Saturday, July 31, 2010

Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began


In this second installment of Art Spiegelman's comic, the author continues to chronicle his cantankerous father's tale of survival in Nazi Europe. The comic also follows Art as he is torn between his admiration for Vladek Spiegelman surviving the horrors of the Holocaust, and his frustration with Vladek's failure to survive in present-day America. Once again, Art chalks up a black-and-white comic that is anything but.

This comic is unrated: Violence, Adult Language, Adult Situations.Get more detail about Maus II: A Survivor's Tale: And Here My Troubles Began.

The Magnificent Ambersons (Library of Indiana Classics) Review


A great novel - one of the greatest American novels but not as well know as it should be. George Minafer should be as well known as Gatsby. I cant imagine anyone not loving it.Get more detail about The Magnificent Ambersons (Library of Indiana Classics).

Batman: The Killing Joke Top Quality


BUY THIS GRAPHIC NOVEL RIGHT NOW! It's an epic read and I was left thinking about it for days. I've read it three times already, and each time have found something new. Not that I even need to, the story alone is freaking awesome. I'm not going to ruin anything, but if your even debating buying this novel, BUY IT BUY IT BUY IT. Did I get my point across?Get more detail about Batman: The Killing Joke.

Hunted Down: the detective stories of Charles Dickens This instant


Only mystery here is why the above title is Mysteries when there is only one short story included. Very poor come on for this title!Get more detail about Hunted Down: the detective stories of Charles Dickens.

Justice League of America: Cry for Justice Immediately


This story was terrible. TERRIBLE!

It is the worst example of false maturity I have ever seen in a comic.
"You know what would be awesome? If we made this story really violent to show how mature comics are."
"Yeah! Let's put lots of pointless torture in there!"
"Yes! Give me my pay-check please!"

There is absolutely NO POINT to this story. It doesn't have anything to say beyond 'Wow! Comics are MATURE now!'

Do not read this!...unless you like reading terrible things in which case it's kind of a fun laugh.

Get more detail about Justice League of America: Cry for Justice.

Friday, July 30, 2010

The Flash: Rebirth Best Quality


Bringing back Barry Allen is DC saying, "we failed." The Silver Age Flash's death in "Crisis on Infinite Earths" was probably the most powerful and heartbreaking superhero death of all, and arguably, one of the most interesting things to happen to the character. His death also represented the end of a comics era, paving the way for the company to create a Flash for modern audiences, that would hopefully capture the spirit of a new age, just as Barry had. Well, that never happened, so here you go: Barry Allen reshaped for the bloodthirsty and aging modern comics demographic. You also get a pretty sloppy storyline featuring time travel, plot details mired in past-continuity, and so many speedsters (including three named "the Flash") that super-speed doesn't seem so super any more. With this book, Geoff Johns is making his case for Barry Allen's resurrection. Unfortunately, it's not a very convincing one.Get more detail about The Flash: Rebirth.

Batman: Year One Get it now!


I've never been a big fan of DC comic books, I've always preferred Marvel Comics to DC. And I'm not even that big of a Marvel fan, I just like Spider-Man, and trust me I've got a helluva lot of Spider-Man so don't worry I'm no newbie to the world of comics. But if there is ONE DC character I really really like it's Batman. The Nolan Batman films have always been better than the Raimi Spider-Man films (well not really better there good in different ways, Nolan's films are really good serious movies and the Raimi are really good fun movies). So I was surfing the web one day and found a top ten list of Batman novels, this was number one. This was three years ago, I may be just a little bit late with this review. Now three years later I have amassed a large collection of Batman backissues (and current issues as I am currently enjoying Tony Daniels, as of this writing, current run on the Batman series) and graphic novels, and I can honestly say that Batman Year One my first Batman comic is still my very favorite.

This story captures the realism and grit of Gordon, and Batman, and Gotham. It's probably one of the most realistic Batman stories and cements Batman's place in the real world. The storytelling is skilled and it is probably Frank Miller's greatest work (it's definetly better than his modern stuff... DEFINETLY) and the narration switching between Gordon and Bruce feels like things these character's would say if they were real, and I just get an immense ammount of joy that Bruce's narration is written in script. But my favorite part of this stor is that it doesn't treat the reader's like there morons it doesn't explain everything becsause it knows that the mature readers reading the book will understand, my favorite example of this is when after being interviewed by Gordon Harvey Dent turns to behind his desk and tells Batman that it's safe to come out. The narration doesn't say "DENT IS WORKING WITH BATMAN, DURPA DURPA!" but you know that they are.

In short all I can say is... buy this book!Get more detail about Batman: Year One.

Batman: Year One Buy Now


I've never been a big fan of DC comic books, I've always preferred Marvel Comics to DC. And I'm not even that big of a Marvel fan, I just like Spider-Man, and trust me I've got a helluva lot of Spider-Man so don't worry I'm no newbie to the world of comics. But if there is ONE DC character I really really like it's Batman. The Nolan Batman films have always been better than the Raimi Spider-Man films (well not really better there good in different ways, Nolan's films are really good serious movies and the Raimi are really good fun movies). So I was surfing the web one day and found a top ten list of Batman novels, this was number one. This was three years ago, I may be just a little bit late with this review. Now three years later I have amassed a large collection of Batman backissues (and current issues as I am currently enjoying Tony Daniels, as of this writing, current run on the Batman series) and graphic novels, and I can honestly say that Batman Year One my first Batman comic is still my very favorite.

This story captures the realism and grit of Gordon, and Batman, and Gotham. It's probably one of the most realistic Batman stories and cements Batman's place in the real world. The storytelling is skilled and it is probably Frank Miller's greatest work (it's definetly better than his modern stuff... DEFINETLY) and the narration switching between Gordon and Bruce feels like things these character's would say if they were real, and I just get an immense ammount of joy that Bruce's narration is written in script. But my favorite part of this stor is that it doesn't treat the reader's like there morons it doesn't explain everything becsause it knows that the mature readers reading the book will understand, my favorite example of this is when after being interviewed by Gordon Harvey Dent turns to behind his desk and tells Batman that it's safe to come out. The narration doesn't say "DENT IS WORKING WITH BATMAN, DURPA DURPA!" but you know that they are.

In short all I can say is... buy this book!Get more detail about Batman: Year One.

