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Post by Deleted on Mar 7, 2015 5:14:47 GMT -5
Chaos: Lone Sloane OGN by Philippe Druillet (Heavy Metal Publications)Ok, so this was part of a much longer ongoing narrative, a later installment in a series of stories abou Lone Sloane, so I was diving into the middle of a story. But it was fine, between the prologue and the first few pages, I had everything I needed to follow along. Sloane was a great warrior who had died ten years earlier in an epic struggle against the dark demon Shaan who controlled the galaxy/universe, and now Shaan and his forces were moving the golden sarcohugus of Sloane. In the past, Sloane's ally the warrior Yearle had overcome death, so Shaan was taking precautions. Yet a agent of allies/sympathizers with Sloane manage to infiltrate the transport and revive Sloane from his death slumber setting he and Shaan on a path for an spic confrontation... The story is interesting, a bit out there at times, relying on some common tropes at others, but all in all is an entertaining sci-fi tale of epic/mythic nature. If you are not used to European style storytelling though, the pacing/flow/presentation of the story may be offputting at first as it is very caption heavy. Druillet's art though is the showstealer here though. Absolutely drool worthy. I found myself lingering over each page just absorbing the visuals and marveling at the skill and artistry in the design and execution. a sample image of Druillet's art from the book... Definitely worth the experience. And for you bargain hunters, it is available for $5 plus shipping at the Heavy Metal online shop currently. -M
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Post by Deleted on Mar 7, 2015 9:33:46 GMT -5
I was turned on to Corto Maltese: Ballad of the Salt Sea by Shax, who sang its praises from every rooftop. Took me a while to get to it, but when I did, I quite enjoyed it. I agree, it took a bit to adjust to the way the book was paced, it's tone and points of emphasis, but it was a welcome change for me. -M Corto Maltese is one of those things I'd always been meaning to get around to. It was the combination of RaGN Week and Shaxper's praise that finally got me to pick it up.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Mar 7, 2015 11:22:24 GMT -5
I was turned on to Corto Maltese: Ballad of the Salt Sea by Shax, who sang its praises from every rooftop. Took me a while to get to it, but when I did, I quite enjoyed it. I agree, it took a bit to adjust to the way the book was paced, it's tone and points of emphasis, but it was a welcome change for me. -M Corto Maltese is one of those things I'd always been meaning to get around to. It was the combination of RaGN Week and Shaxper's praise that finally got me to pick it up. I think what I appreciate the most about The Salt Sea is what it says in the spaces between the action scenes. There's far more meaning to be found in the movements of the seagulls than the posturing of war machines. It's a book that hates society, admires the savages living far from it, and also feels sadness for those same savages slowly being incorporated into the expanding frontiers of the world war and its corrupting ideologies. Pratt's art is astounding, and the characters are brilliant, but its the meaning behind it all that moves me most. Corto is just looking for some peace and meaning outside of it all, and he's doomed never to find and grasp it, as are we all.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Mar 7, 2015 11:27:08 GMT -5
Well I probably won't have it finished by tonight, but I finally started reading the Lone Wolf and Cub Omnibus by Dark Horse. I'd been hearing about LW&C for years now and finally sat down to read it. It truly and honestly did live up to the hype. Utterly brilliant work. Amazing that a story in which the protagonist is utterly perfect at everything he does never seems to get old. The perfect marriage of physical, mental, and spiritual prowess, plus a moral code clearly outside of society's but which makes more sense than anything being preached in the temples or practiced in the streets. I started reading last night and am now halfway through the 700 page volume.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 7, 2015 21:40:20 GMT -5
A Family Matter by Will Eisner, published by W.W. Norton (Kitchen Sink also did an edition) A family comes together to celebrate the birthday of their father, now wheelchair-bound after a stroke. Old jealousies and resentments rise up, secrets are revealed, and the real reason for the gathering comes out, leading to a tragic (inevitable?) ending. Well, it's Eisner, so you know it's good. The people feel real, their conflicts genuine, and the ending is powerful. But . . . it feels incomplete. The siblings are all introduced and each given their own conflict/arc/secret, but they don't reach individual resolutions. Of the two big secrets revealed, only one (the circumstances surrounding their mother's death) feels relevant, foreshadowing what's to come. The other sexual abuse of one of the kids is never mentioned again, and feels like it was thrown in for the shock value. (It's become something of a cliche, which is sad.) So I wanted to love this book, and I ended up just liking it a lot. Cause hell, second-tier Eisner is still light-years ahead of most everybody else.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 7, 2015 21:45:07 GMT -5
Cause hell, second-tier Eisner is still light-years ahead of most everybody else. Amen! Hallelujah! -M
