Entries from November 2009
Classics meet comics...or is it the other way around?
There’s a comic quality and grounds for parody in even the most classic literature. In Masterpiece Comics, R. Sikoryak proves himself adept at discovering and exploiting these cartoonish characteristics. But while the laughs in his collection are literate, what he parodies are the comics, everything from Peanuts to Superman.
Masterpiece Comics would be a one-joke…
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Tags: Featured
Facing job loss, foreclosure and his wife's cheating, an aspiring poet seeks redemption in marijuana sales.
November 26th, 2009 · 1 Comment
Samuel Johnson’s Lives of the Poets told of the struggles of some 50 of his contemporary 18th-century English versifiers, John Milton, Alexander Pope and John Dryden among them. Jess Walter’s The Financial Lives of the Poets is the brutally-comic tale of aspiring contemporary poet, laid-off business reporter and family man Matthew Prior.…
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Tags: Book Reviews
Circular design, reoccurring family history and melancholy moods define the latest work of cartoonist Chris Ware.
It’s not too late to appreciate Chris Ware’s cover and story in The New Yorker‘s November 2 “Cartoon Issue.” Young trick-or-treaters stand at doorways, their faces hidden behind white masks, while their parents wait back on the sidewalk, their faces masked in illumination from their personal communication devices. What a great…
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Tags: The Rabbit Rants
A graphic remake of Fahrenheit 451 sets flames against the darkness.
It’s fitting–or maybe ironic– that Fahrenheit 451, favorite of high school librarians everywhere, has been turned into a graphic novel. About half-way through Ray Bradbury’s familiar story of a world where books are put to the torch, Fire Captain Beatty tells the story’s wavering central character, Guy Montag, how books…
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Tags: Comics
The hero of Larry McMurtry's The Last Picture Show returns to sex and Texas. This time, he's followed by a rhinoceros.
When we last saw Duane Moore in Larry McMurtry’s 2007 novel When the Light Goes, he was a sixty-something malcontent who had just found age-old happiness with a much younger woman. When we first saw him back in 1966, in McMurtry’s The Last Picture Show, he was a sexually confused…
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Tags: Book Reviews
Larry McMurtry is no John Updike (as if you didn't know).
Reading Rhino Ranch, the latest installment in Larry McMurtry’s on-going Duane Moore saga that began in 1966 with The Last Picture Show, was a bit of deja-vu all over again. The last three books of the series are of a sort. The town of Thalia is still dying. Sexual frustration continues…
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Tags: Book Reviews · The Rabbit Rants