Dance with a Vampire (Vampire Kisses, Book 4) Order Now


I like this series, I do. I like Raven's quirkiness and I don't take the story too seriously. This series is odd, in that the characters and themes are aimed at high schoolers but the writing is somewhat immature and seems better off for 10-14 year olds. That said this story was a cute, super speedy read. Raven and her vampire boyfriend Alexander, have gotten rid of teenage brother and sister vampires who are out to make trouble and keep Raven from Alexander. Suddenly they have the duo's younger brother Valentine snooping around and up to no good. What does Valentine want and is he planning on harming Raven's younger brother Billy Boy? Mix in some fun with the Prom and some relationship angst and that about rounds off the book. My biggest complaint is that these books are TEENY Tiny and cost $8.99. They are trade paperback size, but it still feels like a rip off to spend that much on such a thin tale.Get more detail about Dance with a Vampire (Vampire Kisses, Book 4).

Blacksad Decide Now


Fantastic art and even better art. Highly recommended book. Big plus for Dark Horse for printing this in letter/A4 size; some publishers have a wrong tendency of reducing European comics to US standard size comics and that way diminishing the quality of the art etc..note that euro e.g. French comics often come out once or twice a year and a lot of effort is put into most of them with many panels per page (usually) therefore necessitating large size printing.

Anyway, this book collects the first 3 original Blacksad book into one nice integral book; hopefully DH will also publish the 4th volume that just came out, maybe include that volume with the aqvarelle and sketchbook that was already printed prior to this book by other publishers.

Another book I hope DH would publish is Sambre (also highly recommended by many)
enter sambre at bedetheque.com to find some preview pages

Buy this book, it is different, it is good and it will be a fun read.Get more detail about Blacksad.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Naruto, Vol. 48 (Naruto (Graphic Novels)) Right now


Naruto 48 contains Naruto chapters 443 - 453 (a whopping 11 chapters) that appeared in the monthly Shonen Jump # 82 - 84 (10, 11, 12, October, November, December 2009 Volumes). The last volume included the epic climax of the Pain Invasion arc and this volume builds right off of it. This is ideally not a volume that a newcomer to the series would jump into and I highly urge them to go back and experience volumes 45-47 before starting this one. With that said, this one immediately starts off with Naruto having defeated the final Pain in Konoha.

This volume also serves as a cool down to the climax while allowing the reader to see how Naruto has grown after being affected by the late Master Jiraiya. Now to spoil anything but for those looking for intense action this is possibly not the volume of choice. However it was an awesome experience in concluding the arc and the author wasted no time at all starting the next arc. I was emotionally relieved to get through this arc that was full of emotional turmoil and such and I was glad to see Naruto finally relieved. This volume also contained two shockers for the next arc too!

Chapters:
443: The Interview!
444: The Response
445: Top of the World
446: I Just Want To Protect Them
447: I Believe
448: Heirloom...!!
449: The Blossom of Hope
450: The Cheering Village!!
451: Sasuke's Disposal!!
452: Pressured by Danzo!!
453: Gokage Summit's Eve!!

Having this many of chapters helped to conclude the arc, shuttle us into another arc all in time for the few months to wait before this new arc gets started. It is still going on in the monthly Shonen Jump mangazine releases. I find that having read the monthly releases for the chapters covered in this volume and seeing them all in one volume is truly a pleasant read and I enjoy the way VIZ/SJ handles Naruto. I do hope for Naruto to keep on going as I love it and the cover design is particularly awesome too!

This volume also came packed with a Naruto Collectible Card Game card!Get more detail about Naruto, Vol. 48 (Naruto (Graphic Novels)).

Lowest Price The Golden Bough







In this landmark study Frazer digs up the oldest of Christianity's roots--the worship of a god who dies only to be resurrected--and follows it to its elemental source: the cyclical death and rebirth of plant life. It's that simple. The turning of the seasons. Drawing upon examples from hundreds of cultures and peoples as divergent as African huntsmen and German peasants, Native Americans and Welsh farmers, Frazer proves conclusively that Christianity and a host of other religions all reflect the death of the Earth in fall and winter and its rebirth in spring and summer.
Ron Hogan, whoever he is, criticizes Frazer for the so-called "social Darwinism" that "finds its most explicit form in Frazer's rhetorical question: `If in the most backward state of human society now known to us we find magic thus conspicuously present and religion conspicuously absent, may we not reasonably conjecture that the civilised races of the world have also at some period of their history passed through a similar intellectual phase?'" Substitute the word "primitive" for "backward" and the statement is now politically correct; it is already correct on every other level. Hogan goes on to complain: "Frazer was much too genteel to state plainly that `primitive' races believe in magic because they are too stupid and backwards to know any better; instead he remarks that `a savage hardly conceives the distinction commonly drawn by more advanced peoples between the natural and the supernatural.' The stupidity here belongs to Hogan; scholars from Carl Jung to Claude Levi-Strauss argue quite conclusively over many pages precisely this point: primitive--or let us say primal as Jamake Highwater suggests to intimate "first"--primal cultures do NOT separate the natural and supernatural. Remove "by more advanced cultures" and Frazer become politically correct--and that is the only correctness Hogan is arguing. Frazer wasn't being "genteel" by not calling such cultures "stupid"; stupid has nothing to do with Frazer's argument. That's Hogan's area of expertise.
The Golden Bough is absolutely brilliant in its insights and breathtaking in scope. And we should be ashamed that for decades Frazer's chapter on the Crucifixion was dropped from all the abridged versions of his classic study--and let's face it; no one outside of a handful of scholars is going to read the 12-volume unabridged third edition. This is what's truly primitive--pretending that if we hide Frazer's analysis of the Crucifixion the analysis and its implications don't exist.
Get more detail about The Golden Bough.

Low Price The Magnificent Ambersons (Library of Indiana Classics)


A great novel - one of the greatest American novels but not as well know as it should be. George Minafer should be as well known as Gatsby. I cant imagine anyone not loving it.Get more detail about The Magnificent Ambersons (Library of Indiana Classics).

Save Irredeemable Vol 3


The concept for Irredeemable is pretty simple, the Plutonian (a low-rent Superman clone) has gone crazy and is killing off other heroes, villains, even whole countries. In this volume the surviving heroes discover a possible weakness, what's left of the US government launches a desperate plan, we learn a bit more about the Plutonian's history and see what his arch-enemy is up to. There are chilling scenes of the Plutonian's evil and the heroes' desperation.

But this book suffers from the same problems earlier volumes did. There's a lot of set-up but not much meat. The Plutonian remains a one-dimensional villain despite the glimpses at his past. He has no goals, no motivation and kills indiscriminately . Many characters, including the Plutonian are terribly derivative.

I'll stick with it, it's a fun story and a guilty pleasure but I hope writer Mark Waid has a plan in mind for this story and won't just drag it out as long as he can.Get more detail about Irredeemable Vol 3.