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Post by Deleted on Mar 8, 2015 1:20:22 GMT -5
And one more for the road as RaGN Week winds down.... Jim Starlin's The Price OGN Eclipse (reprinted in Dreadstar Annual #1 in color; and in various Dreadstar tpbs over the years...) Book Two of the Metamorphosis Odyssey Saga-this has been sitting in my to reread pile since I reread MO along with Shax when he was reviewing it. I figured RaGN Week would be a good time to get to it. Of all the Dreadstar saga, this is my favorite individual story, even though Vanth only plays a very minor role at the very end of the story. This is Syzygy Darklock, an origin story, but a damn good one. The art is vintage Starlin, and the story reads like a sci fi version of a cosmic Dr. Strange story in many ways. Darklock's brother is murdered and he must go on a cosmic quest for knowledge and power to avenge his brother-knowledge and power that can only come through the dark arts and demonic entities helping his harness celestial energy. It's a familiar story for Starlin in some ways, but this is Starlin at the pinnacle of his creative force, and is perhaps his best iteration of that story. Sample art (colored version) This wraps RaGN Week for me, thanks for all who participated and/or read along. It's been fun, feel free top post your own stragglers from the week, and see you next year. Until then, good reading. -M
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Post by shaxper on Mar 8, 2015 8:27:59 GMT -5
thanks for all who participated and/or read along. And thanks to you, mrp, for organizing it!
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Post by coke & comics on Mar 8, 2015 15:44:09 GMT -5
Palestineby Joe Sacco Fantagraphics, 1993-1995 Joe Sacco spent a couple months in the occupied territories of Palestine, and recounted his experiences in comic form. The narration is sometimes crisp and straightforward, sometimes frantic and jumbled. His own experiences and impressions tend to be the latter, his accounts of the stories of suffering he heard tend to be the former. It is organized into short chapters, just a few pages each, as Sacco goes town to town, house to house, and is served tea with sugar, while people recount the abuses they have experienced under Israeli occupation. Occasionally, we see brief snippets of self-reflection from Sacco, glimpses into his own cynicism and feelings that he is exploiting tragedy for his comic. All realized with beautifully detailed art, with sometimes exaggerated or abtracted faces. The comic creates a window into lives of a people in a time, an oppressed people in an unjust time, that reminds us of many times and many places, where one group has held power over another and abused that power. This is one of the best comics I have ever read.
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Mar 8, 2015 23:35:45 GMT -5
The Manara Library, Volume 1by Milo Manara (and sometimes Hugo Pratt) Have you ever wished you could un-read something? I picked this up because Hugo Pratt did the writing for the lead story, and boy am I sorry I did so. Manara's art is visually striking, but, while I'm not easily offended by art, this one made me sick. Just about every page is chock full of masterbation, graphic rape, and/or incest. Worse yet, the characters in the story (and perhaps Manara and Pratt themselves) treated both the constant rape and incest as completely appropriate, normal things, engaged in by the good guys and bad guys alike. And you thought Game of Thrones was bad. Seriously. Sick sick stuff. I cannot believe Pratt had a part in this. Isn't Manara's stuff like Indian Summer just porn though really? I mean, maybe I sound like a philistine here, but I've read Indian Summer, Click! and Gulliveriana by him and, they're all just porno comics as far as I can see -- with all the misogyny and dubious morality inherent in the medium -- masquerading as something more high-brow. Not that I'm a prude; I can enjoy porn as much as the next red blooded male, but let's call a spade a spade. Manara's stuff like this is just smut as far as I'm concerned. Gorgeous artwork, of course, but filth is filth, surely? On topic, I'm not really participating in this event per se, but by coincidence I'm on a massive Will Eisner kick at the moment. I've burned through a shed load of The Spirit in the last two or three weeks and I also read The Dreamer and The Will Eisner Reader collection of short stories. Last night I read New York: The Big City and next up on my to read list is The Building. Eisner never, ever seems to disappoint.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Mar 9, 2015 4:50:07 GMT -5
Isn't Manara's stuff like Indian Summer just porn though really? I mean, maybe I sound like a philistine here, but I've read Indian Summer, Click! and Gulliveriana by him and, they're all just porno comics as far as I can see -- with all the misogyny and dubious morality inherent in the medium -- masquerading as something more high-brow. Not that I'm a prude; I can enjoy porn as much as the next red blooded male, but let's call a spade a spade. Manara's stuff like this is just smut as far as I'm concerned. Gorgeous artwork, of course, but filth is filth, surely? It definitely isn't being marketed as porn. Heck, our library has all six volumes sitting right out there in the graphic novel section for anyone to pick up. And, even if it was, there's still a canyon of divide between your run of the mill pornography and rape and incest fantasies.
