lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
[personal profile] lb_lee
“Something else that puzzles me about other people is that a lot of them don’t know their purpose in life. This usually does bother them—more than not being able to remember being born, anyway—but I can’t even imagine it. Part of knowing who I am is knowing why I am, and I’ve always known who I am, from the first moment.”

Blurb: After the murder of their original in childhood, Andy deals with the outside world while more than a hundred other souls share an imaginary house inside his head, maintaining a somewhat-orderly coexistence.  Andy's new coworker, Penny Driver, is also a multiple personality, a fact that Penny is only partially aware of. When several of Penny's other souls ask Andy for help, Andy reluctantly agrees, setting in motion a chain of events that threatens to destroy the stability of the house. Now Andy and Penny must work together to uncover a terrible secret that Andy has been keeping . . . from himself.

Why is it worth your time?: It's good. Also, hey wow, a story where there's more than one plural, and they make friends and have different ways of viewing their plurality! There are precious few stories about plurals relating to each other, and the challenges and rewards of that.

Plural Tags: fusion/integration, switching, MPD/DID, headspace, plural community, inner children, memory work, abuse high-focus

Content Warnings: In comments below; contains spoilers.

Accessibility Notes: Available in ebook and paper forms. Translated into German under the title Ich und die anderen.
lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
[personal profile] lb_lee
"Isaac and his mother lived alone, on a house on a hill. Isaac kept to himself, playing with his toys while his mother watched Christian broadcasts on the television. Life was simple, and they were both happy--that is, until the day Isaac's mom heard a voice from above: 'Your son has become corrupted by sin. He needs to be saved...'"

Blurb: A computer game following an abused child and his possible-headmates fighting through randomly generated dungeons filled with poop, trauma, and abortions. Offense guaranteed. This game has very little narrative, but McMillen has stated that all the player characters are Isaac, so I don't think it's a stretch to see them as headmates, or to interpret the levels as a form of violent headspace. (Especially since there are items which, if possessed, allow you to die and come back as a new player character--i.e., switch.)

Why is it worth your time? The game is a blast to play, as long as you aren't bothered by the grotesque aesthetic. It has insane replay value, due to its randomness. It rewards experimentation, though it does rely on fine muscle control.

Plural Tags: nonhuman headmates, abuse high-focus, switching, otherworld, children, the dead

Content Warnings: In comments below; contains spoilers.

Accessibility Notes: No subtitles for spoken cutscenes, but there are only maybe two or three of those, all of which you can probably follow through visuals alone. There are a bazillion Let's Plays of this game, but I haven't watched many and the nature of the beast makes completionism kind of impossible, so I can't recommend any one in particular. Any one playthrough lasts maybe an hour tops, but getting everything can take hundreds of hours, making this impossible to length-tag appropriately.

Miscellaneous Notes: There are two main versions of the game, a bunch of expansion packs, and a card game now, the last of which I have not played.
lb_lee: A happy little brain with a bandage on it, enclosed within a circle with the words LB Lee. (Default)
[personal profile] lb_lee
"Oh well. Who cares what one's shrink thinks? Besides, the owners of those various scripts would never emerge in that office. I was the one in control. Funny, the harder I ignored the little girl, the more light-headed I felt..."

Blurb: Autobiographical true stories of being a multiple. Sometimes serious, sometimes goofy. The comics are mostly short fragments about various multi misadventures (including banking while multiple, dealing with health insurance and hospitalization), which culminated in a longer story about how Clell realized she was multiple, dealt, and integrated. Unfortunately, while the comic has many fun bits, the story is unfinished; the play contains the whole story, but it's also compressed by necessity.

Why is it worth your time? It's pretty good. In my opinion, the most fun parts of the comic are the short, everyday bits about such things as banking while multiple. It's the little life details that ground the story. Plus Clell is, far as I know, the first multiple to have made comics about it.

Plural Tags: MPD/DID, fusion/integration, switching, abuse high-focus

Content Warnings: In comments below; contains spoilers.

Accessibility Notes: Comic is incomplete. Available only on paper, unless you go for piracy. At least one of the floppy issues are out of print. This comic is impossible to length-tag correctly, because individual issues are short, the play and trade paperback are medium, but getting the whole story requires all three of them, which is LONG.

Buy it from Madison Clell here.

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pluralstories: James of William Denn leafing through the DSM-III-R (Default)
Many-Selved Stories and Multi Media

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