Discount Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol. 2: 1982-1984


I'll make this brief. This book gets 3 stars for only one reason: They reproduced the artwork poorly! Again!! If you look at my 4 star review and images of Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol. 1: 1980-1982 (Library of American Comics) you'll see that they screwed up the scans there too. For that volume there were two levels of image quality, bad & worse. "Fortunately", this entire volume is the better of the two (just bad).

This quality is still significantly worse than the original compilations that came out when the strip was still running.

So, take a good look at the better image on that other review (the one with the black star in the panel), and compare it to the original compilation. Detail is still lost. The panel lines are fuzzy. Artwork is not as sharp.

Take a look on every page on this volume, and you'll see a line above the page number. *That* line is fuzzy! I thought that maybe the printing press was just bad, but the page numbers are sharp as a tack. There is only ONE piece of artwork that is sharp. That is on the page near the back that advertises the upcoming third volume. A picture on the lower right shows Opus reading a Penthouse magazine, with the title "Madonna Nude Yet Again" emblazoned on the cover. Ze Meadow Morals Squad (Hodge-Podge, Portnoy & Milo)looms ominously behind him with a baseball bat. Sharp & clear, just as it should be. ALL the artwork in this volume should look as good! IDW: Whatever you did for this piece of art, do it for all the strips!!

I saw the same problems with IDW's reproductions of Terry & the Pirates. I gave them a pass because the art is so old, and they probably had to scan newsprint for many. But here they have the originals!

So why 3 stars instead of 4 like in Volume 1? I was giving them a chance to correct their errors on the second volume & they blew it. I sincerely hope that they fix these problems with volume 3. Is it the editor who is screwing up, or does Berke just not care about the end result? Does he see these volumes as just a cash cow? A lot of the comments written by him in the book suggest that he cares a lot less for his work than his fans. He thinks it's too dated to have any relevance today.

Berke: You're wrong. Go read some old Doonsebury collections. They are even more topical, and they still hold up. Just like your work. When I was a kid, I didn't get your political references, but I still thought it was funny that a cat would fall in love with a woman by the name of Jeane Kirkpatrick. Come on Berke, this is the definitive set. Have IDW put some extra effort to get it right!

On the plus side, There is a lot of strips that had never before made it into a compilation, a lot more commentary by Berke, and even some sketches at the end. The paper quality & binding is as good as the first volume.

Buy it knowing that if you have the original compilations, you should not get rid of them.Get more detail about Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol. 2: 1982-1984.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Cheapest Jack of Fables Vol. 7: The New Adventures of Jack and Jack


"Jack of Fables" launched some years ago as a spinoff centred around Jack Horner, the Jack in numerous fictional stories (the giant-killer, the beanstalk-climber, etc.), who had been a regular in the "Fables" ongoing series as a self-centered, amoral jerk. Given his own series, which was markedly more comic than its predecessor, he soon found himself in the middle of a vast new area of the Fables mythology involving meta-concepts such as the Literals. The "Great Fables Crossover" storyline resolved the main ongoing arc of the series with the Literals (apart from Gary, the Pathetic Fallacy, Jack's sidekick), and brought into play Jack's son by the Snow Queen, also called Jack. With the crossover out of the way, writers Matthew Sturges and Bill Willingham take an arc to dramatically reorient the series, in what I would provisionally call an improvement. Spoilers follow.

There are four issues collected here, the first of which is a standalone story about one of Jack Horner's adventures in the past: in this case, finding himself in darkest Africa in the late 19th century, in the company of a variety of ape and monkey Fables beasts. This issue is gently amusing, but there's not a whole lot to it, apart from the final in-joke about how all these stories later, in garbled form, became the novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs. Enjoyable, but not remotely groundbreaking or memorable, even for what it is.

The final three issues, on the other hand, form the main body of the story, and are much better. The story is split between Jack Horner and Gary, who while wandering find that Jack is undergoing a major transformation, and Jack the younger (briefly Jack Frost, but he renounces those powers as a rejection of his evil mother's legeacy), who decides to try and redeem his jerkish family legacy by becoming a genuine hero. Jack Sr.'s story is essentially a grand karmic comeuppance, as his millennia of bad behaviour finally comes back to bite him, writing him out of the series (for now, anyway). Jack Jr., by contrast, comes across Gepetto's wooden owl, and goes about on his first case as a hero for hire (though he doesn't really charge anything, which makes paying the bills difficult; someone really should get this kid a Puss in Boots). The adventure itself is fairly unremarkable as a plot, but the younger Jack is a refreshing new lead character, and one can tell that the writers, Matthew Sturges and Bill Willingham, are enjoying the contrast between his idealism and the outright narcissism of Jack Horner. His banter with the wooden owl MacDuff is quite nicely handled.

As far as new directions go, this volume establishes a promising one, and I look forward to the further adventures of Jack the hero, which could go in many interesting directions (including, perhaps, encounters with his parents). Recommended.
Get more detail about Jack of Fables Vol. 7: The New Adventures of Jack and Jack.

Cheap Sojourn: The Dark Elf Trilogy, Part 3 (Forgotten Realms: The Legend of Drizzt, Book III) (V. 3)


This is an amazing story! The whole trilogy was great, each book having very distinctive changes in setting and the mentality of the main character. Many trilogies seem to have this "middle book" syndrome with the second entry, where it really just feels like a bridge between the first and the third. In this trilogy, each entry stands very well its own and ends with a solid conclusion.

R.A. Salvatore does a wonderful job of developing Drizzt as a character throughout the series and allows the reader to really feel like they "know" him. He also does a phenomenal job of describing the Underdark and creating a vivid picture of the dark world to the readers.

Sojourn is a wonderful story of the trials Drizzt must go through on his quest to be accepted in an unfamiliar world, where he can only hope that the principles of its inhabitants are more in line with his than those of his evil kin. A fun comparison can be drawn between Sojourn and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein with the beginning of Drizzt's adventures on the surface. I just happened to read Sojourn right before reading Frankenstein for an English class and had a great time relating Drizzt to Frankenstein's monster in the beginning of his tale.

I highly recommend this whole trilogy to any avid fantasy readers. You'll find it hard to stop reading, even after the third book. Fortunately, there's plenty more in the saga, so have fun with it!
Get more detail about Sojourn: The Dark Elf Trilogy, Part 3 (Forgotten Realms: The Legend of Drizzt, Book III) (V. 3).

