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The other side of super-heroes
Review of Astro City - Life in the Big City - Kurt Busiek by DavidBedford

Advantages: A fascinatingly different take on the super-hero genre
Disadvantages: None to speak of

Kurt Buseik’s Astro City has been running (on and off) for the last few years, through a variety of publishers. It is a superhero title, but is far from being of the standard bill of fare. The focus of the series is not on hero/villain conflict, but on the effects these can have on the many people involved, costumed or otherwise. Writer Kurt Buseik is keen to point out in his introduction to this volume, which collects the first six issues of Astro ...
...Read on… SETTING Astro City doesn’t have a central set of characters as such, and each chapter in the story is told from the perspective of a different person, super or otherwise. The city itself is an important part of the story, having a fleshed-out history and a well-developed structure with distinct neighbourhoods, which begin to be introduced in these issues. This is one of the most believable of pretend cities, as it was worked out fully ... Read review

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22.08.2001
A quirky, endearing - and "amazing" - read
Review of Amazing Rain - Sam Brown by amsterdamage

Advantages: Unique story-telling; brilliant artwork; allegorical themes
Disadvantages: Minimalist and not to everyone's taste

"In the future we will send all the fat people to the moon and they will be as light as a feather" - the protagonist, Amazing Rain Sam Brown's unassuming talent has captivated me ever since I was first introduced to his work on homepage explodingdog.com. The reason for our introduction was slightly cringe-worthy - I had seen his delightful stick figures used in various emo avatars and icons - but I was pleasantly surprised to find that his art ...
...works like so: visitors email him a phrase, any phrase at all, and he draws his interpretation of these on a computer using a tablet. The results are sometimes bizarre, but always entertaining. A phrase may be anything from "i like hotdogs" to "these daisies are overcooked" and the resultant doodles tend to feature adorable stick figures sometimes accompanied by small birds, stars, monsters or angular dogs and robots. Amazing Rain is Mr Brown's ... Read review

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07.12.2007
BEANO IS SUPREMO
Review of Dennis & Gnasher Cartoon Capers - Beano Books by Wendelle

Advantages: Keeps my 8 year old son amused/is cheaper than other comics/magazines
Disadvantages: None

...inside page with, of course, Dennis the Menace and Gnasher, who else?!. Other cartoon stories include oldies such as Ball Boy, The Numskulls, Little Plum, The Bash Street Kids, Minnie The Minx, Rodger the Dodger, Billy Whizz, with a few new ones amongst them such as Ivy The Terrible and Tim Traveller. My son loves The Beano so much that in almost 2 years he has collected roughly 100 copies. Where does he keep them? Having tried to get him to part ...
...beloved Beanos being recycled, we found out that you can actually purchase Beano Binders to hold your comics in. I purchased a couple on the Internet by going into www.beanotown.com but have to admit that, although the binders are great at keeping all his comics together and in one place, they are quite pricey (about £5-£6 if I remember rightly). Joining the Beano Club is also well worth it - £15 for kids, £17 for adults. This gives you a whole year's ... Read review

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10.02.2003
For Halloween, Oyster Boy decided to go as a human
Review of The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy - Tim Burton by BlueMidget

Advantages: Interesting ideas, funny, beautiful illustrations
Disadvantages: Not to everyone's taste, not suitable for young children

...Tim Burton is renowned throughout the world. If his name doesn’t mean much to you, you’re probably still familiar with some of his work – movies such as ‘Beetlejuice’, ‘Batman’, ‘Edward Scissorhands’, ‘Nightmare Before Christmas’, ‘Mars Attacks!’ and the recent remake of ‘Charlie And The Chocolate Factory’, to name but a few. Best known as a director and writer for his unique, yet dark and brooding style of storytelling, Burton’s ‘The Melancholy ...
...mind). As well as the poetry, the book also has illustrations, which use Burton’s distinct style, as seen in ‘Nightmare…’ and ‘The Corpse Bride’. After a spate of buying Burton’s movies online, this book was suggested to me by Amazon; I’m not an obsessive fan of Burton’s movies, but I did enjoy them enough to be curious about this book and given it’s relatively cheap price, coupled with the fact that I hadn’t read much poetry since finishing my ... Read review

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02.05.2007
(30.04.2007)
An unassuming relater of imagined tales
Review of Kai Lung Unrolls His Mat - Ernest Bramah by torr

Advantages: Gravity-dispelling
Disadvantages: Concentration-demanding

...rivers, broken paths and thunder-stones, Kai Lung came on the seventh day at evening to the outskirt of a trackless morass that barred his further progress.” * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * It took me some time to select an opening quotation with which to introduce this piece, one that would convey the flavour of Kai Lung quickly and succinctly to the reader. I’m not sure I’ve succeeded. As Ernest Bramah, the author, has Kai Lung ...
...of the humour of the Kai Lung books lies in the elliptical stylistic flourishes. The difficulty is rather that the shorter snappier aphorisms often depend for their full effect on the context that the author has cunningly contrived before deploying them. If, for example, I were to quote “He who would feast with vampires must expect to provide the meat,” you might find it no more than mildly amusing. The full force is only felt when you have read ... Read review

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20.10.2003
(21.10.2003)


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