comics of the 2000s
Feb. 27th, 2010 12:59 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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But, anyway, I do actually manage to buy some comics now and then, and here's my favorites of what I read of the work produced between 2000 and now. Plenty of stuff I missed, so don't get offended if I left off a swell work of genius.
SCHIZO #4 - You'd think Ivan Brunetti was merely another manic-depressive autobio shock-brush-jock - and he is - but the oversize SCHIZO demonstrates his cartooning chops AND the quiet, contemplative interior that lurks within his horrifying outer candy shell. Great strips about Francoise Hardy, Piet Mondrian, Val Lewton, Louise Brooks, and the simple horror of being alive. Plus girls.
SAFE AREA GORAZDE - Joe Sacco kicked the decade off with this comics-journalism epic about the Bosnian war. The world took a year or so to consider it and immediately went on to start some more wars. I think his artwork's a little stiff here but you can't help but be impressed at the skill, the effort, and the significance of this work.
THE BIG SKINNY - Carol Lay's been doing one-page strips for Salon for years, enlivened with longer serials ("Joy Ride"), but this book - a combination self-help, autobio, nonfiction package - is something new and unique. Yes, it's a weight-loss book, but it's a lot more comprehensive and a lot less stupid than any other diet book you'll ever see. Entertaining to read even if you're super healthy and a potential lifesaver if you aren't.
(edited to add) EIGHTBALL #22 - ICE HAVEN - Clowes combines "Rope" and "Our Town" as a kidnap mystery plays out in a small town as seen through the eyes and the different cartooning styles of various characters. Tight, engrossing, surprisingly moving.
RUSTY BROWN - Chris Ware scores with the exploits of Rusty Brown and Chalky White, two midwestern lumps whose lives are dominated by obsessions with junk culture. One rises above, one sinks below. Ware's formalist style leaves many cold, but RUSTY is shorter, funnier, and either less ambitious or more accomplished than his JIMMY CORRIGAN work.
BIZARRO COMICS - DC commissioned dozens of indy-alt cartoonists to do their take on Superman, Batman, etc, and the result is a cheerful mashup of fun comics starring everybody's favorite characters acting less like angsty super champions and more like normal people. This book puts paid to the lie that indy cartoonists hate super-heroes, but people keep repeating it anyway.
MASTERPIECE COMICS - R. Sikoryak has been cranking out these old-school comics/classic literature pastiches for years for various publications but this is the first time they've all been collected in one place. His mastery of every single cartooning technique known to man is on full display here - Bazooka Joe comics, EC comics, golden age DC, Little Lulu, there's nothing this man can't appropriate and make his own in the service of adapting "Wuthering Heights" or Dante.
ANGRY YOUTH COMICS - Johnny Ryan burst onto the comics scene like a giant scabby scene-bursting monster, freaking out the squares and shocking little old ladies everywhere. I cannot stress how offendingly funny his work is, and his deceptively simple linework hides some real draftsmanship.
PLANET OF BEER - "Smell Of Steve, Inc" finally released this incredible book collecting his/its weekly alt strip. Absolutely a must-have for deadpan hilarious adventures involving Black Aquaman, Fonzie, the titular search for the Planet Of Beer, Pope Fonzie, President Carter and Kenny, and much much more. No "Ziggy With A Hat", though.
TALES DESIGNED TO THRIZZLE - Mike Kupperman has been dropping weird little bombs of oddly stiff cartooning into various publications for years, and his solo book is, like his "Snake & Bacon" collection, a mind-melting aggregate of awkward laughs. Unrelated concepts smash into each other as if illustrated by the Eisner-Iger shop after a night of hallucinogens, all wrapped into a neat little package.
Honorable mention: reprints of older works and books about comics:
KIRBY by Mark Evanier
BAT-MANGA by Jiro Kuwata with Chip Kidd
ART OUT OF TIME by Dan Nadel
I WILL DESTROY ALL THE CIVILIZED PLANETS by Fletcher Hanks / Paul Karasik
RICHIE RICH / THE HARVEY GIRLS by various / Dark Horse
No manga on the list, that's a different list, I think. Who knows.

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Date: 2010-02-27 07:26 pm (UTC)I wish Dark Horse would do a better job on those Gold Key reprint volumes. I finally got the M.A.R.S. Patrol TPB and man, muddy, and pages out of order, and missing the cool 'fact file' stuff from the inside covers. I heard the Magnus, Robot Fighter volumes had similar issues.
And it's almost that 'planning to fail' thing. I bet people want these books but hold off pre-ordering because of the quality control issues, which means fewer orders, which means the PTB at Dark Horse figure nobody wants them so they cut back resources involved with the production and on and on it spirals...
Grrrrrrr.
Dammit.
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Date: 2010-02-28 04:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-28 08:55 pm (UTC)DFS.
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Date: 2010-03-02 02:45 am (UTC)Incidentally, I don't know if you'd want to listen, but Slave Labor Graphics has a podcast they run about weekly (hosted by Dan Vado), and Evan Dorkin has taken to calling in every week and abusing Dan in that distinct Brooklyn fashion you would expect him to. Nothing profound, but a nice little look into Evan's self-depreciating workday. A search on iTunes for slave labor graphics should pull it up.
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Date: 2010-03-12 05:54 am (UTC)I will say, the comic is 10 times better than the pilot, but both are in the awesome category.
-ZeonicFreak
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Date: 2010-03-12 03:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-12 05:12 pm (UTC)I picked up issues 10 and 11 a month ago or so at my local comic book shop (which is a good 45 minute drive) and in issue 10, they pretty much call in to like a QVC channel and harass the mess out of some guy because he doesnt know what hes talking about regarding comic book merchandise, which leads him to go insane :)!!!
Ill have to go online and get a whole set of those off some site, thanks for letting me know. Well, i do have all the comics downloaded so reading them off my PSP is an idea. And no, im not one of those people who will never spend a dime to support someone, if i find something that i downloaded i will spend the money to pick up a hard copy of whatever it is.