Buying Irredeemable Vol 3


The concept for Irredeemable is pretty simple, the Plutonian (a low-rent Superman clone) has gone crazy and is killing off other heroes, villains, even whole countries. In this volume the surviving heroes discover a possible weakness, what's left of the US government launches a desperate plan, we learn a bit more about the Plutonian's history and see what his arch-enemy is up to. There are chilling scenes of the Plutonian's evil and the heroes' desperation.

But this book suffers from the same problems earlier volumes did. There's a lot of set-up but not much meat. The Plutonian remains a one-dimensional villain despite the glimpses at his past. He has no goals, no motivation and kills indiscriminately . Many characters, including the Plutonian are terribly derivative.

I'll stick with it, it's a fun story and a guilty pleasure but I hope writer Mark Waid has a plan in mind for this story and won't just drag it out as long as he can.Get more detail about Irredeemable Vol 3.

Buy Coraline


I saw the movie. I read the book. Skip the movie.

The book is deliciously fun to read. Gaiman can pack more info in a sentence than most writers can pack into a chapter. The best thing about this book was though it was a "kids" book, the danger and the threats were very real: you got a sense that maybe the main character was in over her head, and maybe she wouldn't come out of it. This was very much darker than other YA/kids books like Fablehaven or Billy: Messenger of Powers, but it was a great read. Lots and lots of fun... just be sure to read with the lights on.Get more detail about Coraline.

Purchase V for Vendetta


In the great Alan Moore's book "V For Vendetta," V is an intriguing anti-hero, strangely clad in a black robe and a Guy Fawkes mask, rebelling against the fascism of post-nuclear war England. The mood is Blade Runner meets Orwell's 1984. "V" is typical Alan Moore brilliance: deep characterization, dialogue that draws upon classic literature, and political/philosophical blood coursing through its veins. The interplay between V and his female "protégé" Evey is particularly satisfying; it both moves the story along and adds definition to the characters.

If you are like me and slept through most of the forgettable movie, go out and read this book! "V for Vendetta" shows clearly Moore's maturation as a writer, as he went on to masterpieces like Watchmen and Swamp Thing.

The artwork in this volume is not captivating and at times is hard to follow. Alan Moore credits the artist David Lloyd with being a co-creator of the storyline. I'm spoiled by the level of artistry in graphic novels today. The inking and colors in "V" are primitive in quality compared to today's stratospheric standards. Perhaps some of the sparse panels were done for artistic effect - so I could be misinterpreting what the artist was trying to accomplish.

This novel rises to the level of quality fiction such as 1984 or Animal Farm, dispensing with the tired superhero genre. On a broader level, this book made me contemplate why and how superheroes had hijacked the graphic medium in the United States for so long. Only recently are we getting top-quality "comic books" that don't deal with superheroes - such as "Fables" "Last Man" and "Ex Machina." "V for Vendetta" blazed a trail for those modern masterpieces, even though it took decades for them to follow.Get more detail about V for Vendetta.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Order The Last Airbender: Prequel: Zuko's Story


Written much better than the film but occupying much less of your time, this short manga is still a better value than a ticket to The Last Airbender.

Zuko's Story centers on the eponymous prince, clarifying parts of his past and answering a few questions. It's cleverly written in a way to make it canonically feasible for both the series and the movie, and you'll even find the character designs mixing between the two. Zuko is written to be just as frustrating and angry as he is for the majority of the series. Azula is an evil little wretch. Iroh is a pleasant combination of his movie and series self - if he had his series design, you probably couldn't tell the difference. If you hate the movie and love the series, don't snub this book.

There are two irritating points though. The artwork is adequate but it's sparse and sketchy, very light on tones, and the artist has some problems rendering fire (or maybe she wasn't paid enough to dedicate time to punching up pages, I don't know). Finally, with a retail price of eleven dollars, the book is entirely too short to cost as much as it does. I would not pay that and recommend buying from Amazon.Get more detail about The Last Airbender: Prequel: Zuko's Story.

Shop For Scottish Ghost Stories


I got Scottish Ghost Stories ten years ago whilst on vacation in Scotland and it continues to prove an interesting read. It's a collection of 12 different stories with a couple of great illustrations by Tim Hunt for each.

The stories range from those about hidden rooms at Glamis Castle to glowing ladies in the night and scary dark cellars. At least half of the stories are excellent, although they're all quite readable but one or two do drag a little.

Many of the stories are those which the author has heard from others or are contributions. They all seem to have the same style though, ..., they're still great to read.

The style of writing could prove a little '1940s English' for some, but most books by older authors are like this.Get more detail about Scottish Ghost Stories.

Little Lord Fauntleroy


Not only is it a flimsy book with no illustrations (when the illustrations are quite important to the story), but my copy was missing a page, right before the end. My copy goes straight from "his mother on one side and the Earl on t" then, new paragraph (skipping 263 words and a whole charming scene where little Cedric thanks everyone), it continues "hand into the Earl's and stood close to him."

Don't waste your money on this "Print on Demand" edition; get a good used copy instead.

Get more detail about Little Lord Fauntleroy.

Manalive Review


This is one of my favorite novels, so I bought it for my brother-in-law as a graduation present. This edition is awful: tacky cover, horrible layout, each page has the little blips that come from being scanned. Buy a different edition.Get more detail about Manalive.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Mort Big Comic (Discworld) Top Quality


So many reviewers have already given such great detail in review about this story that I will not follow suit. I admit that I was very enthralled through the book. I found Pratchett's observations, puns and absurdity very fun. I like the story that as I got closer and closer to the ending I found myself slowing down my reading to savor it.

Unfortunately, the ending was a let down for me. The final conflict was rushed, chaotic and not very satisfying. In the end of this story I was left pondering what would be a better way to wrap it all up and could not find anything suitable to do differently. It had all the tell tale signs of a Doctor Who episode where great leaps in logic are needed by the protagonist in order to try and wrap up the story in a semi-plausible way. So, I just have to accept it for what it is: a funny vignette into the world of Death and the people that cross his path of his existance.

There is so much good about this book that I cannot give it a more harsh review. It is definately worth the read. It is fast paced and funny. If you want an amusing quick read then this is the one for you.Get more detail about Mort Big Comic (Discworld).

The Walking Dead Volume 11: Fear The Hunters This instant


Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead, vol. 11: Fear the Hunters (Image Comics, 2009)

The release of a new volume of Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead is always cause for celebration (or at least it is when my library finally gets it in). Even when Kirkman takes a long digression from the main storyline, he's bound to make it gripping. Such is the case with Fear the Hunters, a book that generally stays away from the zombies and gives the dwindling group a far more fearsome predator to combat (telling you what would be a spoiler). When the confrontation occurs, some members of the group, including Rick, discover things they might not want to know about themselves. Still, newfound knowledge or not, Washington, DC awaits... another solid volume in one of the best American series being published today. If you haven't yet discovered The Walking Dead, pick up Days Gone Bye at your earliest convenience and get sucked in. ****
Get more detail about The Walking Dead Volume 11: Fear The Hunters.

