recommend me some essential graphic novels to acquire

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (549 of them)

Yes, Lucifer is worth reading, Abbott. It is Big, and it's about Lucifer creating a new world free of G_d's influence and hijinks that ensue. It is not nearly as highfalutin' and serious as it might sound but it is still Vertigo.

Deric W. Haircare, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 02:36 (seventeen years ago)

Love some hijinks!

Abbott, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 02:38 (seventeen years ago)

I can't believe I've been here longer than 10 months

CaptainLorax, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 03:21 (seventeen years ago)

Just so you all know, I don't tell people in other forums about ilx. The people that lurk in other forums I visit occasionally (mmorpg.com), would make ILX turn into ape shit. Who would want ILX to become 4chan for instance? I mean theres a huge difference between a forum being ape shit as opposed to unicorn shit or whatever the hell ILX is.

CaptainLorax, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 03:25 (seventeen years ago)

four months pass...

Wow, I just read The Arrival by Shaun Tan, and I would wholeheartedly recommend it to everyone. The artwork is absolutely beautiful, and though there is no words it would easily translate into a really great movie. As the title suggests, it is about a man who leaves his wife and daughter to find work in a new country. It's obviously influenced by Ellis Island in the late 19th/early 20th century, but with flying ships, balloon postal service, and so on. Alternate universe new country. Very dreamlike. The book excels in recreating that sense of fright, wonder and confusion one encounters upon entering a new culture, with no friends, not knowing the language. Where will he sleep, where will he work? What the HELL is that food? It is awesome.

Also, this would be one of those books that you could read as a child and enjoy, and then 20 years later reread it and enjoy it on another level.

"80s Baby" (Z S), Friday, 2 January 2009 01:28 (seventeen years ago)

This is from a section where he is trying to figure out how to use the public transportation system. The little creatures are the pets that everyone seems to have.

http://i44.tinypic.com/28in7h2.jpg

"80s Baby" (Z S), Friday, 2 January 2009 01:30 (seventeen years ago)

The city

http://i174.photobucket.com/albums/w120/jeffreyquah/thearrivalsplash.jpg

(I'll stop. I'm just excited about being able to recommend something that hasn't been mentioned already here.)

"80s Baby" (Z S), Friday, 2 January 2009 01:34 (seventeen years ago)

nice picture - reminds me of charcoal drawings that the kids are forced to do at art schools... but with a red color (and probably more talent than most art school kids).

I have most recently acquired: The Frank Book and From Hell. The Frank Book is probably going to end up as a centerpiece for a coffee table one day when I buy a house (no guest actually wants to read a whole book on a coffeetable so I might as well put one with great art and barely any text).

I'm Looking into Ordinary Victories by Manu Larcenet because the art style seems like something I would draw and it's just a majestic type of cartoony art. (I mentioned recently this book recently in I Love Comics - even though I don't read any comics. Just cartoons and graphic novels.) Unfortunately, Ordinary Victories, is probably too skimpy to call a novel. (but there is 4 in the series right now and 2 are translated to English)
http://madinkbeard.com/images/Larcenet1.gif

❤ⓛⓞⓥⓔ❤ (CaptainLorax), Friday, 2 January 2009 01:47 (seventeen years ago)

z_S, i bought the arrival for my bf last year after the cover caught my eye at a bookstore - it really is beautiful.

just1n3, Friday, 2 January 2009 02:18 (seventeen years ago)

i'll have to get that

HOOSytime steenman (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Friday, 2 January 2009 04:02 (seventeen years ago)

I love the arrival too. been meaning to pick up his new one 'tales from outer suburbia'

sonderborg, Friday, 2 January 2009 05:15 (seventeen years ago)

five months pass...

My gf just referred this question to me, since I've been reading a decent amount of graphic novels the past year or so, but now I'm passing this on to you all to see if you have any advice:

I'm a magazine editor who needs to solicit an article on graphic
novels-only I'm not overly familiar with the genre and don't have a ton
of time for research. The magazine I work for covers issues related to
war and peace, poverty, and social justice, so I'd like the writer to
focus on new graphic novels (out within the last couple years) that
address these issues. Anyone out there who follows the genre and can
point me in a few directions - or know of good writing on it?

"out within the last couple years" is the difficult part for me, since I've spent the last year mainly trying to get familiar with touchstones that have been out for a long time. So while Maus would be great, it's also a few decades old.

Persepolis seems like a decent recommendation, although it's a few years old now. Anyone else have any ideas?

ya'll are the ones who don't know things (Z S), Thursday, 4 June 2009 16:39 (seventeen years ago)

By the way I ignored all the advice on this thread and recently read Blankets. The description on Amazon made it sound like the story of the agony of growing up in a tiny town in the middle of nowhere with a super-evangelical family. A small part of the story was about that. But he doesn't really rebel against any of that much until the final 1/10 of the story. Up to that point he's like "I can't think about girls or I'll make God angry at me, wahhh". The dialogue is also consistently unrealistic and overblown: "When we were young, my brother and I shared the same bed...and we would often witness sparks of light dancing about the sheets." No wonder Raina dumped you, dude.

