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Post by Lord Lucan on Oct 9, 2015 12:21:54 GMT -5
Apart from what's already in the section, I thought a place to recommend your favourite of these might be worthwhile, especially for people like myself who don't currently read any.
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Post by πͺ silly buns on Oct 9, 2015 12:51:19 GMT -5
I've read some stuff by Alan Moore, Joss Whedon, and Brian K. Vaughan. I liked Y: The last , by Vaughan, which is a post apocalyptic story that ranges 10 volumes. If you want something shorter, Pride of Baghdad was a 1 issue story by Vaughan about four lions that escaped a zoo during the US v Middle East war war in the 90's or so. Based on a true story.
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Hippo
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Post by Hippo on Oct 9, 2015 13:00:05 GMT -5
Apart from what's already in the section, I thought a place to recommend your favourite of these might be worthwhile, especially for people like myself who don't currently read any. Depends, I guess. What have you read? What interests you to read about?
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Post by Lord Lucan on Oct 9, 2015 13:04:59 GMT -5
Apart from what's already in the section, I thought a place to recommend your favourite of these might be worthwhile, especially for people like myself who don't currently read any. Depends, I guess. What have you read? What interests you to read about? I've read none in the near past. As it relates to comics, it could potentially be many things, I'm not sure.
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Post by Lord Lucan on Oct 9, 2015 13:16:35 GMT -5
I've read some stuff by Alan Moore, Joss Whedon, and Brian K. Vaughan. I liked Y: The last , by Vaughan, which is a post apocalyptic story that ranges 10 volumes. If you want something shorter, Pride of Baghdad was a 1 issue story by Vaughan about four lions that escaped a zoo during the US v Middle East war war in the 90's or so. Based on a true story. Lot of pathos in the latter one?
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Ice Cream Planet
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Post by Ice Cream Planet on Oct 9, 2015 13:37:29 GMT -5
Watchmen and V for Vendetta (particularly if you are interested in British politics) are predictable, but splendid. Some other choices:
Asterios Polyp, Blankets, Ghost World, City of Glass, Sex Criminals, Saga, and anything by Lynda Barry (she's hilarious).
Oh, and The Far Side and Calvin and Hobbes, obviously.
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Post by πͺ silly buns on Oct 9, 2015 13:42:06 GMT -5
I've read some stuff by Alan Moore, Joss Whedon, and Brian K. Vaughan. I liked Y: The last , by Vaughan, which is a post apocalyptic story that ranges 10 volumes. If you want something shorter, Pride of Baghdad was a 1 issue story by Vaughan about four lions that escaped a zoo during the US v Middle East war war in the 90's or so. Based on a true story. Lot of pathos in the latter one? The onion chopping fairy may have visited me a few times.
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Hippo
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Post by Hippo on Oct 9, 2015 14:02:40 GMT -5
I liked the most recent run of Hawkeye, very interesting.
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Dellarigg
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Post by Dellarigg on Oct 9, 2015 15:48:27 GMT -5
The only graphic novel I've read is From Hell, which is probably tantamount to saying the only reggae album you've got is Legend by Bob Marley. I enjoyed it a lot, but I haven't felt a great urge to read much else. Maybe the Swamp Thing stuff, if the library has it, which it won't.
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Post by MrsLangdonAlger on Oct 9, 2015 16:59:17 GMT -5
Lumberjanes and Kaptara!
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repulsionist
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Post by repulsionist on Oct 9, 2015 17:00:29 GMT -5
Second the Polyp rec. Second the Barry rec.
Sloppily and hastily delivered recs
Dazzler Graphic Novel Death of Captain Marvel Eisner's Contract with God El Incal
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Post by sarapen on Oct 9, 2015 18:25:44 GMT -5
You might enjoy Persepolis, which is an autobiographical comic about an Iranian woman's life from the eve of the revolution to I think the 90's. I can't remember quite when the end point was, but volume 2 definitely ended before Mohammad Khatami was president, otherwise it would have probably been more optimistic. Oh, and if we extend this to manga you could give Eden a try. I wrote a review of it over on the manga thread, but basically it's a post-cyberpunk story about the world after a pandemic has ravaged it and the New World Order has been erected by the usual suspects. It's the only comic I know of that invites the reader to read Chomsky in the appendix. Essentially a leftist critique of neoliberalism but with cyborgs and Gnosticism.
