|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
PG TIPS No. 4: In a regular series of PG Tips articles, Paul Gravett reviews
books of and about comics from his recommended reading list. |
![]() |
Monographie Lacrymale You may have caught the supremely creepy graphics of French visionary
Blanquet ("blon-kay") in Fantagraphics anthologies Blab! and Zero
Zero, but
here you get a sumptuous 128-page adults-only feast of his paintings,
animation, dolls, bedroom installation, drawings on nude models, and of
course his comics, rounded out with an interview, critiques and
bibliography. A "tearful monograph" that truly brings tears to the eyes, and
yes, it's bilingual. |
|
Lolajean Riddle Teasing and moody, influenced by Lynch and Clowes, this 33-page psychodrama
is told in two parts, in two voices, from two perspectives. Let yourself
be
pulled inside the desires and dreams of sultry freelance illustrator
Lolajean, self-mythologiser and pornographer, and of an enigmatic
Hollywood-bound writer she meets in a motel. This debut collaboration
shows
real daring and talent, more please. |
![]() |
Parting Ways by Andrew Foley, Scott Mooney and Nick Craine Speakeasy Comics, $12.99 Join Peter Orbach's zany journey and "near-life experiences" travelling through a new streamlined purgatory, where "hell's become one big karma wash". A witty script and promising art in this 152-page romp. For sample pages check out Mooney's site www.moon-man.com. |
|
Capote In Kansas by Ande Parks & Chris Samnee Oni Press, $11.95 Troubled author Truman Capote established the 'whydunnit" with his controversial true murder novel In Cold Blood. In this intriguing 128-page biographical insight, Parks and Samnee explore how he came to research and write his landmark study of the American nightmare and the price he paid for it. A slice of literary noir. |
![]() |
Smoke by Alex de Campi & Igor Kordey IDW, $7.49 "Good boys grow up to be soldiers." A financially and morally bankrupt government (sound familiar?), a wave of bizarre terrorism, and one soldier boy turned official assassin with added girlfriend problems, all thrown together in a disturbingly plausible near-future London. This comes in three 48-page monthly chunks of barbed satire and steely intelligence. A health warning - Smoke is good for you. |
|
The Alchemist's Easel by Al Davison Active Images, $17.99 Lucid, symbolic, revelatory, dreams can be all these things and much more when translated into comics. This is a 176-page collection of dream-inspired comics at their very best from the author of The Spiral Cage. Visit his site at Astral Gypsy to find out more. Sleep tight. |
|
Foul Play Foul Play, that ghoulish baseball game, with intestines for base lines,
severed arm for a bat and decapitated head for the ball, must be one
of the most notorious EC horror schlockers of them all. Here it's reprinted
straight from the pulpy comic book as one of a lucky 13 classics, plus
one never-before-published EC story, "Wanted for Murder!", drawn by Al
Williamson and intended for the aborted Picto-Fiction magazine Crime
Illustrated #3. Before each tale, Geissman profiles the 14 artists,
sprinkling loads of wonderful rare and unseen art and artefacts. EC newbie
or fan-addict, you need this all-colour 272-page tome. Choke! |
![]() |
Everett Raymond Kinstler "It's about time!", in the words of admirer Sergio
Aragones. At last, a
240-page authorized, copiously-illustrated biography and art book on
this
American illustration legend, from 1942 to 1962, from "uneducated kid" to
bravura comic book and pulp magazine illustrator to portrait painter
of
presidents. This is going to be gorgeous to look at and fascinating to
read
for its first-hand memories. |
PG Tips is a monthly sidebar to Paul Gravett's Novel Graphics column in Comics International providing shorter reviews of the latest recommended books of and about comics.
|
Text © Paul Gravett.
All artwork © the respective copyright holders.
The PG Tips logo is © The
Unilever Group.
Powered by Read Yourself RAW