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Lovern Kindzierski

Auteur de Normandy Gold

16+ oeuvres 129 utilisateurs 6 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Lovern Kindzierski. Photo by "5of7" (flickr).

Séries

Œuvres de Lovern Kindzierski

Normandy Gold (2018) — Illustrateur — 37 exemplaires
The Shame Trilogy (2016) 21 exemplaires
Shame: Conception (2011) 14 exemplaires
Shame: Pursuit (2013) 8 exemplaires
Demon Wind (2005) — Script Writer — 7 exemplaires
Shame: Redemption (2015) 7 exemplaires
Hope (2018) 5 exemplaires
Normandy Gold #1 (2017) — Illustrateur — 4 exemplaires
Underworld (2015) 3 exemplaires
Normandy Gold #3 (2017) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Normandy Gold #2 (2017) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Normandy Gold #4 (2017) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires
Normandy Gold #5 (2017) — Illustrateur — 3 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Sandman, Tome 6 : Fables et réflexions (1993) — Colorist — 5,761 exemplaires
Sandman, tome 11 : Nuits éternelles (2003) — Colorist / Separator — 4,415 exemplaires
Fables, Vol. 04: March of the Wooden Soldiers (2004) — Illustrateur — 2,077 exemplaires
Coraline: The Graphic Novel (2009) — Colorist, quelques éditions1,867 exemplaires
Murder mysteries (2002) — Colorist — 1,048 exemplaires
The Absolute Sandman Volume Three (1991) — Colorist — 929 exemplaires
The Sandman: The Dream Hunters [Comic] (2009) — Colorist — 732 exemplaires
DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore (2006) — Colourist (13), quelques éditions489 exemplaires
Lucifer Vol. 08: The Wolf Beneath the Tree (2005) — Colorist — 423 exemplaires
Absolute Death (1989) — Colorist — 366 exemplaires
Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection, Volume 1 (2015) — Contributeur — 184 exemplaires
Norse Mythology Volume 1 (Graphic Novel) (2020) — Illustrateur — 134 exemplaires
Batman: Sword of Azrael (1992) — Colorist — 125 exemplaires
The Ring of the Nibelung [P. Craig Russell omnibus] (2002) — Colorist — 120 exemplaires
Batman: Holy Terror (1991) — Colorist, quelques éditions115 exemplaires
The Problem of Susan and Other Stories (2018) — Colorist — 107 exemplaires
Conan and the Jewels of Gwahlur (2005) — Colorist — 72 exemplaires
Hellboy: Weird Tales (2014) — Colors (113-120) — 71 exemplaires
Flash & Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold (2001) — Colorist, quelques éditions64 exemplaires
Elseworlds: Batman Vol. 1 (2016) — Colorist, quelques éditions62 exemplaires
Batman/Green Arrow: The Poison Tomorrow (1992) — Colorist — 59 exemplaires
Challengers of the Unknown Must Die! (2004) — Colorist, quelques éditions52 exemplaires
Batman: The Last Angel (1994) — Colorist — 50 exemplaires
Batman: The Blue, the Grey, the Bat (1992) — Cover Colours — 43 exemplaires
Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde, Vol. 5: The Happy Prince (2012) — Colorist — 41 exemplaires
A Death Gallery #1 (1994) — Colorist — 36 exemplaires
Leonard McCoy, Frontier Doctor (2010) — Colorist — 30 exemplaires
Marvel Monsters HC (2006) — Colorist (WMD1), quelques éditions28 exemplaires
Dr. Strange: What Is It That Disturbs You, Stephen? (1997) — Colorist — 25 exemplaires
Crew (2009) — Colorist — 21 exemplaires
Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde: The Complete Hardcover Set, Vols. 1–5 (2014) — Colorist, quelques éditions17 exemplaires
The Sandman: The Dream Hunters #1 (2008) — Coloring — 14 exemplaires
Romulans: Pawns of War (2010) — Colorist — 14 exemplaires
This Damned Band (2016) — Colorist, quelques éditions14 exemplaires
The Conan Reader (2018) — Colorist — 13 exemplaires
Rick Mason: The Agent (1989) — Colorist — 8 exemplaires
A1 Book 1 (Volume Two) (1992) — Colours (13-32) — 5 exemplaires
Norse Mythology I #1 (2020) — Colorist — 4 exemplaires
All-Star Western: Standing on Death's Doorstep (2013) — Artiste de la couverture — 2 exemplaires
Raven: Daughter of Darkness (2018-) #1 (2018) — Illustrateur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

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Membres

Critiques

Great art and dialogue make for an entertaining read in this gripping pastiche of 70s conspiracy thrillers. Normandy makes a kick ass heroine and whilst the plot isn't that original it did keep me gripped.
 
