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Rusty Brown

Couverture
26 Avis
Fantagraphics Books, 26 déc. 2005 - 64 pages
After four years of almost exclusively repackaging his sophomoric early work for the book trade, the children's entertainer and award-winning calligrapher F. C. Ware returns to his groundbreaking 1990s cartoon series "The ACME Novelty Library," a nearly decade-long publishing experiment which more or less single-handedly demonstrated the redemptive power a fancy paper stock or a little gold foil might exert over an otherwise dull, dry visual narrative. This semi-annual periodical originally serialized his surprisingly undismissed "Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth," and now, with the 16th issue, Ware rejoins the proud, vital esthetic forum of the American comic book with his ongoing serial "Rusty Brown," a love story concerning the ambitions and mistakes of seven consciousnesses at a private school in Omaha, Nebraska, all revolving around a universally reviled child-and absolutely certain to be a favorite with readers of all tastes and biases. As told through the eyes of someone absentmindedly watching a television sitcom circa 1975, this first installment begins one January morning of that same year and describes everything of importance right up to and including the ring of the first period bell before eventually spiraling off into 1955, 2004, and toward the planet Mars, amongst other interesting and exotic time periods and locales. Riveting, fast-paced, and irresponsible, "Rusty Brown" distills the confusing and indulgent storytelling technique that led Mr. Ware's work to be referred to as "nearly impossible to read" by the Los Angeles Times Book Review. (In addition, Mr. Ware promises parallel serialization of his other work-in-progress, "Building Stories," which is actually a much better and more interesting project.) Though originally released by alternative comics vanguard Fantagraphics Books, this new sixteenth issue is the first to be entirely produced, printed and published by Mr. Ware alone; limited to a single press run, once it is sold out, pulped, and/or burned, neither of these narratives will be available again until "Rusty Brown" and "Building Stories" are eventually edited, collected and remaindered as hardcover books. Thus, be the first in your mercantile district to own this first chapter of what years from now is sure to be a tart, possibly insincere reminder of the fragile economy and mental disposition of the early 21st century. 64 pages, full color, 9" x 7"

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Review: The Acme Novelty Library #16 (The Acme Novelty Library #16)

Avis d'utilisateur  - Shannon - Goodreads

Another stellar work by Chris Ware. Consulter l'avis complet

Review: The Acme Novelty Library #16 (The Acme Novelty Library #16)

Avis d'utilisateur  - Joe Decie - Goodreads

I love this story and I wish I still owned it. There's little point in me reviewing it as it's long out of print, so if you don't own it, you probably won't. Much as I love Mr Ware's books I can only take them in small doses, I find it tough going. Consulter l'avis complet

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Table des matières

Section 1
Section 2
Section 3

Références issues de pages Web

du9 - L'autre Bande Dessinée - Chronique: The ACME Novelty Library ...
The ACME Novelty Library. Bonjour je suis a la recherche des plans des montages en papier ; Chris Ware avait creer cet objet "Professional Futuristic 3-D ...
du9.org/ ACME-Novelty-Library-The

The Acme Novelty Library | The av Club
A collection of Chris Ware miscellany finds the Jimmy Corrigan creator working at the height of his powers
www.avclub.com/ content/ node/ 41563

Chris Ware - The ACME Novelty Library Number 18 | The List
INDEPENDENT (Chris Ware) It doesn’t get much more independent than self-publishing, and that’s what Chris Ware is now doing with his occasional title that ...
www.list.co.uk/ article/ 6643-chris-ware-the-acme-novelty-library-number-18/

colorcubic // colorblog » Blog Archive » Chris Ware: The Acme ...
A book that I refer back to often for design inspiration (specifically for typography and layout) is Ware’s “The Acme Novelty Library“. ...
colorcubic.com/ blog/ 2008/ 03/ 19/ chris-ware-the-acme-novelty-library/

The ACME Novelty Library #16 by Chris Ware | librarything
All about The ACME Novelty Library #16 by Chris Ware. librarything is a cataloging and social networking site for booklovers.
www.librarything.com/ work/ 325614

English Studies Forum
On the heels of this success comes the publication of The Acme Novelty Library, a 'best of' sampling of Ware's shorter comics work. ...
www.bsu.edu/ web/ esf/ 3.1/ deman.htm

Pantheon Graphic Novels
... professional colorist and award-winning letterer fc Ware returns to the book trade with "The ACME Novelty Library," a hardcover distillation of all his ...
www.randomhouse.com/ pantheon/ graphicnovels/ acmenovelty.html

The ACME Novelty Library 18 de Chris Ware - Fluctuat.net
The ACME Novelty Library 18 de Chris Ware : résumé, extraits, chronique.
livres.fluctuat.net/ chris-ware/ livres/ the-acme-novelty-library-18/

'kül 2006: BOOK - The Wisdom of Crowds and the Wisdom of Comics ...
On the other hand, Chris Ware’s omnibus of assorted cartoons and depressingly solipsistic ruminations, “The ACME Novelty Library” is wholly irrelevant. ...
thatsoundscool2.blogspot.com/ 2006/ 02/ book-wisdom-of-crowds-and-wisdom-of.html

Bookslut | The ACME Novelty Library #16 by Chris Ware
While there is the instant gratification of being able to read Jimmy Corrigan in its entirety, each of the slim volumes of The ACME Novelty Library provides ...
www.bookslut.com/ fiction/ 2006_02_007782.php

À propos de l'auteur (2005)

CHRIS WARE is the author of "Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth "and the annual progenitor of the amateur periodical the "ACME Novelty Library," An irregular contributor to "The New Yorker "and "The Virginia Quarterly Review," Ware was the first cartoonist chosen to regularly serialize an ongoing story in "The New York Times Magazine," in 2005-2006. He edited the thirteenth issue of "McSweeney's Quarterly Concern "in 2004 as well as Houghton Mifflin's "Best American Comics "for 2007, and his work was the focus of an exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 2006.Ware lives in Oak Park, Illinois, with his wife, Marnie, a high-school science teacher, and their daughter, Clara.

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