The Art of Public Speaking Immediately


I'm not a public speaking expert. This book has made me more aware of the common issues speakers make and what to avoid.Get more detail about The Art of Public Speaking.

Daniel X: Alien Hunter: A Graphic Novel Best Quality


This is a pretty good book, and I enjoyed it quite a bit. This book was about a boy, Daniel X, whose parents were murdered by aliens. Daniel's parents were "alien hunters" and they killed aliens on a "list." And after his parents died, it's his job to be an alien hunter and he swears to kill the alien that killed his parents. The thing is that apparently the alien that murdered Daniel's parents is at the top of the "list." He goes through only a few aliens in this book and you have to read the other books to find out what happens. But this book was a fast paced read and I finished it in one morning. It was tense in some parts but some times was very boring. It wasn't as good as the other books James Patterson has written, but it was OK. I personally have not read the other books but i would look forward to read the other books. Overall, it wasn't bad but it wasn't that good either.Get more detail about Daniel X: Alien Hunter: A Graphic Novel.

Prince Valiant: 1939-1940 (Vol. 2) (Prince Valiant - Reprints) Get it now!


Esta es la oportunidad de admirar a las primerisimas aventuras en toda su gloria, en esta muy esperada reedicion del trabajo mas conocido de Harold Foster. En un formato que permite apreciar al detalle el extraordinario arte; con un recoloreado magnifico.Uno pensaria que esta deberia ser una edicion mucho mas cara. En realidad, es muy recomendable en todo sentido: hermosos dibujos, entrenidisima argumento, y en una presentacion hecha para durar muchisimo tiempo. Mas que un gasto, una inversion.Get more detail about Prince Valiant: 1939-1940 (Vol. 2) (Prince Valiant - Reprints).

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Notre-Dame de Paris: Tome 2 (French Edition) Buy Now


Unlike a great number of the people giving this book a positive review, I was and still am a fan of Disney's movie. Yes, the movie distorted the book quite liberally--but this is to be expected of a children's film adaptation. I view the movie's existence as positive since it encourages older fans of the movie to go and seek Hugo's book to get the complete story. It is a sad fact that most people have never read the book, however, the Disney movie brought attention back to it--a victory, in my opinion.

As far as the book itself, it was marvelous! Hugo's writing style is ornate and an artistic work in itself. As far as who the main character is, I would daresay that this is up to the reader's interpretation. I agree with the fact that the British translation regarding the title is misleading, as I find Quasimodo to be a bit distant from the focus of the book.

Hugo seemed to be preoccupied with portraying both Notre Dame and 15th Century Parisian society when writing this book. From that stance, it would seem as though both Cathedral and time period were the protagonists of the story.

As far as in-context, living characters, I would again like to state that Quasimodo is not whom I would nominate as protagonist. Esmeralda is a tempting choice, however, she is not given too much detail as far as personality. I would daresay that the most developed character in the book is the antagonist, Claude Frollo. I could write volumes on this character alone, as he is my favourite. If he weren't already antagonist, I would deem him a good candidate for protagonist.

Ah, Claude Frollo. He is the main reason behind my love for the book. (To Disney fans--his story does not unfold as in the movie!) I find his constant struggles and painful past to be some of the most intriguing parts of the book. The parts which included dialogue predominantly on his part were certainly my favourite ones. Claude and his constant battle with his feelings, his devotion, his jealousy and his belief in fate colour the book like no other character could.

Ultimately, the message of the book is that appearances are deceptive. Hugo portrays this most obviously with Quasimodo. In my opinion, however, he gives the reader this message through every main character. Phoebus, for example, is at first presented as a gallant officer who rescues Esmeralda but later turns out to be a vulgar womanizer. Clopin is first encountered as a mere beggar but is in fact the king of the Gypsies, holding power within his circle of vagabonds. Quasimodo is first thought of as a monster but is given a more tender place in the reader's heart by the conclusion of the book. Esmeralda is described as beautiful and she at first shows mercy to both Gringoire and Quasimodo, but is later revealed as superficial and vulgar in her taste for men. Claude Frollo appears as a studious priest, but is in reality a passionate, tortured spirit and so much more.

To all, I encourage you to read this book! You will feel what the characters feel as your eyes follow Hugo's words. I recall with clarity reading the part where Claude observes as Phoebus attempts to manipulate Esmeralda for his own purpose and, enraged, stabs the captain with Esmeralda's dagger. I remember how my stomach turned as I read. I could feel Claude Frollo's every emotion. It was like magic. It was, in fact, magic. The magic of excellent literature!
Get more detail about Notre-Dame de Paris: Tome 2 (French Edition).

Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art Order Now


This book is not strictly a graphic novel, but rather a mostly serious, occasionally whimsical analysis of the artistic medium known as "comics", done, naturally, as a comic book. McCloud attempts to define the medium itself (starting from Will Eisner's notion of "sequential art") and then proceeds to define the language of the form, and examine its various facets. Contrary to my expectations, McCloud does not make any assumptions or assertions about the actual content of comics, which to some might seem a major drawback, nor does he try to evaluate the quality of any specific style or product. Clearly, he wants to transcend such notions altogether and define the parameters of what comics could be, rather than what they all-too-often are.

McCloud investigates what there is about the medium that draws us to it, without going into such story-centric concepts as plot or characterization. He really doesn't even try to establish critical standards for this medium so much as just delineate the issues, and point out some of the difficulties inherent in a form that combines both writing and pictures.

While this may sound like a dry textbook, it's really much better than that. I most appreciated those moments (and there were many) where McCloud points out aspects of the medium that I'd always taken for granted (the gutters, for example) making me really think about facets of comics that I never even realized I knew. Maybe this book isn't as much pure fun as the comics we're used to, and certainly some of the middle chapters seemed to drag, but anytime you get the chance to look at an old friend through fresh eyes, it's got to be worth the effort. A must-read for anyone serious about comics, and a virtual bible for those interested in working in the field.Get more detail about Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art.

Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch Decide Now


If you're either a Gaiman or Pratchett fan and you haven't read this, do yourself a favor and get on it right away.

If you know nothing about either author, this is a good entry point to both of their works.

