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	<title>Comical Musings &#187; fluffy</title>
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		<title>Review: Unity</title>
		<link>http://luprand.com/2009/12/review-unity/</link>
		<comments>http://luprand.com/2009/12/review-unity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Dec 2009 17:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Luprand</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[amnesia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Busybee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[complex]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fluffy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[furry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[intrigue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mystery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plaid]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plot-based]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surreal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unity]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://luprand.com/?p=231</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I have something of a soft spot for science fiction. Some of this might be that I grew up reading &#8220;the good stuff&#8221;&#8212;my dad has an extensive collection of Asimov, Niven, Card, Heinlein, Clarke, and others, so I had a pretty steady supply of sci-fi as long as I could get past the bats in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have something of a soft spot for science fiction. Some of this might be that I grew up reading &#8220;the good stuff&#8221;&mdash;my dad has an extensive collection of Asimov, Niven, Card, Heinlein, Clarke, and others, so I had a pretty steady supply of sci-fi as long as I could get past the bats in the attic. As a result, I managed to avoid the brunt of <a href="http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Ptitle3tinj4tz">Sturgeon&#8217;s Law</a>, and the tales of the improbable hold a special place in the stacks of my heart, on the other end of the room from the works of Frances Hodgson Burnett and just past the shelf of O. Henry.</p>
<p>So I was intrigued when a cartoonist named <a href="http://twitter.com/fluffy">fluffy</a> submitted her* comic, <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/"><i>Unity</i></a>, for review. When a comic starts with a <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20070212.php">purple-skinned amnesiac thinking in a computer font</a>, you know that what will follow is either science fiction or <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090601.php">ergotism</a>. Or, as the case is for fluffy, <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20040723.php">synaesthesia</a>. (A certain amount of this information is what I&#8217;m picking up from the &#8220;easter eggs&#8221; to be found throughout the comics; a lot of webcomic artists enjoy hiding bonus commentary in the alt-text of their comic images. This can be entertaining or frustrating, depending on how much text is suddenly revealed when you hover your mouse.)</p>
<p>The art of <i>Unity</i> is somewhat variable. At times, there are highly detailed <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090907.php">character shots and backgrounds</a>; at others, <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090525.php">plucked emus in footie pajamas</a>. From a print publishing standpoint, I&#8217;m intrigued by the choice for different characters to speak in <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20071003.php">different</a> <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090824.php">typefaces</a>&mdash;a good way to differentiate between characters speaking, but <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20070507.php">sometimes irritating</a>.</p>
<p>There is a lot of <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20071029.php">nudity</a>, but when the nudity involves <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20081016.php">beings descended from the common platypus</a>, there&#8217;s not much to be seen (no mammaries, no external privates). Sexuality does crop up a lot in <i>Unity</i>, however. Main character Juni is the <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20070302.php">neutered</a> <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20081125.php">virgin-birth clone daughter</a> of a <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20081127.php">lesbian witch-doctor</a>, while her partner, Sam, is <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20080526.php">female in anatomy but male in pronoun</a>. This becomes something of a plot hook, as it becomes revealed later that many members of Juni&#8217;s species are treated as <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20081120.php">prostitutes</a> outside of their <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20081021.php">native lands</a>.</p>
<p>It seems that Juni&#8217;s people, being <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20080414.php">electrically sensitive</a> like their <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090616.php">distant forebears</a>, have the potential to recover the information left behind by the ancient <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20071003.php">creatures</a> who created their <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20070226.php">world</a>, if only they <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20091211.php">weren&#8217;t so primitive a culture</a>. But it takes a lot of confusion, plotting, counter-plotting, and <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20090828.php">murder</a> to figure all this out from square one. I have to hand it to fluffy for managing to tie so many baffling story threads into a coherent plot, in spite of the number of interruptions and random art pieces that get thrown in.</p>
<p>One final note: the <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/2007030.php">animated 404 error page</a> is strangely hilarious.</p>
<p><b>Comic Rating:</b> Three or four recipes I kinda want to try now.</p>
<p>* Fluffy is a bit of an enigma. To my knowledge, fluffy prefers a <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20040619.php">gender-neutral</a> pronoun, as does the protagonist of <i>Unity</i>. The trouble in this is that it gets hard to differentiate between an <i>it</i> referring to the comic, an <i>it</i> referring to the main character, and an <i>it</i> referring to the cartoonist. In the interest of clarity, then, and because fluffy appears as a human with breasts and a skirt in some of the <a href="http://beesbuzz.biz/d/20030907.php">early journal comics</a>, I will be using <i>her</i> to denote the cartoonist. I offer my apologies to the alternate-gender community, as well as to the American Usage professor who tried to teach me inclusive language.**</p>
<p>**Though even she balked at the use of <i>sie</i>, <i>hir</i>, or <i>coe</i> as pronouns.</p>
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