EAN:9780930289225 Label:Vertigo Author:Alan Moore Binding:Paperback | Ok, I bought this GN based on all the great reviews Don't Understand All the Hype...... The art work is not that great and the story telling is ok2009-02-26 Rating 2. It was bland and somewhat boring. I hate to knock anyone's work, so please realize this is just one reader's opinion. I do read a lot of graphic novels, especially those considered to be written for adults and this one just did not impress me at all. My biggest regret is that I bought the entire Swamp Thing run by Alan Moore and none of them have been that great. I had high hopes based on the reviews but have been very disappointed. . So many people talk about the writing so I think is useless for me to do it (awesome) Splendid artwork Bissette & Totleben. I have picked up a couple of books of the early 90's, none of them come as nearly as close as this one is well portrait, (I bought Knightfall, Zero Hour, and the return of Superman) one thing is to draw good in little panels, another is having a perspective to tell a story like Bissette and Totleben2008-10-16 Rating 5. Not many reviewers mention them. Just pick up the sandman and you can tell the difference after Sam Kieth left, the story is great but the artwork is mediocre for a book like that, that's why I'm still buying the next books of S. T. The work of this 2 great artists is beyond splendid, forget about technology, there a few pencillers like Bissette today and no Inker like Totleben. If you don't know what an inker does, take a look at Green Lantern, Van Sciver does his own inking (for the most part), Ivan Reis is one hell of a good penciller but he lack a hell of a good inker. Pick S. T. 1 &2, just the art work is a masterpiece well deserved to be taken a look at, now needless to say the depth of the stories. . With Swamp Thing, Alan Moore, one of the most talented authors in comic book history, rewrote the rules Amazing Horror. I picked this up 20 years ago and am still amazed2008-06-30 Rating 5. Steve Bissette and John Totleben are probably my favorite art team in the history of comics. This is close to their start, so it's a little rough around the edges, but still way above and beyond the vast majority of most illustrators out there. Steve drew the amazing layouts, destroying storyboard conventions, and John tightened the loose sketches up into works of art. This was hugely influential when it came out, and still a highlight of work in graphic storytelling to this day. Many people copied, but few could rival, Alan Moore's dark and serious style. Alan Moore took this as an opportunity to try something completely different with the Swamp Thing character, and pretty much succeeded Graphic SF Reader. While I am not as much a fan of this as some people, it is still pretty good2007-09-03 Rating 4. Many would say that the comic industry was redefined by works such as Watchmen and The Dark Knight returns, but for me (and there are countless people who would agree with me on this one) it all started with the first issue of Swamp Thing included in this collection Where the comics revolution REALLY began. "The Anatomy Lesson" heralded a new narrative structure and a literary voice that still rings in the ears of most comic book fantatics to this day: Alan Moore2007-06-18 Rating 5. After clearing up some unfinished storylines before starting his revamp of the character Moore started to cut loose, and Saga of the Swamp Thing moved from an obscure horror comic book into legend. Not only is "The Anatomy Lesson" brilliant, but there are other stories in here that would rank as some of my favorites of all time. Though some people might claim that Moore was still trying out panel transitions and experimental narrative structures that did not always work, I disagree. They worked perfectly, and make reading the comic so much more enjoyable. If the narrative seems long-winded to some, well then, they can just go ahead and feast their eyes on the gorgeous art (courtesy of John Totleben and Steve Bissette). I also have to mention the very last issue in this collection as a counterpoint to the first, entitled "By Demons Driven. " This story gives us a taste of things to come in future collections, and just when events just can't seem to get any darker the last panel of this issue proves us wrong. Even if you're not a comic fan, you should get this. See where it all really began. Buy it. Read it. Let the words penetrate the root systems of your mind. Smell the moss. Taste the fear. . hold it in your hands. Saga of the Swamp Thing. . |
Swamp Thing Vol. 1: Saga of the Swamp Thing
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