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Mar 9, 2015 9:25:31 GMT -5
Isn't Manara's stuff like Indian Summer just porn though really? I mean, maybe I sound like a philistine here, but I've read Indian Summer, Click! and Gulliveriana by him and, they're all just porno comics as far as I can see -- with all the misogyny and dubious morality inherent in the medium -- masquerading as something more high-brow. Not that I'm a prude; I can enjoy porn as much as the next red blooded male, but let's call a spade a spade. Manara's stuff like this is just smut as far as I'm concerned. Gorgeous artwork, of course, but filth is filth, surely? It definitely isn't being marketed as porn. Heck, our library has all six volumes sitting right out there in the graphic novel section for anyone to pick up. And, even if it was, there's still a canyon of divide between your run of the mill pornography and rape and incest fantasies. That's odd that your local library should have this stuff on the shelf with all the other graphic novels. That says to me that they have no idea of the contents. Also, I take your point that if it is porn, then it's fairly extreme and/or niche porn, but still... My Faber English Dictionary defines pornography as "writings, pictures, films, etc, designed to stimulate sexual excitement." I'd say that fits these kinds of Milo Manara graphic novels pretty well. I mean, I can't believe anyone is simply reading them for the strength of the stories.
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Post by shaxper on Mar 9, 2015 18:48:34 GMT -5
It definitely isn't being marketed as porn. Heck, our library has all six volumes sitting right out there in the graphic novel section for anyone to pick up. And, even if it was, there's still a canyon of divide between your run of the mill pornography and rape and incest fantasies. That's odd that your local library should have this stuff on the shelf with all the other graphic novels. That says to me that they have no idea of the contents. I purchased the first volume because it was Amazon's #1 choice for "If you like Corto Maltese...". None of the info on the Manera Amazon page in any way suggested that it was sexual in nature and not for a general audience. Everything addressed his art style and friendship with Pratt. Even the introduction to the first volume pretty much avoids mentioning sexual content at all, instead discussing drawing style, influences and historical context.
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Confessor
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Post by Confessor on Mar 9, 2015 19:38:29 GMT -5
I purchased the first volume because it was Amazon's #1 choice for "If you like Corto Maltese...". None of the info on the Manera Amazon page in any way suggested that it was sexual in nature and not for a general audience. Everything addressed his art style and friendship with Pratt. Even the introduction to the first volume pretty much avoids mentioning sexual content at all, instead discussing drawing style, influences and historical context. LOL...man, you must've had a shock when you cracked Indian Summer open. There should definitely have been something on amazon to alert you to the fact that this graphic novel featured mature content and images of a sexual nature though. It's bad that it said nothing at all, because buyers are clearly not being able to make an informed choice.
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Post by shaxper on Mar 9, 2015 19:57:51 GMT -5
I purchased the first volume because it was Amazon's #1 choice for "If you like Corto Maltese...". None of the info on the Manera Amazon page in any way suggested that it was sexual in nature and not for a general audience. Everything addressed his art style and friendship with Pratt. Even the introduction to the first volume pretty much avoids mentioning sexual content at all, instead discussing drawing style, influences and historical context. LOL...man, you must've had a shock when you cracked Indian Summer open. There should definitely have been something on amazon to alert you to the fact that this graphic novel featured mature content and images of a sexual nature though. It's bad that it said nothing at all, because buyers are clearly not being able to make an informed choice. Yeah, I definitely wasn't ready for a pastor raping his niece in a bathtub. That was...different.
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