Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Zombies, Dylan and the Bible

The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks
The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks. Max Brooks and Ibraim Roberson. Three Rivers.
Brooks' silly and self-important "historical'' zombie vignettes serve as illustrated back-stories to his popular series of expository zombie prose novels. It's a decent enough gimmick, and this graphic treatment might be entertaining and important to acolytes and fans of his other undead work. But the only redeeming feature for the unconvinced is the lithe and imaginative illustrations and vivid storytelling of Ibraim Roberson, whose craft and skill far outclasses Brooks' moribund material.
Bob Dylan Revisited: 13 Graphic Interpretations of Bob Dylan's Songs
This French collection of illuminated Dylan lyrics, illustrated by an international, non-American team of artists is a mixed bag. Some of the selections seem odd choices for graphic retelling; others represent missed opportunities. But when things click, like in Dave McKean's Desolation Row, Gradimir Smudja's Hurricane and Zep's Not Dark Yet, you can see the promise of the concept. But most of the interpretations are a bit too serious and austere to justify the effort.

Reunions are usually iffy, which is why Eisner wisely resisted revisiting his creation, The Spirit, except for a few brief encounters. But he finally acquiesced to publisher Denis Kitchen's entreaties to allow other creators to play with his most famous character. The result was an eight-issue series that's gorgeously reproduced in this volume. Artists and writers alike were canny enough to resist slavish mimicry, bringing a new energy to the strip while retaining the original noir-ish blend of innovation and tradition. Alan Moore, Dave Gibbons, Eddie Campbell, Kurt Busiek, Tom Mandrake, John Ostrander, Paul Chadwick and others clearly had a ball with their stellar homages to The Spirit of Will Eisner.

The good news is that Crumb tackles the Bible -- but that's the bad news too. While his draftsmanship and composition have never been better, the material is, frankly, weak, hackneyed and disjointed. Unless readers allow their own transcendent faith and suspension of disbelief to make it more than what it is, Crumb's visual tour de force is for naught.

Sikoryak's astonishing mashups take classics from Shakespeare, Camus, Bronte and the Bible and combines them with the hoary comics motifs of Batman, Superman, Mary Worth, Blondie, EC, Garfield and more. He's a terrific artist, and his awesome mimicry and maniacal imagination will startle and delight litt'rateurs and fanboys alike.

This amazing and rewarding book presents a portrait of Bertrand Russell -- of all people -- and his quest for meaning in logic and romance. The book's creative team also appears as characters in their resonant and interesting evocation, using of the graphic format in an imaginative and engaging way.
Originally published in The Miami Herald

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Tucker Stone reviews!

Cheerfully ganked from Comixology.


Sunday, October 26, 2008

The Alcoholic and Monsieur Leotard

A couple of capsule reviews from The Miami Herald. It's not easy writing short!



The Alcoholic. Jonathan Ames and Dean Haspiel. Vertigo. 136 pages.
Jonathan Ames is a successful performer, essayist and novelist of mostly noirish detective fiction. Aided by artist and American Splendor stalwart Dean Haspiel, he recounts his life of sexual ambiguity, substance abuse, and affairs of the heart and other organs. An unrequited boyhood crush and the unconditional love of a favorite aunt provide resonant and visceral emotional counterpoints. Haspiel's images are powerful and complementary. As with the best art, the reader is left wondering what's next.


The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard. Eddie Campbell and Dan Best. First Second. 128 pages.
English expatriate and resident Aussie artist and writer Eddie Campbell's autobiographical Alec stories are finally collected later this year, but From Hell, the revisionist Jack The Ripper series with Alan Moore, is his claim to mainstream fame. This gorgeous new work, an entertaining collaboration with Brisbane attorney and writer Dan Best, is a colorfully frothy fantasy extrapolating a biography for the imaginary nephew of famed acrobat Jules Leotard, the original ''daring young man on the flying trapeze'' for whom leotards are named. His misadventures with an endearing supporting cast form a hilarious and astounding epic that culminates in the creation of (what else?) the first comic book superhero.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Book reviewed

My review of Jake Rossen's "Superman vs Hollywood," on the history of movie and TV adaptations of Superman and a host of related characters, is in The Miami Herald, here.

And I filed capsule reviews on the "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier" and the 2nd edition of of the "Luther Arkwright: Heart of Empire" CD-ROM, too. Not sure when they'll run, though. Maybe in a couple of weeks.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Reviews



By RICHARD PACHTER
original versions published 11/13/07 in The Miami Herald


Alice in Sunderland. Bryan Talbot. Dark Horse. 328 pages.

"Sprawling" and "rollicking" may not be terms often used to describe historical works, but this one, actually labeled "an entertainment" by Talbot, the Grand Master of modern British comics, certainly sprawls and rollicks. Ostensibly a history of the Sunderland region, an area overflowing with cultural, political and religious significance, Talbot, the relentless genius behind "The Adventures of Luther Arkwright" and "The Tale of One Bad Rat," weaves in a dazzling array of contrasting and complimentary threads, including biographical revelations of Lewis Carroll and guest appearances by comics guru Scott McCloud, English vaudeville stars and several variations of the author himself throughout this multimedia tour de force. It's no wonder that even crusty punters like Warren Ellis and Alan Moore bow to the brilliance of Talbot. If you're already a fan, grab his gossipy collection of out-of-school tales, "The Naked Artist," illustrated by Hunt Emerson, a bawdy and scatological peek behind the curtains of comic conventions and other lunatic gatherings.

Ronald Reagan: A Graphic Biography. Andrew Helfer, Steve Buccellato, Joe Staton. Hill and Wang. 112 pages. Helfer, a veteran editor and the scripter of the graphic biography of Malcolm X, turns his attention to the near-mythical Reagan. The art of journeymen Buccellato and Staton ably supports the narrative as the future governor and president wends his way through show business and politics. Partisans of either stripe might find the story lacking, but Helfer is solidly supported by research and biographies, and the facts of the articulate and charismatic Reagan's life are well-documented and interestingly portrayed.