Here are the comics we added to our library collection last week:
Anderson, David. Bastard Bunny in "Don't you know who I am?!" : the collected works /London : Virgin, 1998.
Art out of time : unknown comics visionaries, 1900-1969 /New York : Abrams, 2006.
Chadwick, Paul (Paul H.) Think like a mountain /Milwaukie, Or. : Dark Horse, 2006.
Denson, Abby. Tough love : high school confidential /San Francisco, Calif. : Manic D, c2006.
Dupuy, 1960- Get a life /Montreal : Drawn & Quarterly, c2006.
Forney, Ellen. I love Led Zeppelin : panty-dropping comics /Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics, c2006.
Hernandez, Gilbert. Sloth /New York : DC Comics, c2006.
Legg, Barnaby. Eminem : in my skin /London : Omnibus, c2004.
Rege, Ron. Skibber bee bye : a book /Montreal : Drawn & Quarterly, 2006.
Sienkiewicz, Bill. Stray toasters /Anaheim, CA : Graphitti Designs, c2003.
Weissman, Steven. Chewing gum in church /Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics, c2006.
Monday, 25 September 2006
Minicomics Monday
Today I have two minicomics from Marek Bennett:
Mimi's Doughnuts #5 is a lot of fun. There are several short stories in this 12-page mini, all about awkward teenager Shayna during the summer she turns fifteen. Divorced parents, odd birthday gifts from relativeness, hanging out with your friend, eco-sabatage, and writing fantasy stories--it's all here. Bennett has an engaging cartoony style and knows how to pack a page without it looking too cramped.
Dog Bless America is a 24-hour comic, and is the perfect illustration about what frustrates me about 24-hour comics. There's a germ of a clever story about a secret-agent dog sent on an assignment to the Middle East, but the story wanders and never gels and the art is kind of sloppy, especially compared to the more polished art that appears in Bennett's minis and Webcomics. Had he taken the time to develop this story properly it could have been better.
Mimi's Doughnuts #5 is a lot of fun. There are several short stories in this 12-page mini, all about awkward teenager Shayna during the summer she turns fifteen. Divorced parents, odd birthday gifts from relativeness, hanging out with your friend, eco-sabatage, and writing fantasy stories--it's all here. Bennett has an engaging cartoony style and knows how to pack a page without it looking too cramped.
Dog Bless America is a 24-hour comic, and is the perfect illustration about what frustrates me about 24-hour comics. There's a germ of a clever story about a secret-agent dog sent on an assignment to the Middle East, but the story wanders and never gels and the art is kind of sloppy, especially compared to the more polished art that appears in Bennett's minis and Webcomics. Had he taken the time to develop this story properly it could have been better.
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