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Loading... The Graphic Canon of Crime & Mystery, Vol. 1: From Sherlock Holmes to A Clockwork Orange to Jo Nesbøby Russ Kick (Editor)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is a pretty wide-ranging graphic sampler of crime and mystery fiction, spanning almost the entire history of literary creation. Everything from ancient Greek tragedy to the Bible to Agatha Christie and Edgar Allan Poe are represented, in a variety of graphic styles. Each piece has a nice introduction, to both the original work and the graphic (and sometimes textual) adaptation. There are a whole bunch of these volumes, and I'll probably continue to delve in, but in some ways they are like short story collections, with some pieces only a couple of pages long, some longer, and others really like annotated paintings, with only the barest interpretation of the original work. It's an interesting approach, though I do tend to favour long-form literature, so I'm not sure how much I got out of it. I did share a couple of snips with others though. ( ) Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss. I've liked the previous Graphic Canon's before this one. All of them have expanded my liking for literature. Not just authors and books I've heard of before, but even one's that are new to me. With this edition, there were a few, more than before, I was unfamiliar with. In some ways I liked that and others I didn't think it read well. Of course most of these are just samples of literature turned into comics, but sometimes with mystery and crime stories that's not such a great idea. Than again, this book makes me want to read the actual stories to full get "what the heck was going on!" I'm hoping the next volume is better. They are only doing two of these that I know of which is good because they are missing some BIG names in crime fiction like Hammett and Chandler. This book had too much of what most people wouldn't include in crime and mystery it makes me wonder will be in the next volume. Maybe that one I'll be more familiar with the works or authors at least. This is a tough one to review. Overall, I think it's a really cool collection, with a nice diversity of samples of crime and mystery literature. Unfortunately, a great many of the stories were not my cup of tea. However, the art, and the variety of styles, is a treat! I think this almost feels like a textbook of sorts, more designed to expose the reader to a great many ideas and styles than to entertain the reader. Don't get me wrong, at times both things are accomplished, but for me not frequently enough to give it a higher review. no reviews | add a review
"From James M. Cain to Stephen King, from Sophocles to the Marquis de Sade to Iceberg Slim, here are stunning and sometimes macabre visualizations of some of the greatest crime and mystery stories of all time. Rick Geary brings his crisp style to Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment; C. Frakes resurrects the forgotten novella "Talma Gordon," the first mystery written by an African American. Crime finds new life in these graphic renditions of The Arabian Nights, the Bible, James Joyce's Dubliners, Patricia Highsmith, and leading mystery writers of today like Jo Nesbø"-- No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.5The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, ComicsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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