Beautifully drawn, I'll give it that. But it's telling that the most enjoyable page in the entire book is the one given over to a recreation of a comic strip that his brother shows him (the one about the guy and the eyebrow fairy, for those that read it). Where is his BROTHER's graphic novel? I'd read that.

ya'll are the ones who don't know things (Z S), Thursday, 4 June 2009 17:01 (seventeen years ago)

bump for advice on the magazine editor's question?

ya'll are the ones who don't know things (Z S), Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:03 (seventeen years ago)

I can't think of anything off the top of my head, as I'm usually a superhero kinda guy, but if you crosspost the question to I Love Comics you might get results. I will let the question marinate though, and if I think of anything will post here.

ian, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:10 (seventeen years ago)

Joe Sacco's Palestine and Safe Area Gorazde might be good recommendations.

fit and working again, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:19 (seventeen years ago)

Can't think of anything from the last couple of years, but Howard Cruse's Stuck Rubber Baby would fit what the editor is looking for, as it is a mixture of a coming-out story of a gay man and a history of the civil rights movement in the American South. It's from the 90s though, so not really recent.

Tuomas, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:24 (seventeen years ago)

Also, Pyongyang by Guy Delisle, Exit Wounds by Rutu Modan.

fit and working again, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:25 (seventeen years ago)

Thank you for the recommendations, and yeah, I'll cross-post this over at ILC.

ya'll are the ones who don't know things (Z S), Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:27 (seventeen years ago)

Oh, and Alan's War by Emmanuel Guibert.

fit and working again, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:28 (seventeen years ago)

I guess Jason Lutes' Berlin is pretty recent, as the second book came out only last year. It's quite good, but it isn't finished yet.

Tuomas, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:29 (seventeen years ago)

Just got the second Hate anthology today, not exactly serious graphic novel stuff, but fun anyway.

Achtung Blobby (Neil S), Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:29 (seventeen years ago)

I second the recommendation on Exit Wounds, and it definitely is about war and peace (as well as family and romance).

Tuomas, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:30 (seventeen years ago)

Agreed on exit wounds. I haven't read those Sacco books but I read one or two earlier ones, he's definitely good.

Nhex, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:35 (seventeen years ago)

I've never read Joe Sacco, but he's probably your man.

dan selzer, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:37 (seventeen years ago)

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel is pretty recent too, and I guess the gay/lesbian content makes it kinda political, though it's mostly a family history. More relevant from a LGBT and social rights point of view is her long-running strip Dykes to Watch Out For, which I think is her true masterpiece. I'd recommend that to anyone, besides lesbian history and political commentary it also has plenty of humour and drama and soap opera, so it's quite fun to read. (Fun Home is good too, but it's kinda text-heavy and narratively complex, so it takes some effort to get inside it.)

Tuomas, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:41 (seventeen years ago)

Sacco's work is excellent. If war reportage is not your thing his But I Like It is a lighter book about touring with a rock band.

fit and working again, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:41 (seventeen years ago)

I've tried to read Sacco's "journal" comics, but the overtly long text panels always wear me down. They feel more like illustrated reportages than proper comics with good storytelling.

Tuomas, Thursday, 4 June 2009 19:44 (seventeen years ago)

nine years pass...

Any graphic novels that you'd recommend for an 11 year old and a 14 year old?

The latter has "V is for Vendetta". The former actually draws in a way that reminds me of Mr Scruff (amazed he hasn't written a book) or Kid Koala (probably too bleak ... also too rare/expensive).

Ta.

djh, Wednesday, 5 December 2018 19:05 (seven years ago)

Trying to keep to limited runs/single edition trades.

Both younguns:
Noelle Stevenson - Nimona
If they're OK with having a girl protag (lord knows I wouldn't have been at that age), really funny, lovely art, nice story about friendship.

Jeff Smith - Bone
Great adventure story, tails off towards the end but the beginning is magical. And yes, there are single-volume editions available lol.

14YO:
BKV - Runaways
Bright and TUNS of FUNS, there are like 4 volumes (collected into 2 omnibuses)? BUT SO GOOD.

Frank Miller - Batman: Year One
Grim / gritty done right. Exceptionally tight writing.

Alan Moore - Top 10
Also bright and fun, though it does touch on L&O:SVU like subjects, but hell, if they're reading V...

Dan Slott + Ty Templeton - Spider-Man/Human Torch
Bright and funny. Slott's She Hulk is also good, but that spans several volumes.

More if I can remember.

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Wednesday, 5 December 2018 22:43 (seven years ago)

10yo
Grant Morrison - All Star Superman
I’m not a big reader of Supes but this is a beautiful and loving distillation of the character.

14yo
Grant Morrison - We3
My favorite Morrison, about cyborg animals, I don’t remember how violent is is though.

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Wednesday, 5 December 2018 23:51 (seven years ago)

it is super violent!

