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Non-Superhero Comics General Discussion Thread

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gdt5016 said:
God, the Invisibles is fucking AWFUL.

Morrison must've been snorting crack off a needle full of heroin when he was writing that.
Eh, I kinda like crazy, weird shit sometimes. I'll give it a shot.
 
Costanza said:
Eh, I kinda like crazy, weird shit sometimes. I'll give it a shot.

Crazy, weird, directional, rambling, unfocused....all describe that book. I gave up after 20 issues, and I still can't tell you what the fuck was going on.

And I hated all the characters.
 
Costanza said:
Eh, I kinda like crazy, weird shit sometimes. I'll give it a shot.

Beware! That's the author who has all the chance of making you embrace the concept of superhero comics.

Anyway, just know The Invisibles is a love it or hate kind of thing.
 
This thread cannot continue without:

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does planetary count as a non superhero book? because id advise it, but it has very superhero-esque roots.
 
This is my (old) post from the "Best of the Decade" thread, I'll just repost it here (minus the SH recommendations).

I've gotten into comics within the last year and a half. I've read barely any mainstream superhero stuff. And if it's all like John's Green Lantern, they can all fuck off. That was terrible. List is unranked by the way, aside from number 1...

The Walking Dead

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Maybe my favorite comic ever. A brutal, depressing, stark, grim, hopeful, funny, beautiful, fucking rough tale of a (ever changing) group of survivors after zombies take over. The true focus is on the large cast of characters, and not the zombies. Hell, for a large part of the story, the zombies aren't really a threat anymore. It's really about the total and absolute breakdown of society. And the reasons to keep going.

Awesome black and white art perfectly sets the tone, which is depressing, as it should be. Gets my number one.

Life is hard out here, and The Walking Dead captures it perfectly.




Berserk

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The manga to look out for. Kentaro Miura's dark fantasy epic is a true (very) long term work of art. 20 years of content, and nowhere near done, Berserk is a truly fucked up book. This book can do it all (under it's overall hopeless, fucked up, depressing, shocking atmosphere), and does it well. It can be funny, do friendship and romance well (well....), and presents interesting notions on God/Devil/Man/Fate.

But it's absolutely heartwrenching. "The Eclipse" was one of the most devastating things I've ever read/seen. I mean...gosh. Absolutely terrible stuff. And then....and then....and then! I could go on all day with "and then's". This aint no joke. Bad things keep happening to Guts (one of the greatest fictional characters of all time, by the way). Blood, guts, murdered children, raped women, raped children, love triangles gone horribly horribly wrong, etc are seen constantly in this book. Consistently even.

The story centers on Guts (far from a hero), a one-armed, one-eyes swordsman seeking to destroy the demons of hell. Born from a corpse on a battlefield, Guts should never have survived, a boy doomed to fight against fate. Thats as barebones as I can go without spoiling one of the greatest stories in all of comics.

There's one huge negative to this series though. It will never, ever, ever be finished. Miura take a month long break anytime he gets a toothache, new videogame, or goes to the Bahamas. It's been going on for 20 years, and it feels (maybe) half way. Barely. Miura will die before he finishes it. It's also veerrrrrrrrrrrrrryyyyyy slow paced in parts, so it's best read in volumes instead of bi-weekly.

Last note, it's positively gorgeous. The art is always, no matter what (well, aside from everything pre-Golden Age arc, which is like the first two volumes) breathtaking. Scary too.

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Stunning.


One Piece

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Wait! Don't get put off by the (very) kooky (unique) art. This comic is a total blast. Funny, epic, weird, dramatic, sad...everything. Very planned out, evolving, changing.

Now, without a doubt, the focus of this comic is the bond of friendship between the main characters, The Strawhat Pirates, lead by Monkey D. Luffy. One of the best casts ever. The Strawhats are so damn awesome it hurts. The relationships herein are truly powerful, and touching. One Piece can drag a tear out of me all the time. It can get pretty emotional. The Strawhats just plain rock.

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Friendship is the name of the day, in One Piece. Incredibly kickass fight scenes too.