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Post by rimjobflashmob on Oct 10, 2015 9:27:49 GMT -5
Marbles by Ellen Forney is a fantastic graphic novel memoir about the author's struggle to come to terms with her own mania and depression.
Scott Pilgrim by Bryan Lee O'Malley is a joy from start to finish.
Bottomless Belly Button by Dash Shaw is a lovely and heartbreaking character study of a family that's barely holding themselves together.
King City by Brandon Graham is a surreal, imaginative SF tale about a thief and his lockpicking cat.
And of course, seconding all the classics already mentioned above.
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Post by MrsLangdonAlger on Oct 10, 2015 12:22:45 GMT -5
All of the suggestions here are great so far! I'll also add I Kill Giants, which is touching and just wonderfully done and is being adapted into a movie.
Revival is a great series with several trade paperbacks out so far. It's a zombie/supernatural Southern noir.
Paying For It is an intersting read.
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Post by MrsLangdonAlger on Oct 10, 2015 12:24:25 GMT -5
Also Grant Morrison's WE3, Brian K. Vaughn's Ex Machina, and anything Hellboy.
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Hippo
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Post by Hippo on Oct 10, 2015 12:35:43 GMT -5
Nobody mentioned either Sandman nor Watchmen so yeah, there's your two obvious staples.
I'd also like to mention Chew, going in I thought I'd probably hate it but it grew on me because while it is dark at times, it's also very light in a way and humorous to boot.
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Ice Cream Planet
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Post by Ice Cream Planet on Oct 10, 2015 13:19:19 GMT -5
Nobody mentioned either Sandman nor Watchmen so yeah, there's your two obvious staples. I'd also like to mention Chew, going in I thought I'd probably hate it but it grew on me because while it is dark at times, it's also very light in a way and humorous to boot. *ahem* I mentioned Watchmen, thank you very much.
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Post-Lupin
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Post by Post-Lupin on Oct 10, 2015 15:43:56 GMT -5
Guys, there's a severe lack of Warren Ellis here... He's done a lot of stuff, but here's a few possible entry points: Transmetropolitan - Political journalism satire... think Hunter S Thompson Of The Future with better/worse drugs and a gun that makes people shit themselves. Considered a classic for good reason. Global Frequency - Rescue Fiction: 1001 people worldwide, experts in various fields, called on by a mysterious ex-spy when bad shit happens. 12 issues, good entry to Warren's voice. NEXTWAVE: Agents of HATE - Marvel actually let him take the piss out of their entire back catalogue. Freakangels - post-apocalypse/flooding of London, a group of psychic kids who caused the end of the world try to survive. An easy entry because it's a free webcomic, here. Planetary - Superhero archaeologists, trying to understand why their world is a strange as it is... and to keep it that way. Riffs off of everything from Sherlock Holmes to Godzilla. Injection - One of his current series, full of British folk strangeness.
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Paleu
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Post by Paleu on Oct 16, 2015 15:01:46 GMT -5
There are already a plethora of great options to choose from in this thread, so I'll just add one more book to the already sizeable pile. I've been working my way through Alan Moore's Miracleman run, and it's definitely worth checking out. It makes the Nietzschean subtext of many comic heroes into text, and manages to tell a wonderful story while it's at it. It lies at the intersection of "accessible" and "intellectual" that is my particular media sweet spot.
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Post by Jean-Luc Lemur on Oct 16, 2015 16:19:17 GMT -5
If youβre looking for nonfiction Logicomix, a comic biography of Bertrand Russell pre-WWII and overview of early twentieth century analytic philosophy, is superb.
