Photo de l'auteur

Ken Steacy

Auteur de Doom Patrol, Vol.5: Magic Bus

18+ oeuvres 443 utilisateurs 4 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Ken Steacy

Crédit image: Ken Steacy. Photo by "5of7" (flickr).

Séries

Œuvres de Ken Steacy

Doom Patrol, Vol.5: Magic Bus (2007) — Illustrateur — 192 exemplaires
Night and the Enemy (1987) — Illustrateur — 95 exemplaires
Dinosaurs (Screamin 3-D) (1997) 17 exemplaires
Tempus Fugitive (1997) 4 exemplaires
Tempus Fugitive #3 (DC Comics) (1990) 3 exemplaires
Tempus Fugitive #2 (DC Comics) (1990) 3 exemplaires
Doom Patrol Vol. 2 #53 (1996) — Illustrateur — 2 exemplaires
Tempus Fugitive Section 1 (1990) 2 exemplaires
Tempus Fugitive (1990) # 2 (1991) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Doom Patrol, Vol.6: Planet Love (2008) — Illustrateur — 152 exemplaires
Spirit Jam (1998) — Contributeur — 51 exemplaires
Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago..., Volume 5 (2012) — Illustrateur — 34 exemplaires
Star Wars Omnibus: Wild Space, Volume 1 (2013) — Illustrateur — 33 exemplaires
A Bunch of Jews (and other stuff): A Minyen Yidn (2017) — Illustrateur — 19 exemplaires
Star Wars Omnibus: Wild Space, Volume 2 (2013) — Illustrateur — 17 exemplaires
Let's Visit the Toy Store (2001) — Illustrateur — 14 exemplaires
Let's Visit the Sweet Shop (2001) — Illustrateur — 14 exemplaires
Epic Illustrated #26 [October 1984] (1984) — Illustrateur — 13 exemplaires
Let's Visit the Pet Store (1989) — Illustrateur, quelques éditions12 exemplaires
Epic Illustrated #06 [June 1981] (1981) — Contributeur — 12 exemplaires
Epic Illustrated #11 [April 1982] (1982) — Contributeur — 10 exemplaires
Epic Illustrated #04 [Winter 1980] (1980) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires
Epic Illustrated #25 [August 1984] (1984) — Illustrateur — 8 exemplaires
Let's Visit Play Land (2001) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
Grendel #15 (1987) — Artiste de la couverture — 2 exemplaires
The Transformers 47: Dinobot Hunt! (part 1) (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
The Transformers 45: The Icarus Theory (part one) (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Savage Tales, Vol. 2 #5 (1986) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire
Cereal:geek, issue one, first quarter 2007 — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
Feathered Friends (Animal Friends) (2005) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1955-01-08
Nationalité
Canada

Membres

Critiques

Published by Comico in 1987, Night and the Enemy is a graphic anthology consisting of five military SF tales written by Harlan Ellison and illustrated by Ken Steacy. Each story takes place during the two hundred-year-long interstellar war between Earth and golden-skinned aliens known as the Kyben.

“Run for the Stars” – Petty criminal and drug addict Benno Tallant is abducted by Earth resistance forces and implanted with a bomb to destroy the Kyben, but Tallant finds a way to gain the upper hand against both the Kyben forces and ultimately, Earth.

“Life Hutch” – After crash landing on a small planet during a space battle, a pilot named Terrance locates a life hutch—one of many small survival facilities constructed on planets across the galaxy in the event of an emergency. However, the robot programmed to maintain the life hutch malfunctions and attacks Terrance, leaving him severely wounded. Terrance soon realizes that he must remain immobile lest he trigger the robot again… but for how long?

“The Untouchable Adolescents” – Captain Luther Shreve offers assistance to the juvenile inhabitants of the planet Diamore, which will soon suffer a devastating natural catastrophe unless machines can be deployed to direct the shockwave to the planet’s oceans. However, the telepathic inhabitants do not trust the humans after their world was already plundered by the Kyben months before. They warn the humans to leave, yet Shreve insists on helping them—resulting in the deaths of six crewmembers. Finally, Shreve relents, but what price will the Diamore pay for their decision?

“Trojan Hearse” – The Kyba construct a metal ring called the Orifice through which vessels can travel at the speed of light to another ring elsewhere across the galaxy. In this case, to a ring hidden on Earth. Shortly after a human spy escapes Kyba with schematics to the Orifice, the Kyben decide to invade, confident that Earth could not have developed a defense in such a short time…

“Sleeping Dogs” – On Epsilon Indy IV, ambassador Lynn Ferraro attempts to stop warmongering Commander Drabix from destroying a series of what he believes are Kyben strongholds scattered across the planet. However, it is soon discovered that their weapons are incapable of penetrating these featureless black cubes. Finally, Drabix orders his ship in orbit to open fire on one of them— which he soon regrets.

All told, Night and the Enemy is a quick and engrossing read by one of the masters of the short story and beautifully illustrated by Steacy.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
pgiunta | 2 autres critiques | Nov 22, 2018 |
I received this from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

I was very disappointed with this one. Harlan Ellison is one of my favorite authors, so I was excited to see something new. This wasn't what I was expecting, that's for sure.

The story was hard to follow, and the book felt more like an illustrated novel rather than a graphic novel. I know that sounds confusing, but this wasn't what I would classify as a "comic book" in the strictest sense.

The artwork suffered, too, and felt amateurish to me.

Not recommended.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ssimon2000 | 2 autres critiques | May 31, 2016 |
Based on an Ellison story from 1957 and its sequels telling the story of the Earth-Kyba war with a frame story set millions of years after the war ended. There’s a coward who, left behind by his fellow humans to slow the advance of the Kyba, discovers courage in an ironic and terrible way. There’s a human fighter confronted by a robot gone insane, and so on. This is closer to an illustrated story than to a conventional graphic novel—there’s a lot of text and no lettering, just dialogue inserted into the frame with type. The images differ as between the stories, but are mostly bold rather than detailed. Despite the 2015 production, the stories remain of their time (e.g., the telepathic, humanoid race encountered in one story wears loincloths/necklaces with “teeth” on them, straight out of standard racial stereotypes, and its leader tells the protagonists how another group “burned our jungle and took our women and killed our warriors,” although I guess that’s supposed to be ok because one of the humans to whom they’re saying this is black).… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
rivkat | 2 autres critiques | Nov 19, 2015 |
Only half the book is about the Brotherhood of Dada, the rest is... well, unless the authors decided to make it a Dada experiment in itself but heck, this is a collection of issues not a thought of previously graphic novel...
 
Signalé
rreis | Jan 26, 2009 |

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
18
Aussi par
24
Membres
443
Popularité
#55,291
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
4
ISBN
13
Favoris
1

Tableaux et graphiques