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Dungeons & Drag Queens by MP Johnson

What happens when a small town drag queen gets sucked into a realm of sword and sorcery and forced to do much more than lip-sync for her life?

After a weird wizard transports Sleazella LaRuse to the realm of Houmak, Green Bay's number one diva must battle to save her life and protect the lip-syncing, potty-mouthed persona she's worked so hard to cultivate. Will her bones be devoured by the gnawing nipple-mouths of slavwolves or crushed by the brutal Blada Femma? Worse yet, will she find love amongst the scum sailors and slopulating sky serpents? Will she win this glamorous game of thrones? The answer is clear in the most fierce and fabulous fantasy epic ever.

   

With a title like Dungeons & Drag Queens and a cover like that - seriously, blow it up and gaze in wonder at the detail! - there was no way I could possibly resist giving this a read, even if I was not already a fan of MP Johnson.

Much to my delight, this worked as a clever bit of Bizarro fun, a solid fantasy story, and an honest slice of gender exploration. Yes, it is ridiculous and over-the-top, but the tongue-in-cheek parody is never allowed to eclipse the fact that there is a story to be told. In addition, while Johnson plays fast-and-loose with transgender taboos and drag stereotypes, her heroine is a fully-fleshed human being, complete with honest emotions and a significant back-story.

Sleazella LaRuse (gotta love that name) is a small town drag queen, as fierce as she is flamboyant, who is rudely stolen away from her home to become Queen of the fantasy realm Houmak - except, of course, she doesn't quite have the plumbing necessary to produce an heir. Kidnapped, cast aside, and consigned to her doom, she quickly finds herself stripped of the 'image' of Sleazella, leaving only frightened, insecure, Todd McKinney in her wake. It is only through reasserting herself, rejecting Todd's past, and being true to the carefully created persona of Sleazella that she is able to rise above her situation and take on the medieval world in which she finds herself. Todd's past bubbles to the surface on more than one occasion, riding the memories of high school bullies and an abusive father, but it's Sleazella who proudly lives on.

As for the fantasy element, Dungeons & Drag Queens is really comprised of a series of quests or tasks, hearkening back to the tales of Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber, and even early Michael Moorcock. It's a fun tale, and one that makes clever but careful use of the creative freedom allowed by the Bizarro genre. The wizard with the talking puppet and shadowy ventriloquist trailing behind is just the tip of the iceberg. There are slavwolves with multiple nipple-mouths; a race of Amazonian women who fornicate as they fight; the monstrous many-mouthed Uzularoum, who gleefully perpetuates the scam of his own beheading; a dragon overlord that just wants to be loved; and a crew of pacifist pirates who count being stabbed fourteen times just part of negotiation.

It really is a fun fantasy story that never forgets its Dungeons origins, while the Drag Queens element works beautifully, with Sleazella a legitimate heroine, and not just a running gag. The ending is a bit dark, but that's entirely in keeping with the Bizarro genre. If any of this sounds the least bit interesting, then given it a shot - you'll be surprised by how much fun it is.


Paperback: 150 pages
Published: April 1, 2014
Published by: Eraserhead Press


This post first appeared on WTF Are You Reading?, please read the originial post: here

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Dungeons & Drag Queens by MP Johnson

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