similar sort of farewell to "The Autobiography of Bruce Wayne" in Alan Moore's and Curt Swan's excellent "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow." I've gone back and forth on that one over the years, but I enjoyed it much more than I ever had previously on last re-read. Which was only a few months back. What changed? I'm not sure. Beyond my scope here, just worth mentioning. If this had been a Superman in the Bronze Age series instead of a Batman one, that would undoubtedly be the story I'd choose to end on.

On to the Ghost of Batman Present:

Specifically:
Illustrated by Dick Giordano.
Robin and the Batman find themselves mystically drawn to Crime Alley, whereupon the Phantom Stranger appears in his usual manner, offering the Batman an unusual opportunity:


Stranger claims he is simply doing this as a friend. Which in retrospect is a little silly, sure - I mean, in an Infinite-Earths-scenario, the Batman could do nothing else but save his parents and thus himself, over and over and over again, and he'd still be getting murdered/ young-Bruce-traumatized an infinite number of times...


But who cares? Off they go (the Batman insists on going alone, but Robin jumps into the swirling dimensional rift before he can be stopped) Kirk-and-Spock-in-"City-on-the-Edge-of-Forever"style.

Some of my favorite moments come during Robin's exploration of this alternate Earth.
There is, however, Sherlock Holmes, as you'll see in a little ways down.

Robin begins to suspect that for the good of the many, perhaps Bruce's parents should be allowed to die. The Batman somewhat understandably refuses to entertain the idea but leaves young alternate-Bruce under Robin's watchful eye just the same as he goes around town hunting for Joe Chill.

Quick aside - Robin in the window, there, really cracks me up.
Surveillance Fail. Perhaps the Batman never taught him the whole hide-in-the-trees-from-a-distance technique that he himself employs.
Naturally, Robin has a change of heart, and... well, let's let the screencaps do their jobs.


It's a great what-if/ time-travel sort of story, and I genuinely enjoy the fact that while the Phantom Stranger's stated aim is not very logical, the Batman jumps at the chance just the same. It would be a nice touch if it was established that in addition to protecting Leslie Thompkins once a year on the anniversary of his parents death, he hits up the Phantom Stranger to let him save his parents on some random earth.

In the epilogue, we learn that young alternate-Bruce seems destined to become the Batman just the same.

I love this panel.
And finally, for the Ghost of Batman Future, let's go all the way to 1989:

Specifically:

In case you forgot, Deadman's power is that he can temporarily possess people as part of an afterlife deal with Rama/ God, and he's an anguished sort. Christmas finds him taking temporary command of various people's bodies - in some cases, using them to correct their own awful behavior, Sam-from-Quantum-Leap-style, and in other cases simply hovering about in other people so he can enjoy the physical sensations of Christmas. This cheers him up considerably, until he realizes:


As he understandably bemoans his fate, he is visited by a mysterious woman:


"Magic and I have never been boon companions, I'm afraid." In old DC-code, that means she's from Krypton. Could this be Supergirl? Reintroduced into post-Crisis continuity? No, it couldn't be. Supergirl not only died in Crisis, it was repeatedly established that she never existed.

I sense a message to the reader, here...
See that was the weird part about the late 80s at DC. It wasn't enough to reboot everyone and everything, there seemed to be an awful lot of going out of the way to reiterate how totally, utterly forgotten and consigned to oblivion forever pre-Crisis characters and circumstances were.

You might even say they beat you over the head with this message, repeatedly.
Which made the DC guard at the time seem a little like Orwell's Ministry of Truth or the Committee of Public Safety from the French Revolution, un-history-ing whatever it wanted to. And it had the effect on me personally of drawing my attention more and more to pre-Crisis DC, if only to figure out what had existed that they felt had to be so pointedly (and repeatedly) "corrected."

It all seems silly now - I mean, the same year (1989) DC began publishing alternate-timeline stories but brand-repositioned them as "Elseworlds" - but at the time, something like this was very hit me as an anti-regime act smuggled to the viewer under Christmas cover.

Making Deadman the vehicle for it not only made sense but was about the only way you could do this at DC in '89.
So, while Earth-2 Batman does not appear at all in this story, he very much does, if you take my meaning.


~

Before I go, let me mention two of the other stories in this Christmas Special. I bought it at the time it came out but hadn't looked at it in years and had completely forgotten about John Byrne's contribution, an Enemy Ace Christmas tale that just may rank among the best things he's ever done:

Considering Byrne's c.v., that's saying a lot. (Finished art by Andy Kubert)

Definitely worth checking out. Also worth checking out and much more germane to this blog series is this story by Gray Morrow of the Batman's career from the perspective of the Bat-cave itself.

It seemed an appropriate note to end on.