Signalé
whatmeworry | 1 autre critique | Apr 9, 2022 |
‘The Shame Trilogy’ is a fantasy graphic novel written by Lovern Kindzierski and art by John Bolton. Mother Virtue is an ugly old lady but full of goodness and everyone in the village likes her, especially the children, who she loves in return. Sadly, she has never had a child of her own. One night, she selfishly wishes for a child of her own and the words are overheard by Slur, a force of dark, dark evil who looks quite a lot like the alien in ‘Alien’. In a bad immaculate conception, Slur implants a life in Mother Virtue which will become a daughter named Shame and will mean trouble for the world.

Mother Virtue takes action to stop Shame after the child is born. She summons the nymphs and dryads of the forest to guard her, turns her home and the woods around it into a living prison then leaves. Shame is indeed powerful and even as a child can bend reality. She is cruel and gives the nymphs and dryads who were her playmates new distorted forms, including enormous breasts like Hugh Hefner’s playmates! The fact that the normal beautiful ladies have small bosoms and only the distorted ones have large may be a sly feminist comment by the artist on our peculiar plastic age or it may not. In general, there’s a lot of female nudity, continuing the fantasy tradition of soft porn that dates back to thirties ‘Weird Tales’ covers featuring ladies being whipped. Anyway, continuing with the story, ‘Shame’s father sends shadow beings to help her escape the prison and she plans exquisite revenge on her mother.

That’s the plot for the first half of book one and I don’t want to give away any more. There’s a nice twist as book two begins. Suffice to say that it’s still a story about good versus evil and evil seems to be doing well if that’s not a misuse of the word. Healers are burned as witches and Shame’s army is crushing all opposition. She hangs about her palace dressed a bit weirdly to show off her breasts and thighs. The use of sexual imagery, nubile young ladies beautifully drawn by John Bolton, is presumably meant to attract male readers. The use of women as the most powerful figures in the story should attract female readers. It’s only fair to warn potential purchasers that it all gets pretty dark at times and this isn’t one for the children.

All in all, it’s pretty good. John Bolton’s art is absolutely outstanding, every panel a thing of beauty and of pen and ink and watercolour. Even if you didn’t like the story you could buy this just for the art. The hardcover edition is gorgeously printed on lush paper and is magnificent just as an artefact. There are many splash pages you could cut out and frame and put on the walls. But please note that the story is entertaining, too. There are bonus features as well, a long interview in the back of the book with the artist and writer and some character sketches and background on its creation. The graphic equivalent of extras on a DVD, I suppose.

A lovely book that may one day be a prized collectors’ item so snap it up quick if you like this sort of thing. I do.

Eamonn Murphy
This review first appeared at www
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bigfootmurf | 1 autre critique | May 13, 2020 |
The creators claim to be inspired by 1970s cinema like Dirty Harry and Taxi Driver, but this work seems to skew more strongly to 70's exploitation fare. The plot is simple enough: to avenge her sister, a small town sheriff becomes a high-end Washington, D.C., prostitute (please note: she doesn't go undercover; she just becomes a prostitute, NBD) and randomly assaults and kills people consequence free until she feels she comes close enough to the right one to call it a day.

If this was supposed to be over the top satire, I feel like I missed the wink. It seems to play out earnestly if nonsensically.

I was a little thrown when the likenesses of Robert Redford, Sam Elliott and Robert McNamara were used for some of the side characters, but the creators actually have a two-page spread laying out all the celebrities they used, including a whole bunch I missed. It made me remember the time singer Amy Grant sued Marvel for drawing her on one of their covers: https://www.cbr.com/when-doctor-stranges-girlfriend-was-amy-grant/. I hope the celebrities used here have more of a sense of humor.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
villemezbrown | 1 autre critique | Mar 20, 2019 |
Normandy Gold
By Megan Abbott & Alison Gaylin
Artwork by Steve Scott & Rodney Ramos
2018
Titan Comics/ Hard Case Crime Comic

1970s, Washington D.C.
Sheriff Normandy Gold is seeking vengeance for the brutal murder of her sister, Lila. She learns Lila was a prostitute, working for Felicia Vane whose biggest customers are in politics.....
Gold finds herself in the middle of a 1970s prostitution ring that can be followed all the way to the White House.
The artwork is really well done, coloring is great. The Hard Case Comic series is a really cool series, that takes the 1970s book series and has crafted them into graphic novels and comics. Exceptional!… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
over.the.edge | Sep 25, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
16
Aussi par
42
Membres
129
Popularité
#156,299
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
6
ISBN
23
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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