Y-The Last Man

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A lot has been said about this book. Don't know how much I can add...

I didn't really dig the ending. Don't want to spoil it for others, but I just felt it didn't really match the tone of the story, such a change was jarring and unsatisfying.

Love this book.


Fables

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A truly original piece of work. Takes place in a world where all of the fables we know (Big Bad Wolf, Snow White, Prince Charming, Pinnochio, etc) are pushed out of their homelands by The Adversary and are forced to take shelter in ours. Blatantly inspired by Israel (and later on obviously pro-Israel), this comic is a total blast.

First, the cast of characters are top notch. Bigby Wolf is one of the baddest dudes ever, a reformed terror. Snow is a tender, tough scorned woman (after her divorce from Charming). Prince Charming is a sly, devilish pimp. Thats just a taste of the wealth of awesome characters here.

In the tradition of Sandman, the art style changes every so often (with a main one being the most prominent), but it's all good. The series is also notable for it's gorgeous cover work, both TPB's and especially single issue covers.


Scott Pilgrim

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YEAHHHHHH!

So. much. fucking. fun.

Scott fucking Pilgrim baby. This is my (very close) number 2 (well, I think lol). It's such a great mix of romance, comedy, action, slice-of-life, videogames, music, movies...it's got everything for everyone. Really great, funny, art. Very manga inspired.

Scott is in love with Romona. To keep her, he has to beat her 7 Evil Ex Boyfriends. Simple as that. Last volume comes out Summer 2010.




Bone

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Endlessly funny and charming, suitably dramatic and epic at moments, but always, always loads of fun. Jeff Smith brings a real world to life. Inspired by Tolkien high fantasy (which I usually dislike), Smith taints that world with the wonderful Bone Cousins, of which Fone Bone is the lead. The story, through his eyes, is engaging, funny, and above all, heartfelt. Fone is just so... earnest and endearing that you can't help but love him.

I was, however, disappointed with the ending. Deflating, is the word.

[Ex Machina I don't even consider a Superhero book]


Ex Machina

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Am I the first to mention this?

This is another work by BKV (of Y fame), but quite a bit different.

Machina tells the story of Mitchell Hundred, superhero-turned-Mayor of New York. Part political story, part superhero story, and all love letter to New York City. It's a quirky, constant mix of all three. Just about to end, and afterwards (depending on the ending, of course) should stand with Y as Vaughan's top works.


Honorable Mentions

Preacher-Barely in the decade.
Vagabond- Gorgeous and awesome. But, that whole (very long) arc with that blind guy sucked ass. And recently it's been very rambling and philosophical, which has killed the pacing, not to mention it's deathly boring.
Scalped-Too young to call, I think.
Jack Of Fables- Not anywhere near as good as anything else on this list, but still in the Fables universe, and gets good whenever one of the regular Fables characters make a guest spot (which has been rare :/ .
 
gdt5016 said:
God, the Invisibles is fucking AWFUL.

Morrison must've been snorting crack off a needle full of heroin when he was writing that.

This is even more wrong than your last thread about Invincible.
 
-Transmetropolitan.
-Ex Machina.
-Priest.

These have sparked my interest. Kudos for these great suggestions guys.
 
Didn't care for The Invisibles at all (first volume), but then I haven't cared for much of Morrison's work outside of All-Star Superman. Much like Final Crisis, it's complete narrative failure probably justified by substructures only LiveFromKyoto has the patience to discern.
 
gdt5016 said:
In which I praised Invincible.....?

In which you suggested it was the only good superhero book, even though it's largely a pastiche of dozens of other superhero books.

Marvel/DC fans seems to hate Invincible for the most part. I don't get it.

That's because, having a long history with comics, we know how utterly generic and uninteresting it is.
 
To put it in image form:

Persepolis

Persepolis is an autobiographical account of Marjane Satrapi's childhood growing up through the Iranian Cultural Revolution, before being sent to France to avoid the ever-more restrictive nature of her home country. It was turned into a film in 2008.

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Maus

Maus (also known as Maus: A Survivor's Tale), by Art Spiegelman, is a biography of his father's struggle to survive the Holocaust. A great comic, with a distinct art style that represents different nationalities and races using different species of animals.

