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The Many Deaths of Scott Koblish (2018)

par Scott Koblish

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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3513698,664 (3.53)3
"Marvel Comics artist Scott Koblish (Deadpool, Spider-Man) has been illustrating his own demise for many years in morbidly funny, 4-panel black-and-white comics. He's the one person struck by a comet, suddenly overrun by a pack of baboons, resting under the precarious rock tipped by a single bird, or the target of his daughter's (of course homicidal) teddy bear come to life. Though it's always Scott on the receiving end, the comics perfectly capture that irrational feeling we all have that everything can go very wrong in one irrevocable, albeit hilarious instant. Slapstick, surreal, and eerily plausible, with extended scenarios and pops of color throughout, this collection of cosmic reckonings shows that if the end is nigh, at least it'll probably be funny"--… (plus d'informations)
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‘The Many Deaths Of Scott Koblish’ is a small hardback coffee table book by comic artist Scott Koblish (Spider-Man, Deadpool) in which he contemplates ways he might meet the Grim Reaper. There are fantasy and SF elements to several of these extinctions which, along with his status as a super-hero artist, qualify it for inclusion on this website.

Largely in black and white but with odd splashes of colour, these are mostly one page, four-panel cartoons in which Scott Koblish meets his doom. Some stretch to three pages so I assume he did them for his own amusement in idle moments and eventually had enough to make a book. These are all ‘silent’ strips with no dialogue or captions at all and the material is suitable for children. That’s gotta be a potentially big market and the lack of dialogue makes it good for international distribution.

So, what’s in it? The first page shows Scott leaning against a rock atop which a huge boulder is precariously balanced. A bird lands on one end of the boulder and it falls on our hero. No gore, he’s just obscured from view underneath it.

On page two, he falls off a mountain while skiing. On page three, he’s sat on the ledge of an open window when a cat jumps in his lap and he falls out. Then he’s killed by an earthquake, strangled by his own malevolent hair, wafted into space by helium balloons (a 2 pager) and so on and so on. These bare descriptions don’t convey the humour of the pictorial representation.

Many are far out with Scott being eaten by trees, kidnapped by aliens and starving to death at a comic convention waiting for someone to buy his sketches. Sea monsters also feature quite a lot. My favourite has Scott walking along looking at his phone, run over by a driver who’s looking at her phone and photographed by all the bystanders using their phones.

What else can I say? The hardcover version is a tidy little book printed on quality paper. It’s quite amusing and won’t take up much of your time. The kids will like it. It’s ideal for putting on the coffee table for guests to pick up and peruse while you’re making tea. It’s an odd thing to publish but certainly no worse than the celebrity joke books and memoirs that come out at Christmas time.

In fact, the Christmas season would have been the right time to release it as it makes a decent little stocking filler for almost anyone, even if they can’t read. It’s nice.

Eamonn Murphy ( )
  bigfootmurf | May 13, 2020 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Veteran comic book artist Scott Koblish likes to doodle about all the ways he might die, so he compiled a few dozen of them into one wordless collection. They range from the realistic - texting while crossing the street and getting hit by a bus driven by another texter - to the bizarre - falling off a boat and getting grabbed by mermaids who stuff him in "Davy Jones' Locker" where he drowns.

I really enjoyed the art style, which is very minimal greyscale except for a few pops of color. Many of the deaths are very imaginative and fantastical, but I also enjoyed the inclusion of the more mundane ones as a reminder that we could actually die in a million different ways every day. My favorite deaths were the ones involving a recurring orange cat, for obvious reasons.

My only gripe is that this collection is very short. The art is minimalistic and there are no words of any kind (maybe a few labels), and the collection is fewer comics than a Sunday newspaper. Taking my time, I read the whole thing in less than 10 minutes. Unless you're a collector or really into Koblish, I'd recommend reading it from the library. ( )
  norabelle414 | Jan 2, 2019 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Not for the chronically anxious.

(Full disclosure: I received a free book for review through Library Thing's Early Reviewers program.)

-- 2.5 stars --

The Many Deaths of Scott Koblish is exactly what it sounds like: the author's weird and varied imaginings of how he might meet his end. The scenarios range from the mundane-yet-tragic (being buried in an avalanche; dying in a festive house fire) to the more bizarre and outlandish (being kidnapped by aliens only to die in a fiery wreck when the US government shoots your flying saucer down; being murdered in the night by your daughter's adorable stuffed teddy bear). My personal favorites are those that involve nonhuman animals getting revenge (such as the kangaroo boxer who stomps his human opponent to death. down with animal fighting!). There are no fewer than five instances of cats sending an unsuspecting Scott Koblish plummeting out a window to his death.

It's a cute enough idea, if not terribly memorable. Well, unless you're scared of clowns, alligators, or dying in unclean undies. Then some of these panels just might keep you awake at night. No death by sheer embarrassment, though, so I'm safe! :)

http://www.easyvegan.info/2018/12/04/the-many-deaths-of-scott-koblish-by-scott-k... ( )
  smiteme | Sep 19, 2018 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
The Many Deaths of Scott Koblish by Scott Koblish is exactly what the title says--a collection of comics depicting the author's untimely death. As someone who tends to think of all the worst case scenarios in a given situation, I appreciated the dark humor of these comics and the panels are drawn well, so you can clearly understand what's happening. The last comic does a good job of tying everything together, which is a nice extra. Totally recommend for anyone who likes black comedy and/or grew up reading Mad magazine. ( )
  jugglingpaynes | Sep 10, 2018 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I received "The Many Deaths of Scott Koblish" as an advance reader's copy, but even if I had paid full price for this fun hardcover book, it would have been well worth the price of admission.

I was not familiar with Scott Koblish before reading "Many Deaths", in spite of the fact he is an illustrator for Marvel Comics, and has been for several years. Currently Koblish is working on the popular Deadpool comic book. In "The Many Deaths of Scott Koblish", Koblish presents a collection of four panel comic strips concerning his death in some of the most bizarre manners. Whether hit by a meteor, murdered by an adorable Teddy Bear, or electrocuted via a fork in a toaster (with the help of death himself), Koblish has managed to make the topic of his death, one of the funniest comic collections of the year.

There's not much to say about this book. It's short, well illustrated and a lot of laughs to read. I recommend this to anyone who enjoys comics, reading, humor...pretty much anyone!! ( )
  bukwurm2 | Sep 6, 2018 |
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"Marvel Comics artist Scott Koblish (Deadpool, Spider-Man) has been illustrating his own demise for many years in morbidly funny, 4-panel black-and-white comics. He's the one person struck by a comet, suddenly overrun by a pack of baboons, resting under the precarious rock tipped by a single bird, or the target of his daughter's (of course homicidal) teddy bear come to life. Though it's always Scott on the receiving end, the comics perfectly capture that irrational feeling we all have that everything can go very wrong in one irrevocable, albeit hilarious instant. Slapstick, surreal, and eerily plausible, with extended scenarios and pops of color throughout, this collection of cosmic reckonings shows that if the end is nigh, at least it'll probably be funny"--

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