“Things Every Southern Woman Should Know How to Make”

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Alice clicked on the headline, mildly curious about what yet another stranger thought should be in her kitchen repertoire. Pictures of China plates mounded with crispy fried chicken, greens, cobbler, and a pile of biscuits a mile high flooded the screen, all set off with a pitcher of sweet tea beaded with condensation. The table was set; an apron draped off to the side next to a box labeled “Gramma’s Recipes” in fine calligraphy. She closed the browser and put away her tablet. She was born a Georgia peach, but she couldn’t make a cobbler to save her life. Did that mean she wasn’t southern? Or maybe just not “Southern.” For Alice, there was no recipe box full of family traditions. Her younger years were filled with rental homes in different states and her father’s voice coaxing her toward a text book rather than a cookbook. Metalworking and fabrication held more interest than learning to flambé or sauté. Did it make her less of a woman that her cooking skills consisted of fresh salads...

Comic Recs: unOrdinary by Uru-chan

Hey all!

I'm here with another Webtoon recommendation! Today, I want to tell you about unOrdinary by Uru-chan! 

In the world of unOrdinary, most people have superpowers, which sounds great! But, of course, people found a way to ruin it. A hierarchy allows the strong to control the weak, and it's often enforced with brute force. And if you're powerless like John, it's no place to be at all. 

Except John isn't powerless, and he may just be the most dangerous one of all...

Uru-chan does a great job of turning the superpower trope on its head. The whole "with great power comes great responsibility" view gets an amazing twist in this comic. The elites dominate those with lesser abilities, and most accept that this is the way the world works. However, a few believe that the strong should protect the weak--a viewpoint in a book called unOrdinary, and one that is highly discouraged by society and the government. The authorities try to weed out the those who have read the book--which just happens to have been written by John's father--and reeducate them to society's norms. But people are still hitting the streets in costume, claiming to be superheroes, and dying. But are the authorities behind the deaths, or is someone else targeting these superhero elites?

Though the story takes place in a private high school, the issues of the surrounding world aren't ignored. Rather, the structure of the school makes it a reflection of their larger society and its problems. It's especially interesting to see how the characters handle the tumult when their status quo is disrupted.

Season one just wrapped up with a whopping 155 episodes, and season two will start in November. Even if you don't normally read comics about people with superpowers, I highly recommend unOrdinary because it's so much more than special abilities. It's about human nature and what it takes to change it.

You can check out season one here:  https://www.webtoons.com/en/fantasy/unordinary/list?title_no=679.

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