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Post by Douay-Rheims-Challoner on Oct 16, 2015 19:41:40 GMT -5
Alex Alice's Siegfried. A gorgeous take on Wagner's operatic Ring cycle in comic form (though one that takes liberties with the story, but interesting ones that give the work a kind of mythic intensity of its own.) First two volumes are already translated, third and final volume this December.
There's an animated trailer for the work that's just worth looking at anyway:
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repulsionist
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Post by repulsionist on Jun 13, 2016 11:11:56 GMT -5
For old, Golden Age comics that might turn your nostalgia black: I Shall Destroy All the Civilized Planets! (2009) - Second volume of Collected Works by Fletcher Hanks.
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Post by Superb Owl π¦ on Jun 13, 2016 11:37:30 GMT -5
I know this thread has mostly skewed away from Big 2 superhero books, but on a whim I grabbed the first volume of Nick Spencer's recent Ant-Man run at the library the other day and it's tickled me so much, I had to share. Fun and funny stuff, reads like a pitch for Paul Rudd's Ant-Man 2 in the best way possible.
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Post by Lord Lucan on Jun 14, 2016 18:19:25 GMT -5
Thanks for the recommendations I missed since, uh, October! I'd forgotten I'd started this!
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Post by Judkins Moaner on Jul 25, 2016 13:47:04 GMT -5
Just got done with Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba's Daytripper, a time-skipping chronicle of a Brazilian man and his often frayed connections with family and friends. Moving story told with beautifully understated colors.
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repulsionist
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Post by repulsionist on Jan 20, 2017 13:39:00 GMT -5
Pissy lament and thread torpor roiling. Check out Ranxerox. Whenever it comes out in North America.
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fab
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Post by fab on Aug 24, 2017 9:06:19 GMT -5
just gonna riff some stuff from memory, mostly based off of the graphic novel collection we had at the local library I used to work at. It's gonna skew towards popular, well-known stuff (also b/c my memory sucks): - Preacher: Pulpy, over the top violence and sharp-edged satire. It's now a TV show that I haven't seen.
- Fables: A sort of alternate universe thing where all the famous fairy tale folks live double lives in a small self-contained block in New York City. I vaguely recall some scuttlebutt that the series (or was it just the writer / creator in interviews?) may have crawled up its own ass in later entries, but I haven't stayed current with it. What I did read, I really enjoyed, so whatever. I fell off somewhere in the later collected volumes.
- Whiteout: Self-contained, with a one-off direct sequel, I think? Pretty sure it was a murder mystery set in the Antarctic at a science outpost, but my memory may be fuzzy.
- Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth: Can't remember if that's the subtitle, but I remember it being a hammy subtitle either way. Fantastic art. I'm steering clear of the "big 2" stuff as mentioned (and I'm too lazy to skim to see if these are recommended elsewhere) but yeah... the art is sublime and it's very heavy on the symbolism. If you're curious about an alternate take on Batman that focuses more on his rogues gallery, take a crack at that one.
There are a whole whack of titles that I can't recall, including a few that had me tearing up and really got under my skin. I'm just bad at remembering these things and too lazy to skim through the online catalogue, as I've always been more of a physical browsing type person myself. Shame that I can't recall. I know absolutely nothing about manga and the few series we had were mostly super popular and usually related to anime that had already been dubbed. It still fell outside my wheelhouse.
As already mentioned, Y: The Last Man is really good.
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Post by Ben Grimm on Aug 28, 2017 9:56:41 GMT -5
The Death of Stalin graphic novel - the one that the upcoming Armando Ianucci movie is based on - is currently 99 cents as an ebook on Amazon/Comixology.
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Post by MrsLangdonAlger on Aug 28, 2017 20:44:42 GMT -5
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl!
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Post by W.S.Punk on Aug 28, 2017 21:21:35 GMT -5
The Golden Age by Robinson and Smith.
American Flagg! if you can find it, by Howard Chaykin.
And since he just started the third volume, Matt Wagner's first two collections of Mage.
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