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35 oeuvres 852 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Séries

Œuvres de Monte Beauchamp

Krampus: The Devil of Christmas (2010) 57 exemplaires
BLAB! Vol. 11 (Blab!, 11) (2000) 47 exemplaires
Blab: Number 9 (Blab) (2003) 36 exemplaires
Blab Vol. 10 (Fantagraphics) (1999) 36 exemplaires
BLAB! Vol. 13 (2002) 34 exemplaires
BLAB! Vol. 14 (2004) 33 exemplaires
Blab! : Blab No. 7 (1992) 29 exemplaires
Blab! #16 (2005) 29 exemplaires
BLAB! Vol. 15 (2004) 25 exemplaires
Blab 6 (Blab!) (1991) 25 exemplaires
Blab #8 (Blab!) (1995) 24 exemplaires
Blab! Vol. 17 (2006) 22 exemplaires
Blab! Volume 12 (2001) 22 exemplaires
Blab! Vol. 18 (2007) 21 exemplaires
Blab! (Volume 1) (1993) 21 exemplaires
Popular Skullture (2014) 20 exemplaires
Blab 4 (Blab No 4) (1989) 20 exemplaires
Blab! No. 3 (1988) 18 exemplaires
Blab (Blab No 5) (1990) 16 exemplaires
Blab World Number 1 (2010) 16 exemplaires
Blab World No. 2 (2012) 10 exemplaires
Blab! Volume 1 (Blab!, 1) (2023) 8 exemplaires
BLAB! #2 6 exemplaires
Blab! Vol. 2 (1987) 2 exemplaires
Blab! No. 4, Summer 1989 (1989) 1 exemplaire
Krampus Playing Cards Set Two (2017) 1 exemplaire
Total Trash 1 exemplaire

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I haven't actually read any Crumb comics, but I did see a documentary many years ago and he sounded like a pretty interesting character. This was pretty good, a little repetitious at times, but it gave a pretty good picture of how everything went down back then. It also gave more insight into what Crumb was all about.
 
Signalé
ragwaine | Jan 1, 2019 |
This volume of BLAB! features a cover by Jonathan Rosen, and: the BLAB! debut of popular artist Shag!; a full-color tribute to Bazooka Joe; Sue Coe and Judith Brody's "… And Not a Drop To Drink," an exploration of the destruction of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast by angry gods of wind and water against a backdrop of war; Greg Clarke's "The Pungent Gaul," a surprisingly harrowing story of a frenchman who smuggles illegal cheeses from his homeland into the United States and sells them on the black market; Michael Dougan's four-page color story about homeland security, paranoia, technology, international intrigue, and anxiety; "Nine Lives," Peter Kuper's story of the various ways he's almost died; more "Fetal Elvis" from Mark Landman; "Max Vesta, Matchbook Artist," the true story of the art and life of the unsung and little known (except to a few collectors and connoisseurs) master of the matchbook cover; Lou Brooks invites us into his "Garden of Tongue-listing Twimericks"—your mouth will never be the same; Peter and Maria Hoey's "Out of Nowhere," the story of Coleman Hawkins and Django Reinghart's years in pre-WWII Paris; plus stories by Tim Biskup, Gary Baseman, Fred Stonehouse, Marc Rosenthal,Spain, Mats!, and Sergio Ruzzier.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
addict | Dec 8, 2006 |
Ok, first off, we ooh and ahhh at the fabulous Mark Ryden cover. OOOOOOOOOHHHHH. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHH.

Ok, now on to content. I like Blab, much as I like most comics journals, like McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, because I like finding artists and storytellers that I didn't already know, or didn't know I knew, or who just make really interesting and different artwork. And like all of these, there are some works in Blab that are derivative of a number of other artists. But there are always some that really surprise and tantalize. Issue 11 is really good, even aside from the cover. I've heard Blab described as a printed form of Liquid Television, and that's pretty apt.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
caerulius | Jul 31, 2006 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
35
Membres
852
Popularité
#30,032
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
3
ISBN
33

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