Oddly, in some ways, Gaiman + Pratchett < Gaiman or Pratchett alone, but it still works very well. There isn't as much humor as in your typical Pratchett book or as much poignancy as in your typical Gaiman book (which is not to say that Pratchett can't be poignant or Gaiman can't be humorous...merely that the combination seems to have muted these characteristics somewhat).

Get more detail about Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch.

Interworld Right now


This book is pure science fiction in the academic sense. Surprisingly (given Gaiman's reputation) it is not a very well written story. If you like random ideas about infinite possible worlds and altruistic, friendly fairy balloon guides, then go for it. The story is actually quite sophomoric and the characters are neither believable, nor well developed. But the concepts are interesting enough to get you through...if barely.Get more detail about Interworld.

Lowest Price Interworld


This book is pure science fiction in the academic sense. Surprisingly (given Gaiman's reputation) it is not a very well written story. If you like random ideas about infinite possible worlds and altruistic, friendly fairy balloon guides, then go for it. The story is actually quite sophomoric and the characters are neither believable, nor well developed. But the concepts are interesting enough to get you through...if barely.Get more detail about Interworld.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Low Price Instructions


Instructions is one of my favorite Neil Gaiman poems. As I commented when I listened to Gaiman's Fragile Things short story collection on cd last year, the poem is one of his pieces that I will actively dig out and reread occasionally. In the poem, the narrator instructs the reader on how to survive a fairy tale.

In this hardcover children's book edition, the poem is expanded upon by the fantastic artwork of Charles Vess. Vess may not be as frequent a Gaiman collaborator as Dave McKean is, but to my personal taste he's the more enjoyable of the two (your mileage may vary). Don't get me wrong, I love the work of Dave McKean (and Michael Zulli, and P. Craig Russell). I just love Vess' work a little bit more.

For Instructions, Vess posits the main character not as a typical human blundering through a fairy tale, but as a humanoid sort of canine / feline mix. There are pages in which the character looks decidedly canine, and others in which the face is feline to a fault ... and I found that very intriguing. In Gaiman's Blueberry Girl, Vess had the girl who is the subject of the poem change race and age every few pages; here, he finds a way to embody different aspects of the character without a drastic change in appearance. It works a more subtle magic on the reader, I think, as well as focusing less attention on the gender of the character being instructed.

A wonderful poem, beautifully illustrated. "Everthing you'll need to know on your journey," the cover copy says. Not just on a journey through a fairy tale, but on a journey through life.Get more detail about Instructions.

Save Batman: The Dark Knight Returns


Check which book you're buying before you order as Amazon have made a (so far uncorrected) product labelling mistake here.

One of the Batman books listed, "Batman (1966 film)" [Paperback] editied by Frederic P. Miller (Editor), Agnes F. Vandome (Editor), John McBrewster (Editor), is NOT the book that all these many reviews are of. "Batman (1966 film)" published by Alphascript Books and edited by Frederic P. Miller, Agnes F. Vandome, John McBrewster is actually a compilation of Wikipedia articles about the Batman Film, and is DEFINITELY NOT the Batman book by Frank Miller, although this is what it is listed as, and what all the reviews are for.
Get more detail about Batman: The Dark Knight Returns.

Discount The Walking Dead Book 5


I highly reccomend reading the entire 'Walking Dead' series. What happens at the end of the world? This series tries to answer that question. Not to mention it is because of the effing Zombie Apocalypse. What could be cooler?Get more detail about The Walking Dead Book 5.

Cheapest American Born Chinese


"One bright and starry night, the Gods, the Goddesses, the Demons, and the Spirits gathered in Heaven for a dinner party."

This book, told in Graphic Novel format, contains 3 separate tales:

The first tale is the legendary Chinese fable of The Monkey King. The Monkey King was the ruler of all the monkeys on the Flower-Fruit Mountain. When the Gods were having their dinner party, he tried to attend. But because he was a monkey (and didn't wear shoes) he was denied admittance. This changed the Monkey King. He was embarrassed by it, and decided to change himself. He required all monkeys to wear shoes. He studies the 12 disciplines of kung fu to become more than just a monkey. In fact, he transforms himself into a different type of deity all together.

The second tale is about Jin, an American-Born Chinese. His parents immigrated from China and met in college. Jin's mom told him the reason she chose to marry Jin's father. "Of all the PhD. students at the university, he had the thickest glasses. Thick glasses meant long hours of studying. Long Hours of studying meant a strong work ethic. A strong work ethic meant a high salary. A high salary meant a good husband." When Jin is 9, his family moves out of Chinatown, and Jin has to start a new school. Where he is different; the outsider. He suffers from bullies and bouts of embarrassment over his culture.

The final tale is of Danny, the American boy that has a Chinese cousin, named Chin-Kee. Chin-Kee is the epitome of a negative Chinese stereotype. He has buck teeth, a thick accent, and even eats cats. Danny is so embarrassed by Chin-Kee's yearly visits that he has to switch schools every year.

What can be said about this beautiful little book that hasn't already been said?? It truly is a masterpiece. We follow Jin through grade school, where he befriends the student, Wei-Chen, who has just arrived from Taiwan. At first, Jin tries to ignore the other student, but when the two boys start talking about toys (Transformers), they soon become best friends.

The 3 stories eventually come together, all related in a surprisingly beautiful ending. It is basically the story of loving the person that you are. And if you try to change yourself to fit another's persons image of how you "should" be, then you will eventually lose yourself. It sounds deep, and it is. But it is told with a light-hearted humor and really great pictures. Just a small example:

"The only other Asian in my class was Suzy Nakamura. When the class finally figured out that we weren't related, rumors began to circulate that Suzy and I were arranged to be married on her thirteenth birthday. We avoided each other as much as possible."

Not only is this a wonderful tale that highlights the pain of stereotyping and racism, but also teaches a lesson on self-appreciation and self-awareness. An incredibly quick read (I was finished in about an hour), American Born Chinese is absolutely a must-read. Warm, heart-breaking and yet uplifting, this is one book that I can not truly recommend enough. And for anyone that ever says Graphic Novels are just "comic" books, I think you have a lesson waiting for you. A true 5 Star read!!!Get more detail about American Born Chinese.

Cheap Buffy The Vampire Slayer Season Eight Volume 6: Retreat


Season 8 is still going strong. This series is just amazing. I don't want to say anything story specific because I don't want to give away any spoilers but if you're a Buffy fan you've got to read these. If you're a graphic novel fan but not a Buffy fan, you should give them a shot. The writing and story are top notch.

