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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Jason Little, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

4+ oeuvres 248 utilisateurs 11 critiques

Critiques

11 sur 11
 
Signalé
freixas | 8 autres critiques | Mar 31, 2023 |
This book was part of my birthday present from my darling sister, Jessa. It is a graphic novel about an eighteen-year-old girl who gets sucked into a murder mystery when she pays just a little too much attention to the photos she is developing at her job at the one-hour photo. Along the way she recruits a curious cab driver and a sweet but fairly clueless art gallery worker to help her in her quest to uncover the truth. Though at times the protaganist is annoyingly naive, the art style is engaging and the final plot twist is brilliant.
1 voter
Signalé
greeniezona | 8 autres critiques | Dec 6, 2017 |
Murder mystery graphic novel set in the days of film development and pager codes. The story line is graphic (so mature in subject matter) but lacking in sophistication.

The main character, Bee works in a one hour photo booth developing film. She uncovers pictures of a murder and begins to investigate. Unfortunately she is drawn in and her life is threatened by the murderer. She is saved by her wits, her use of pager codes, and her cab-driver friend who sends the Calvary to her rescue.

Entertaining read, but not fabulous.
 
Signalé
Jamichuk | 8 autres critiques | May 22, 2017 |
Motel Art Improvement Service is about as charmingly goofy a graphic novel as anyone could ask for, by turns cutely raunchy and archly clever as it tells the story of Bee, an 18-year-old whose cross-country bike journey has been cut unexpectedly short, and Cyrus, a renegade artist who travels the country in his own weird way.

The title comes from Cyrus's habit of stealing motel art from wherever he happens to be working as housekeeper that week and embellishing it as only an art school hipster can; a showgirl advertising Atlantic City is suddenly a little old lady in pasties, a sickeningly bucolic farm scene suddenly depicts a shunned hitchhiker as well. He also has a habit of helping himself to 10% of whatever pharmaceuticals he finds in the guests' belongings as he cleans the room -- and it is this habit, rather than the art thing, that drives the plot, which is tight and tense and funny as hell.

This is not a book for the young'uns or the puritanical, mind you. Bee and Cyrus take a lot of drugs and have a lot of adorably explicit cartoon sex as they make their way through this offbeat little story. The art is bright and colorful and the character designs are very appealing; Bee is no standard-issue pneumatic comic book bombshell but seems like a real girl with a bigger butt (when getting uniforms she says she needs a size 10 shirt and size 4 top), and Cyrus is just a tall, rangy, lanky dude, but, like real people should and do, they just work with what they have and are trying to find ways to be happy. And as an aid in that endless quest, Motel Art Improvement Service is rather a good one.
 
Signalé
KateSherrod | 1 autre critique | Aug 1, 2016 |
Love this graphic novel. The heroine is nerdy, fashion-challenged and pear-shaped and yet she's athletic, and finds love (or at least sex) and adventure! The art is fun, and the story line is original and funny. There is no adolescent angst at all.
 
Signalé
mulliner | 1 autre critique | Oct 23, 2011 |
Bleh. Nothing special here. A story that would be fairly weak as a short story is told in graphic novel form and it really isn't any better.
 
Signalé
JohnMunsch | 8 autres critiques | Apr 10, 2009 |
Smart and inquisitive Bee observes the strangers who come into the photo shop, through her lens and the pictures they bring in. But when a strange man brings in grisly murder pictures, does Bee do the right thing in trying to gather evidence against him?

Dark despite its usually bright pictures, and graphic in the violence-and-nudity sense of the word, this would be better for older teens and adults. Thoroughly engrossing, with careful timing.
 
Signalé
heidialice | 8 autres critiques | Aug 15, 2006 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/573847.html

Nice little graphic novel about a girl who discovers disturbing things while working in a photography shop developing films. New York and the characters of the city are nicely portrayed. The plot, however, was rather cliched and improbable: at one point our heroine, Bee, is asked by her friend "So, uh, when are you going to call the cops?" The answer is, not just yet as we are only on page 25 out of 150... Still, good fun, if not exactly great literature.
 
Signalé
nwhyte | 8 autres critiques | Jan 30, 2006 |
A fun little detective story, colorfully illustrated and populated with interesting characters. Would like to find some other work by this creator.
 
Signalé
selfnoise | 8 autres critiques | Oct 6, 2005 |
11 sur 11