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 5 December 2018 23:56 (seven years ago)

All-Star Superman is p much perfect though

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 5 December 2018 23:56 (seven years ago)

Yes, plus you get the acronym which anyone that age will love.

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Thursday, 6 December 2018 00:03 (seven years ago)

Kate Beaton for both

Grant Morisson's Doom Patrol for the 14-year-old

Sfar/Trondheim's "Dungeon Zenith" for both

20th Century Boys for the 14-year-old

Liana Finck's instagram for either

Scalped for the 14 year old (it's like a teenager's idea of an adult book - there are bewbs)

Paper Girls for either

Sic to thread for indies

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 6 December 2018 00:57 (seven years ago)

Also big yes on Top 10 (you might like it too, it's the best)

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 6 December 2018 00:57 (seven years ago)

Oh, and depending on their interest in Marvel lore, the Kieron Gillen 2 x Journey Into Mystery books are very good

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 6 December 2018 00:59 (seven years ago)

Apologies for preemptively gendering the whippersnappers.

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Thursday, 6 December 2018 01:41 (seven years ago)

anything kind of recent I should pay attention to? I just went and bought the first two HC collections of Y: The Last Man. I've likd Saga but maybe not as much as some other people. Obviously Monstress is completely amazing.

akm, Thursday, 6 December 2018 02:00 (seven years ago)

Axe Cop for children of every age.

For a superlative chug, only the eggiest nog will do! (Old Lunch), Thursday, 6 December 2018 02:09 (seven years ago)

Jeff Smith - Bone
Great adventure story, tails off towards the end but the beginning is magical. And yes, there are single-volume editions available lol.

AFAIK these days it's single-volume for B&W, digest-sized multi-volumes for colour. it looks good in colour imo, and they're less likely to suffer fatigue* when it gets kinda boring later on
*both of attention and arms, from holding a huge heavy book

Dan Slott + Ty Templeton - Spider-Man/Human Torch
Bright and funny. Slott's She Hulk is also good, but that spans several volumes.

unfortunately the new version of Spidey/Torch has some other bullshit padding it out as well. also She-Hulk is kinda only for nerds, there's loads of continuity stuff that I had trouble dealing with. and the amount of "I'm a lawyer lady who fucks!" might be not suitable for the 11yo if the 14yo is laughing at it and the former gets curious

djh - this is like saying "can you recommend some songs for an 11yo and a 14yo" - what sort of TV or movies or prose books do they like already? (also though: have they read Asterix and Tintin already? get the 11yo loaded up on those from the library asap, especially if your library has older copies of Tintin without eyestrainingly ugly computer lettering)

sans lep (sic), Thursday, 6 December 2018 02:25 (seven years ago)

Trying to remember...there are volumes of Dungeon where the protagonists don't, for example, contract venereal disease from a dalliance with a prostitute, yes? Because I would highly recommend those non-racy volumes to kids if they exist.

For a superlative chug, only the eggiest nog will do! (Old Lunch), Thursday, 6 December 2018 02:50 (seven years ago)

I didn't follow any of the continuity of She-Hulk, but point taken.

Would also add:

Hellboy - Wake the Devil
Occulty apocalyptic weirdness.

akm - I love Lazarus -- deals with the global breakdown of nation-states as polities, which are replaced with corporate families ruling their regions as fiefdoms, WITH SCIENCE.

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Thursday, 6 December 2018 03:07 (seven years ago)

Also Monstress baffles me, I don't know what's going on (other than Maika being insufferably mean to Kippa).

From Damage Inc. to Metallica Inc. (Leee), Thursday, 6 December 2018 03:08 (seven years ago)

lumberjanes, especially if they are girls

adam the (abanana), Thursday, 6 December 2018 03:18 (seven years ago)

Yeah my 11yo loves those

Οὖτις, Thursday, 6 December 2018 03:24 (seven years ago)

Axe cop is also great

Οὖτις, Thursday, 6 December 2018 03:24 (seven years ago)

The Dungeon Zeniths are the non-racy, continuity-lite, non-venereal disease containing ones IIRC. Although, er, try before you buy..

Of course it's the often the books with the flashes of Verboten Adult Things that are the most interesting. We had a copy of L'Incal in the French section of my junior school library. The first pages were well-perused.

(NB not recommending L'Incal - although I did enjoy Bllueberry as a kid.)

The Lucky Luke translations are pretty good too. The Spirou ones are awful, sadly.

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 6 December 2018 07:07 (seven years ago)

Thinking back to what I was reading at 14 and, hey, why not Sandman? You could do a lot worse, and it's even arguably educational (made me a whole helluva lot more interested in like Shakespeare and mythology than stupid school ever did). I might argue that it's practically tailor-made for fourteen-year-olds.

For a superlative chug, only the eggiest nog will do! (Old Lunch), Thursday, 6 December 2018 13:01 (seven years ago)

All-Star Superman is p much perfect though

yes, otm, 100% - the best superman story ever told, and suitable for all ages

We're in 2009—it's time to take risks, (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 6 December 2018 13:12 (seven years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.