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besada said:
In which you suggested it was the only good superhero book, even though it's largely a pastiche of dozens of other superhero books.

Thats part of the reason I dig it. It's, in part, a goof on SH books.

And again, with the title, was facetious.

Sorta :p.


That's because, having a long history with comics, we know how utterly generic and uninteresting it is.

-_-
 
Costanza said:
Marvel/DC fans seems to hate Invincible for the most part. I don't get it.

im a marvel fanboy and i love invincible. im just not happy with the rest of images superhero offerings.
 
gerg said:
To put it in image form:

Persepolis

Persepolis is an autobiographical account of Marjane Satrapi's childhood growing up through the Iranian Cultural Revolution, before being sent to France to avoid the ever-more restrictive nature of her home country. It was turned into a film in 2008.

persepolis.jpg


Maus

Maus (also known as Maus: A Survivor's Tale), by Art Spiegelman, is a biography of his father's struggle to survive the Holocaust. A great comic, with a distinct art style that represents different nationalities and races using different species of animals.

Edit: Gah. I'll try to find a good image of Maus.
Added both of these to the OP, thanks. I found a cover image for Maus btw
 
Parallax said:
im a marvel fanboy and i love invincible. im just not happy with the rest of images superhero offerings.

I'll agree with this. I get annoyed when Image SHs show up. Thankfully, Kirkman keeps that to a minimum.
 
Invincible? Kirkman's a terrible, absolutely atrocious dialogue writer who writes everyone with the same voice. The relationships in particular are unbearable to read and take up far too much screen time. Then there's the meandering plot structure that's endemic of Kirkman's whole "I want to write Invincible and Walking Dead until I die or no one wants to read them anymore" gameplan.

It has its moments, and one thing Kirkman does know how to do is overarching scenario design, but for every issue #7 we get 20 issues of monster of the week, mommy knows best, and My First Girlfriend.
 
I just went through 1-5 of Scott Pilgrim on Wednesday and I loved it (As you can tell from my Av)

Thanks for these suggestions!
 
Costanza said:
Marvel/DC fans seems to hate Invincible for the most part. I don't get it.

We don't. It's a great superhero series for sure. The thing is that it's far from being the only good of it's kind.

As for more recommendation, DMZ is pretty cool too

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DMZ by Bryan Wood and Riccardo Burchielli (ongoing, 7 trades so far)
link to #1
In the near future, America's worst nightmare has come true. With military adventurism overseas bogging down the Army and National Guard, the U.S. government mistakenly neglects the very real threat of anti-establishment militias scattered across the 50 states. Like a sleeping giant, Middle America rises up and violently pushes its way to the shining seas, coming to a standstill at the line in the sand — Manhattan or, as the world now knows it, the DMZ.

Matty Roth, a naïve young man and aspiring photojournalist, lands a dream gig following a veteran war journalist into the heart of the DMZ. Things soon go terribly wrong, and Matty finds himself lost and alone in a world he's only seen on television. There, he is faced with a choice: try to find a way off the island, or make his career with an assignment most journalists would kill for. But can he survive in a war zone long enough to report the truth?

Good stuff.
 
2 more stunners -


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"Fun Home" by Alison Bechdel was the first graphic novel to be named the Best Book of the Year by Time Magazine. When it was published last year it was met with across-the-board critical acclaim, and went onto win an Eisner. The autobiographical book is about Alison, a young girl growing up in Pennsylvania, where her father constantly rearranges, and fixes up their gigantic run down mansion. When her father, a closeted gay man, is killed (or some think he committed suicide), many of the family's secrets come forth, and Alison's acceptance of her own homosexuality surfaces. This book was seven years in the making, and it shows with it's beautiful art and writing. Time Magazine proclaimed it "the unlikeliest literary success of 2006" and "a masterpiece about two people who live in the same house but different worlds, and their mysterious debts to each other." The best autobiographical graphic novel since "Blankets," this book truly does push both the comic and memoir genre to new lengths.