Hope this helps.Get more detail about Buffy The Vampire Slayer Season Eight Volume 6: Retreat.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Buying Tribulation Force (Left Behind Graphic Novels, Book 2, Vol. 3)


After reading the first book in the Left Behind series, I had to order the 2nd. And it didn't disappoint. I never wanted to put it down! I cant wait to get the 3rdGet more detail about Tribulation Force (Left Behind Graphic Novels, Book 2, Vol. 3).

Buy Tender is the Night


An entertaining and illustrative portrayal of a golden time. This is Fitzgerald at his best!Get more detail about Tender is the Night.

Purchase The Walking Dead Compendium Volume 1


As a reader of comics for about 25 of the 35 years I have lived, I can say with some authority that this is the best series currently running. AND it has maintained that stature since the completion of it's first story: Days Gone By, which is of course included in this compendium.

The artwork of The Walking Dead may not have the most creative or stylized art, but as an art teacher I can say that the composition and style always support the needs of the drama, characters, and story. This is a black and white book, but that actually helps maintain the detail the artist includes; the grays and contrast are used to create feelings and moods that keep the reader hooked. The best thing about the artwork, however, is even beyond this huge compendium into issue 74 of the series it is consistent. You meet many many characters who fall in and out of the story, yet without giant S's or spiders on their chests' the artist manages to keep you aware of who's who - even when the cast count goes higher than the average X-men story.

As for the story, The Walking Dead is most amazing in that a huge earth-shattering Zombie apocalypse is only the scene on which the characters interactions and relationships are the star of the show - and that most fans don't even notice because of how sly Kirkman can be. Each included sequential story takes the stakes higher and pushes the reader to do anything to get to the next page, even to the point of speed-reading the zombie fights to get to the effect or aftermath of them.

The only fault of this book (garnering 4 stars rather than the deserved 5) is that it has been published in paperback and weighs about 5 lbs. This makes it nearly impossible to take with you, but if you do attempt to read it anywhere but a flat surface the tome will most likely pull itself into pieces before you're able to lend the book out to your friends (which no doubt you'll be dying to do).Get more detail about The Walking Dead Compendium Volume 1.

Order Batwoman: Elegy


The first thing you will notice about this book is the spectacular artwork. Artist J.H. Williams (Alan Moore's Promethea) employs several different styles over the course of the story, but his primary style (for when Batwoman goes into action) is especially beautiful. These pages are painted with a B&W ink wash and then the talented Dave Stewart (Hellboy, The Umbrella Academy) adds the colors, and the result is stunning. It's also obvious that a lot of thought went into the overall design of each page, not just individual drawings. There are even details in the art that you don't really notice until after you've finished the story.

But what of the story? There are plenty of comics that have terrific art but are poorly written. No such worries here thanks to writer Greg Rucka (Queen & Country). This is sort of a "Batwoman: Year One" (with some sections even mimicking the style of Batman: Year One), but it also gives us a memorable new villain in the psychopathic, Lewis Carroll-quoting Alice. Rucka also does a fantastic job of making Batwoman Kate Kane into her own character, and not just a female version of the Batman.

I can only think of a couple of negatives. A couple of the page layouts were so complex that it took a few seconds to figure out the order in which to read the panels. Also, the book ends in a bit of a cliffhanger, and Rucka has now left DC. Fortunately, Williams will be taking over the writing and continuing the story, but it may be a while until the Alice character returns.

This oversized hardcover is highly recommended. It's not that often that such a perfect marriage of story and art comes along.






Get more detail about Batwoman: Elegy.

Where To Buy Hellboy Volume 10: The Crooked Man and Others (Hellboy (Graphic Novels))


This book is the perfect graphic novel, and when I say that, I also mean they've raised the quality of the graphics for it. It's not your run-of-the-mill semi-graphic novel, like so many of them seem to be these days, don't they.

And it's not at bottom still a comic-book story either, as so many of them are. And I might say, if you don't mind my doing so, that one of the reasons I like the writing of it so much is that I'm a bit spiritual myself, and I can vouch for the truth of about 3/4 of this story (the rest isn't necessarily untrue, I just don't know about it) (and I plan to keep it that way, but you can't fight fate, especially when you're dealing with someone so tricky).

While we're on the subject, I was reading 'R. Crumb Draws the Blues' the other night, and that's got some moments in it that have to do with powers being derived from the dark side of spirituality (African voodoo). And it's non-fiction. It's interesting (always nice when someone else gets the information for you!).Get more detail about Hellboy Volume 10: The Crooked Man and Others (Hellboy (Graphic Novels)).

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Shop For Anansi Boys


I loved this book. However, I did not buy it here. When I noticed the Mass Market Paperback was $2 less than the digital kindle edition, I got pissed off and got it out of the library. My willingness to buy books digitally for the convenience only lasts so long as I feel that I am not getting *completely* ripped off.Get more detail about Anansi Boys.

How to Draw 101 Animals (How to Draw 101)


I ORDERED SEVERAL BOOKS, THEY WERE RECEIVED IN A TIMELY MANNER AND WERE PACKAGED REALY WELL. I ORDERED THESE FOR MY GRANDCHILD WHO JUST LOVES TO DRAW AND I AM HERE TO TELL YOU, MOM IS CONSTANTLY RUNNING OUT OF PAPER. CHILD IS VERY HAPPY WHEN SHE FOLLOWS EASY DIRECTIONS AND CAN ACTUALLY BE PROUD OF WHAT SHE HAS DONE. SHE IS 6 YEARS OLD AND LOVES IT.Get more detail about How to Draw 101 Animals (How to Draw 101).

Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Paradise Review


This was required reading for a graduate course in medieval history.
"The Divine Comedy" describes Dante's journey through Hell (Inferno), Purgatory (Purgatorio), and Paradise (Paradiso), guided first by the Roman epic poet Virgil and then by Beatrice, the subject of his love and another of his works, "La Vita Nuova." While the vision of Hell, the Inferno, is vivid for modern readers, the theological niceties presented in the other books require a certain amount of patience and scholarship to understand. Purgatorio, the most lyrical and human of the three, also has the most poets in it; Paradiso, the most heavily theological, has the most beautiful and ecstatic mystic passages in which Dante tries to describe what he confesses he is unable to convey (e.g., when Dante looks into the face of God: "all'alta fantasia qui mancò possa" - "at this high moment, ability failed my capacity to describe," Paradiso, XXXIII, 142).

