Sunday, 12 December 2004

Christmas Monkey Covers - December 12





For each day of December until Christmas I'm featuring a Comic Cover Advent Calendar. In addition, Sunday is Monkey Covers day here at YACB, because there's nothing better than a comic with a monkey on the cover.



So to celebrate this second Sunday in December, I present you with a Christmas cover featuring a monkey! (Okay, actually a gorilla...) Just move your mouse over the image to reveal today's special Holiday comic cover. Click on the image to get a larger version from CBR.



The cover is from 1967's Treasure Chest vol. 23 #8. The cover by an unknown artist features the supposed editor of Treasure Chest, a comic distributed in Roman Catholic schools and churches, getting into the Christmas spirit.



(A big YACB thanks to Scott Shaw!'s Oddball Comics where I came across this wonder of holiday merriment!)



Just 13 more 'get-ups' until Santa!

Saturday, 11 December 2004

Christmas Covers - December 11





For each day of December until Christmas I'm featuring a Comic Cover Advent Calendar. Just move your mouse over the image to reveal today's special Holiday comic cover. Click on the image to get a larger version from GCD.



Today's cover is 1979's The Brave and the Bold #148. The cover by Jim Aparo illustrates Bob Haney's story of Batman and Plastic Man beating the true meaning of Christmas into the skulls of mobsters intent on pulling a 'Grinch' on the citizens of Gotham.



Just 14 more 'get-ups' until Santa!

Friday, 10 December 2004

A Complex Inferiority

Warning: Rant Ahead.



Via Kevin at Thought Balloons comes yet another story in the news about comics & graphic novels in school libraries: "Comic books arrive in school as learning tool" by Denise-Marie Balona of the Orlando Sentinel. (registration required; try Bug Me Not.)



As with most articles of this ilk, the emphasis is placed on comics being for so-called 'reluctant readers,' particularly boys. Sayeth one of the librarians quoted in the article: "Even if it's just a few words and lot of pictures now, we will progress to more words and less pictures."



The inference being that comics are a form of 'lesser' literature; that it's okay for kids to be reading comics, because they will 'progress' to 'better' or 'real' reading material.



I see this over and over again, and quite frankly I'm getting sick of it. I'm sure that I don't have to make the arguments to readers of this blog, that you all know that there are graphic novels which are as complex and rich and challenging as any work of prose, and prose works that are just as banal as any issue of Youngblood. I just wish that the school librarians would make the same argument, instead of falling back on the comics as gateway to 'real' books meme.



I wonder if these are trully the attitudes of the school librarians, or if they're just covering their asses from parents/teachers/administrators/school board members who wold otherwise be outraged that the school library is spending money on and promoting an 'inferior' form of literature instead of 'real' books. As if a kid would be better served reading "Goosebumps" or "Baby Sitters Club" instead of Bone or Akiko.



I personally have been actively reading both comics and prose pretty much my whole life. I'm hardly what one would call a reluctant reader; I was reading on my own before age three, and by age five I was reading comics. From reading Superman I knew what workds like 'invulnerable' and 'solitude' meant; hardly the typical vocabulary of a kindergartener! I graduated salutatorian of my high school class, so I'd say that reading comics in no way harmed my intellectual or educational growth. In fact, it was my habit of reading comics that led to my persuing a career as a librarian (a story that I'll tell another time...)



(I'm glad that our library is developing a comic and GN collection because they are being seen as a valid form of artistic expression that we need to have in order to support the curriculum of the University.)



Oh well, at least comics are being viewed these days as a gateway to reading, instead of as a gateway to juvenile deliquency...

Christmas Covers - December 10



For each day of December until Christmas I'm featuring a Comic Cover Advent Calendar. Just move your mouse over the image to reveal today's special Holiday comic cover. Click on the image to get a larger version from GCD.