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Laika is a graphic novel by Nick Abadzis that gives a fictionalized account of the life and death of the eponymous dog, the first living creature launched into outer space.

The graphic novel tells the story of Laika from multiple points of view: from that of the ambitious Sergey Korolyov, Chief Engineer responsible for the launching and construction of Sputnik 2; to that of Yelena Dubrovsky, official trainer of the space-bound dogs; to that of Oleg Gazenko, scientist; and finally from the viewpoint of Laika herself, who had lived as a stray on the streets of Moscow.


This is how you appreciate comics in all its forms without shitting on "lesser" forms. ;)
 
Mistouze said:
As for more recommendation, DMZ is pretty cool too

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DMZ by Bryan Wood and Riccardo Burchielli (ongoing, 7 trades so far)
link to #1


Good stuff.
I always see this and was wondering what it was about. Sounds very good.

*adds to OP*
 
So did anybody besides me read Cerebus? I know the series is over and done but it had a huge impact on me. I didn't even start reading it until 1993 when I got a job at a local comic book store and from that point on I couldn't put it down. It was so far removed from anything else I'd read previous to that. To this day its what I use as my gaming name including my Xbox Live handle of CerebusAardvark.

Biggest gripe is when people go...."oh you mean that three-headed dog right?"
 
Unmentioned:


Warren Ellis
-Global Frequency
-Fell
-Desolation Jones
-Ocean
-Aetheric Mechanics, Crecy, and the other Apparat books
-Freakangels
-Doktor Sleepless
-Gravel: Never a Dull Day (the black and white miniseries collection of Strange Kiss et al, not the separate ongoing Gravel series which sucks)

Garth Ennis
-War Stories
-Battlefields
-Punisher MAX
-Hellblazer (Dangerous Habits through Rake at the Gates of Hell)

Alan Moore
-Swamp Thing
-V for Vendetta
-From Hell
-League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

Misc.
-Cerberus (Sim/Gerhard)
 
EviLore said:
Invincible? Kirkman's a terrible, absolutely atrocious dialogue writer who writes everyone with the same voice. The relationships in particular are unbearable to read and take up far too much screen time. Then there's the meandering plot structure that's endemic of Kirkman's whole "I want to write Invincible and Walking Dead until I die or no one wants to read them anymore" gameplan.

It has its moments, and one thing Kirkman does know how to do is overarching scenario design, but for every issue #7 we get 20 issues of monster of the week, mommy knows best, and My First Girlfriend.

Meh, I highly enjoy Mark's relationship stuff. <3 Amber/Eve.

The meandering plot structure, especially in issues 14-24, was more world building using standalone issues. At the time it must've been harder to read, but I enjoy it in hardcover form.

I guess the rest comes down to personal preference.
 
gerg said:
I think the one thing that any comic fan can agree on is that they're so damn expensive! :lol

Yeah.

The Walking Dead compendium is like the greatest thing ever.
 
While not specifically a continuing series, Pride of Baghdad was a great book. The art looks fantastic, and the story is really good. I would highly recommend it.

Rex Mundi is also a great book in the vein of historical fiction.
 
So "non-superhero" means nothing with <type>Wo/Man in the title? Because if Invisibles, Swamp Thing, Hellblazer, and Fables qualify then I'd nominate Powers, Checkmate (when Rucka was writing it), Planet Hulk (it's Conan remade), Bendis/Brubaker Daredevil, Astro City, Sleeper, Brubaker's Captain America, and Annihilation.

And Busiek's Conan. Maybe Wolfman's Tomb of Dracula. Howard the Duck?

Evilore: did you read the first trade or first volume of Invisibles?
 
No one has mentioned Grimjack, so I will. It's all finished (like most of the series listed here) but it's great, and I'd say that even if I hadn't written one of the episodes of Munden's Bar.

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Much of this was already on my reading backlog. Great stuff in there.
From what ive read i can support Transmetropolitan, The walking dead, Maus, 100 bullets and of course Scott Pilgrim.
 
Dead said:
This is the thread equivalent of "I READ GRAPHIC NOVELS, NOT COMIC BOOKS!"