Dante wrote the Comedy in his regional dialect. By creating a poem of epic structure and philosophic purpose, he established that the Italian language was suitable for the highest sort of expression, and simultaneously established the Tuscan dialect as the standard for Italian. In French, Italian is nicknamed la langue de Dante. Publishing in the vernacular language marked Dante as one of the first (among others such as Geoffrey Chaucer and Giovanni Boccaccio) to break from standards of publishing in only Latin or Greek (the languages of Church and antiquity). This break allowed more literature to be published for a wider audience - setting the stage for greater levels of literacy in the future.

Readers often cannot understand how such a serious work may be called a "comedy". In Dante's time, all serious scholarly works were written in Latin (a tradition that would persist for several hundred years more, until the waning years of the Enlightenment) and works written in any other language were assumed to be comedic in nature. Furthermore, the word "comedy," in the classical sense, refers to works which reflect belief in an ordered universe, in which events not only tended towards a happy or "amusing" ending, but an ending influenced by a Providential will that orders all things to an ultimate good. By this meaning of the word, the progression of Dante's pilgrim from Hell to Paradise is the paradigmatic expression of comedy, since the work begins with the pilgrim's moral confusion and ends with the vision of God.

The Divine Comedy can be described simply as an allegory: Each canto, and the episodes therein, can contain many alternate meanings. Dante's allegory, however, is more complex, and, in explaining how to read the poem (see the "Letter to Can Grande della Scala"), he outlines other levels of meaning besides the allegory (the historical, the moral, the literal, and the anagogical). The structure of the poem, likewise, is quite complex, with mathematical and numerological patterns arching throughout the work, particularly threes and nines. The poem is often lauded for its particularly human qualities: Dante's skillful delineation of the characters he encounters in Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise; his bitter denunciations of Florentine and Italian politics; and his powerful poetic imagination. Dante's use of real characters, according to Dorothy Sayers in her introduction to her translation of "L'Inferno", allows Dante the freedom of not having to involve the reader in description, and allows him to "[make] room in his poem for the discussion of a great many subjects of the utmost importance, thus widening its range and increasing its variety."

Dante called the poem "Comedy" (the adjective "Divine" added later in the 16th century) because poems in the ancient world were classified as High ("Tragedy") or Low ("Comedy"). Low poems had happy endings and were of everyday or vulgar subjects, while High poems were for more serious matters. Dante was one of the first in the Middle Ages to write of a serious subject, the Redemption of man, in the low and vulgar Italian language and not the Latin language as one might expect for such a serious topic.

Paradiso
After an initial ascension (Canto I), Beatrice guides Dante through the nine spheres of Heaven. These are concentric and spherical, similar to Aristotelian and Ptolemaic cosmology. Dante admits that the vision of heaven he receives is the one that his human eyes permit him to see. Thus, the vision of heaven found in the Cantos is Dante's own personal vision, ambiguous in its true construction. The addition of a moral dimension means that a soul that has reached Paradise stops at the level applicable to it. Souls are allotted to the point of heaven that fits with their human ability to love God. Thus, there is a heavenly hierarchy. All parts of heaven are accessible to the heavenly soul. That is to say all experience God but there is a hierarchy in the sense that some souls are more spiritually developed than others. This is not determined by time or learning as such but by their proximity to God (how much they allow themselves to experience him above other things). It must be remembered in Dante's schema that all souls in Heaven are on some level always in contact with God.

Recommended reading for anyone interested in literature and medieval history.
Get more detail about Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Paradise.

Wednesday Comics Top Quality


I just got my copy (perfect condition by the way - Thanks Amazon) of Wednesday Comics - and it exceeded all of my expectations! I remember reading these stories in 2009, as each issue came out over the course of 12 weeks, and thinking to myself "Thank you DC for taking a chance on this format and Thank you Mark Chiarello (Edititorial Art Director) for intelligently driving this vision forward - masterful!" And now I find myself saying "Thank you" again for having the courage and insight to collect this fantastic experiment in a HUGE hardcover that does a great job of replicating these oversized adventures an all their colored glory! Not only is this a giant book but it's also so well designed - the colors are bright, the pages crisp, the binding is tight (yes, the pages are sewn), even the end pages are eye catching. Do yourself a favor, and buy this book! You will not be disappointed!Get more detail about Wednesday Comics.

The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb This instant


I have been a fan of R. Crumb's work since his earliest published comics. He has always taken a maverick view of society, individuals, trends and events, and has never appeared to compromise his visions, in spite of as much criticism as praise over the years. An Art critic called him the "Breugel of our age".
He could equally be called the Jonathan Swift or H.L. Menkin. His work can make you laugh and escape. It can also make you reflect more deeply on subjects you thought you had fathomed.

One of his first so-called "psychedelic" Zap comics bore the legend "Caution: For adult intellectuals ony". This book of his illustrated Genesis bears a simliar ironic warning 'Adult Supervision Recommended for Minors'. He might also have stipulated "Readers who think they know the Bible - Beware! Its not set in the sunny rose garden you were led to believe in sunday school".

I confess to have been so affected by this book I have had to put it down for long periods and steel myself before picking it up again. But that was not because of any wayward interpretation on his part, but due to the fierce form of the original to which he has apparently been faithful. There is no bowderisation in this book, no smoothing of rough and uncomfortable content. It is shocking at times, but not because his vision is profane, but because this book purportedly conveying the "wisdom of a desert people" is so bleak.

If there are elements of satire it is only of the Classics Illustrated genre of comic where 'War and Peace' might have once appeared in 32 pages. I think this is a great book, a move towards a more serious side than his earlier and more palatable "classics illustrated such as 'Boswell's Life of Johnson'. There are times when he highlights the stilted form of the original such as who 'begat' who, or the lists of names of prominent chieftans which a series of well drawn cariactures that show realistic looking nomads with faces like weathered walnuts.

I could not see any hint of anti-semitism in these cariactures - something that he has been accused of in the past in spite of the fact that his wife Aline is Jewish and his sexual appetite clearly runs towards sterotypical variations of strong Jewish women. Rather the attention to detail is superb, the costumes, artifacts and contexts for the drawings. It is a great achievement.

Lovers of Bob Crumb should buy it and add to to their collections. There is something noble and epic about his effort. It is also brave when one thinks that wars have been fought over differing interpretations of this archaic sacred text. Perhaps Crumb's great achievement here is that he puts that fact in context.

Roger Vlitos.Get more detail about The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Loser Immediately


Spoilers

Loser seemed to be going somewhere at first, but nothing really seems to happen. There's not a conflict throughout the book. He's happy being who he is, although he doesn't have any friends. If the conflict was about how the other kids changed, why did the author only introduce the basketball kid at the end? If I had to draw a plot chart for it, it would be almost flat. I liked the characters, but nothing happens to them.Get more detail about Loser.