Today's cover is 1946's Action Comics #93. The cover by Jack Burnley & Stan Kaye shows Superman bringing Christmas cheer to a bunch of kids stranded on a cloud with a Christmas tree.

Just 15 more 'get-ups' until Santa!

Thursday, 9 December 2004

Christmas Covers - December 9





For each day of December until Christmas I'm featuring a Comic Cover Advent Calendar. Just move your mouse over the image to reveal today's special Holiday comic cover. Click on the image to get a larger version from GCD.



Today's cover is 1953's Pogo Possum #11. The legendary Walt Kelly gives us a cover featuring Albert & a bunch of ducks filling in for Santa in the Okefenokee Swamp.



Just 16 more 'get-ups' until Santa!

Wednesday, 8 December 2004

Quick Comic Reviews

The Ultimates 2; Superman/Batman; Detective Comics; Outsiders



The Ultimates 2 #1

by Mark Millar, Bryan Hitch & Paul Neary

This first issue serves as a fine re-introduction to the Ultimate version of the Avengers (and since the Avengers are now AWOL in the regular Marvel-U, it's good that we can see them somewhere). Despite the long layoff since the first series, this series hasn't missed a beat. This issue is mostly filled with character stuff, giving us a look at the lives of the heroes when they're not dealing with large threats. While it begins with a bit of action with Captain America on a covert mission, I would have prefered to see it begin on a larger scale, joining in media res at the tail-end of some huge threat that The Ultimates are putting a stop to. Still, it's not fair to judge a book on what it's not, and I'm sure that before long we'll get the huge action that this book is known for.

Rating: 3 (of 5)




Superman/Batman #15

by Jeph Loeb, Carlos Pacheco & Jesús Marino

Lots of action, a few surprises, and a cast and plot that may require you to keep your copies of Who's Who nearby (unless you're a hopeless long-time DCU geek like myself!) I was a bit worried that we'd be getting five issues of Superman & Batman as dictators, but thankfully Loeb's story looks to be a lot more complex than that.

Rating: 3 (of 5)




Detective Comics #801

by David Lapham, Ramon Bachs & Nathan Massengill

Now this is a Batman comic! David Lapham's opening chapter of "City of Crime" just oozes with mood and atmosphere, and makes the city of Gotham a character just as important as Batman. This is a dense story, full of smaller stories which come in and out quickly--sometimes for just a panel--one of which seems insignificant at the time but comes to the fore near the end. Lapham's Batman is a part of the city, moving along the alleys and rooftops like a lone agent out to eradicate the city's sickness, even while knowing that it's an impossible task. Working over Lapham's layouts, Bachs & Massengill give us art that matches the story perfectly, and their cityscapes in particular are stunning--one really gets the sense that the story is happening in a real space. If this level of quality can be maintained throughout the next 11 issues, "City of Crime" will go down as one of the definitive Batman stories.

Rating: 4 (of 5)




Outsiders #18

by Judd Winick & Carlos D'Anda

Ugh. If possible, this second part of "Most Wanted" manages to be more clunky than the first. Other than getting publicity for America's Most Wanted, John Walsh's precense here seems only to cause the heroes to lose several points of IQ (isn't Nightwing supposed to have been trained by the World's Greatest Detective?) And that ending--in the wake of all the fuss made in Identity Crisis about how much security is given to the homes of the families of heroes, it's just really stupid. To top it off, D'Anda work is just as clumsy here as the story, though it's not helped in the least by Sno-Cone's murky colors.

Rating: 1.5 (of 5)

Christmas Covers - December 8





For each day of December until Christmas I'm featuring a Comic Cover Advent Calendar. Just move your mouse over the image to reveal today's special Holiday comic cover. Click on the image to get a larger version from GCD.



Today's cover is 2000's Top Ten #6, with poor Santa running afoul of the law in Gene Ha & Zander Cannon's piece illustrating the Alan Moore story "You Better Watch Out, You Better Not Cry..."



Just 17 more 'get-ups' until Santa!