Yes it is :lol
I got a tshirt like this printed and gave it to this snob who runs a certain comic shop in the san francisco area. It was a great snipe at him because he didnt get the joke and everyone who knows me knows exactly why I gave him the shirt.'

I really wish Chew was pushed harder. Image has something amazing on its hands, but they do absolutely nothing with it. The characters are smart, funny and charming and the artwork is beautiful.
 
My favorite one is Promethea by Alon Moore.It does have a 'super-hero' theme but it is so so different.All the philosophical themes and such,every single page's art style is unique and fits with what they are talking about at that moment.It is just mind blowing.Also just like watchmen where you get bits of 'the black freighter' as you go on promethea has The weeping gorilla, a sort of social commentary which is brilliant.Even if you read it 100 times you just wanna flip through the pages another 100 times to adore the visual masterpiece that is promethea.
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Promethea is a comic book series created by Alan Moore, J. H. Williams III and Mick Gray, published by America's Best Comics/WildStorm.

It tells the story of Sophie Bangs, a college student from an alternate futuristic New York City in 1999, who embodies the powerful entity known as Promethea whose task it is to bring the Apocalypse.

Originally published as 32 issues from 1999 to 2005, the series has now been re-published into five graphic novels and one hard-back issue. Moore weaves in elements of magic and mysticism along with superhero mythology and action, spirituality and the afterlife (in particular the Tree of Life) and science-fiction. Promethea is also notable for wide-ranging experimentation with visual styles and art.
 
BigBlue1974 said:
So did anybody besides me read Cerebus? I know the series is over and done but it had a huge impact on me. I didn't even start reading it until 1993 when I got a job at a local comic book store and from that point on I couldn't put it down. It was so far removed from anything else I'd read previous to that. To this day its what I use as my gaming name including my Xbox Live handle of CerebusAardvark.

Biggest gripe is when people go...."oh you mean that three-headed dog right?"

Sim pretty much closed the book on narrative cartooning when he finished Cerebus. No one writing and drawing comics has ever come close to his mastery over the form. Not only was the panel to panel storytelling in the book world class, but he constantly experimented with new methods of storytelling. It's unfortunate that his own bizarre sociopolitical leanings began to infect portions of the storyline near the end, but even in the direst fits of his Feminist Void tangents, he could still pull off just spectacular sequences in the book. He also happens to be the best integrated on-page letterer since Will Eisner. (All of these things are why Glamourpuss is such a disappointment. Dave Sim?!? Computer Lettering?!?! GTFO.)

Oh, and it's almost like this Punisher #13 review I wrote was explicitly for Costanza and this thread.

:lol

The requests for Flex and Umbrella Academy are precisely why this sort of stratification is so ludicrous. Jason Aaron's Ghost Rider is a less legitimate American Ghost story than Preacher because it features a "Superhero"? Fraction's "Iron Man" isn't as legitimate a global intrigue comic as Queen and Country because Tony Stark is an Avenger?

Such a ridiculous sentiment. There are less than 400,000 people in the entire United States who regularly read and support the comics industry every month. To claim that an entire genre is illegitimate because there are aspects of it that cater to the lowest common denominator is the grossest kind of logical fallacy. Is Raymond Chandler a shitty prose writer because he wrote about detectives? Of course not.

There are plenty of threads that recommend Graphic Novels, and there's always conversations about non-superhero books, because every week, more and more awesome ones are released (see: Scalped #35). It doesn't surprise me, though, that Costanza felt the need to further run down a genre that not only is capable of just as literary heights as any Maus or Persepolis but also without which none of the books listed in the OP would have ever existed.

(Also, The Other Side should be in the OP.)
 
May I recommend Blankets by Craig Thompson.


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Its an autobiographical account of Thompson's upbringing (his parents were Christian) in the Midwest. He goes to a bible camp one summer and meets this young woman he falls in love with. Really bittersweet and drawn incredibly by Thompson. Great stuff.

By the way my avatar is a drawing of me by Thompson, I met him during a book signing a few years ago. Really nice guy.
 
Weird, and disappointing, that this thread has gone for nearly 100 posts already and there has been no mention of Jimmy Corrigan or Ghost World...
 
7Th said:
Weird, and disappointing, that this thread has gone for nearly 100 posts already and there has been no mention of Jimmy Corrigan or Ghost World...
I just got that so can't post any impressions yet.Heard great things about it.
 
EviLore said:
Didn't care for The Invisibles at all (first volume), but then I haven't cared for much of Morrison's work outside of All-Star Superman. Much like Final Crisis, it's complete narrative failure probably justified by substructures only LiveFromKyoto has the patience to discern.

You know it. But there are pretty extensive annotations for it on the web. Even if most of the references are things you've never heard of, it's the kind of work that can lead you to a lot of interesting new ideas. For my money I think Doom Patrol is his meisterwerk though. That's where Flex Mentallo originated.

A couple more recommendations:

Safe Area Gorazde

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If I were ever to recommend one graphic novel as a Must Read™ to anyone, this might be it. Safe Area Gorazde is one of the most amazing and affecting uses of the graphic novel medium you'll ever come across. Joe Sacco is a journalist who, instead of writing news articles, writes graphic novels. He was in Gorazde during the Bosnian war, a defenceless enclave completely surrounded on all sides by genocidal Serbs for four years.

I found it even more moving than Maus; the experiences of the people in this town were beyond comprehension, but Sacco absolutely makes you feel like you've been there, and he mixes in plenty of humanity, joy and epic scope with the examination of the darkest things humanity is capable of. The introduction is also possibly the least douchey thing Christopher Hitchens has ever written; he was a journalist in Sarajevo at the time, and he basically corroborates that Sacco absolutely nailed the experience of being there.


Asterios Polyp

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David Mazzuchelli is probably best known as Frank Miller's collaborator on Batman Year One and Daredevil: Born Again, but after those he went off and became a college professor and a cartoonist for the New Yorker. Asterios Polyp is regarded as his masterpiece, a kind of touching story about a dickhead architecture professor that doubles as a meditation on artistic form and the nature of dualism. This is about as high art as graphic novels get.


The Nightly News

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A Fight Club-esque story about an anarchist cult devoted to killing news anchors. Jonathan Hickman is one of the most interesting creators to come along in the past few years. His style is heavily postmodern, using mixed media and Wikipedia-age aesthetics teling stories about the nature of how authority structures use binary paradigms to define our reality.


Pax Romana

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Also by Hickman, it deals with similar subtexts as The Nightly News. The Catholic Church has secretly been funding scientific research, and discovers time travel. They use it to send a group of soldiers led by a Catholic cardinal back to the time of Constantine, to ensure the lasting supremacy of the Roman empire and prevent the rise of Islam. It doesn't quite get all the way to where it's going, but the style and concept are worth the price of admission alone.


Fun Home

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This was Time's book of the year, and it's pretty heavy stuff. It's an autobiography of a woman which begins with the death and possible suicide of her father, which leads into reminiscing and coming to terms with her upbringing in an emotionally cold home. It's a reminiscence which gains an explosive weight when she discovers her father was in the closet and was a high school English teacher who was probably carrying on affairs with young boys. It's an excellent use of the medium; she visually captures the emotion of her relationship with her father using physical posture and expressions, as well as intertextual juxtaposition in a way that you just couldn't pull off with the written word alone. It's really about trying to rationalize and come to terms with something that's impossible to.


Jimmy Corrigan The Smartest Kid on Earth

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What if Charlie Brown grew up and his life was even more horrible and depressing? That's kind of what Jimmy Corrigan is. Canonized as one of the best graphic novels ever, Chris Ware's story holds nothing back emotionally and is formally one of the most interesting things I've ever read. But I won't lie - I found it absolutely soul-crushing. Like, my head wasn't right for a week after I read it. It's captures the small sadnesses of everyday life and the differences between who were are in our heads and who were are in reality a little too well. Tarantino or Bendis dialogue, often hailed as naturalistic, seems like a big phony show after this.
 
I should get back to reading the Walking Dead. I've been in the middle of the second book for over a year now and can't motivate myself to keep going.
 
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