Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » vampire: masquerade » General » Tricked  
Categories
music
h.r. giger
vampire: masquerade
esoterica
apparel
video
body art - tattoo
jewelry
HALLOWEEN
women's boots
men's boots
Info
about us
links
posters
Related Categories
• General
Graphic Novels
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subcategories
Mass Market
Trade
Tricked
Tricked

zoom enlarge 
Author: Alex Robinson
Publisher: Top Shelf Productions
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $4.99
You Save: $14.96 (75%)



New (29) Used (26) from $2.86

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 97903

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.1

ISBN: 1891830732
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5
EAN: 9781891830730
ASIN: 1891830732

Publication Date: September 7, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: This book is in Brand NEW Perfect MINT Condition. The book is in stock and available for Immediate Dispatch from one of our SIX Warehouses in the United Kingdom. Fast Delivery, Approximate Timings: - UK=Within a Week, EU= Within 2 Weeks, USA & ROW=Within 3 Weeks. We have an excellent customer services. WE Offer Money Back Guarantee. Limited stock at this BARGAIN PRICE - so Buy Now! Experienced UK Based Book Selling Limited Company.

Similar Items:

  • Box Office Poison
  • BOP! More Box Office Poison
  • Too Cool To Be Forgotten
  • Blankets
  • Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (Edition 001)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Alex's new graphic novel follows the lives of six people - a reclusive rock legend, a heartbroken waitress, a counterfeiter, an obsessive crank, a lost daughter, and a backstabbing lover - whose lives are unconnected until an act of violence affects them all in different ways.


Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Very good, but . . .   April 5, 2006
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Okay, I liked this book a lot, but the other reviews here are like the kind of rabid fan reviews you get on Fruits Basket and Salior Moon manga.

A review on the back of the book says it is like an Altman movie. A review on this site says that the book is full of wonderful three dimensional characters. I disagree on both counts.

The plot comes to too much of an overbaked climax. It is still good and entertaining, but Altman has stood for less easy, less obviously indebted to the medium of film resolutions. Say Robinson's film touchstone here is Curtis Hanson or Guy Ritchie -- effective and complex, but too prone to letting the pulp of their plots overwhelm the character arcs.

The characters are mostly, if not flat like the sports card shop guy or Phoebe's Dad, at least they change in yawn-inducingly familiar ways on the whole. Our nutty fan, Beam himself and Beam's new personal assistant . . . I've seen them before. Maybe I haven't seen them as nuanced as I have here in a long time, but there are too many places where there is nothing new and I knew exactly what was going to happen.

Not coincidentally, the places where the characters fall flat are exactly those places where the overly contrived Beam "trick" lies.

The places where this work is genius are in those places that surround the beautifully realized character of plus-sized waitress Caprice. The way Robinson works on issues of romance, hurt, body image, friendship and the way we become the things we hate and that hated us, at least for a while, are sublime. As a character, she makes Phoebe and our sports card forger come alive and come out of the stereotypes they revert to in other potions of the book.

In terms of the art and layout this book is also great, but with moments that prevent it from reaching the fifth star. As a small example, there is a tremendous splash page of Ray Beam's face vivisected into panels. Only in one small panel his sunglasses are missing and we see a small portion of his eye, his humanity. Excellent! Then, toward the end of the book, we get a splash of Steve, our nutcase, splintered into panel shards of insanity. Okay. Nice, but just like the bit where he yanks out his tooth with pliers, I've already had that idea digested for me multiple times in American pop culture.

Robinson wants the end of the book, with its "exciting" ending and its tripped out but mostly indulgent art flourishes, to have great impact. Maybe. He's obviously working really hard here. But maybe that's the problem. Too much work. It feels a bit like he's gripping real hard.

To sum up, the book is tremendously entertaining, it's just that some of the entertainments are better than others. Unlike the reviewer here who argued that this is the type of graphic novel work that is allowing comics to hit a stride, I'd disagree. There are depressing indications that the field of "indie" comics is stuck somewhere between the ambition, scope and character of Los Bros Hernandez, the slice of life verisimilitude of Abel, Pekar and Satrapi, and the PoMo irony of Clowes, Ware and Moore. And like the late 90s "indie" film scene, this book is yet more evidence that maybe we're not really sure how to effectively and artistically navigate through those waters.



3 out of 5 stars The Indie Film as Graphic Novel   March 11, 2007
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

I'd never checked out anything by Robinson before, but the opening pages intrigued me enough to take it home for the weekend. And at the end, the overall effect was kind of like reading the graphic novel equivalent of a reasonably decent indie film. The obvious comparison is to ones like Short Cuts or Amores Perros, since the book alternates between the stories of six unrelated characters whose lives intersect over the course of the book until they come together at the climax. The six characters are: Ray Beam (a reclusive rock star mired in several years of writer's block), Steve (an obsessive and possibly schizophrenic fan of Ray's), Lily (a young Latina woman who becomes Ray's assistant), Nick (a struggling father and husband who forges sports star autographs for a living), Phoebe (a small-town teenager coming to the big city to find the father she never met), and Caprice (a waitress at a kitschy diner run by a gay couple).

The book is divided into fifty sections, each of which focuses on one of the six protagonists. This gives us plenty of time to get to know them, which is both a good and a bad thing. Ray is basically a total cliche of an ex-rock star: fancy home, lots of drugs, elaborate sex with hookers, total self-centeredness and inability to relate to the outside world. His writer's block isn't particularly interesting, and his portrayal is so over the top and implausible that it's hard take his focal position seriously. Similarly, Lily's role as the naive young woman who drifts into his life and falls in love with him is a thankless one, as she's basically reduced to playing a supporting love interest role. Ray's obsessed fan is marginally more interesting, but more for his venom and bile than as a nuanced characters. He's an IT support guy with some kind of mental illness (schizophrenia maybe?), and has stopped taking his meds. This makes him increasingly rude, erratic, and ultimately dangerous, which, again, is familiar turf. (There is a nice bit though where he goes to see his grandmother and you get a glimpse of his humanity trying to break through.)

The forger is a rather more interesting cat -- a husband and father who lies to his family about his job, and gets more and more involved in his crooked Russian boss's schemes. The teenager comes from New Mexico to find her father and eventually winds up at the diner where the waitress works. She's kind of a nonentity in the story, and her arc isn't particularly interesting. Finally, waitress Caprice is the most compelling character and clearly the heart and soul of the book. Her name is perhaps a little too coy, but otherwise, her parts are the most engaging and real. It's a bit disappointing then, that her self-sabotaging nature is exaggerated to the point that she shuts out on the guy she's in love with to hang out with the increasingly aggressive and annoying Nick.

In any event, the various storylines all dovetail in a violent climax at the diner that is reasonably predictable and reasonably satisfying. Again, like many decent indie films, it's enjoyable and maintains one's interest, with some typical characers and a few nice moments, but doesn't leave much of an impact or lasting impression.



5 out of 5 stars even better than Box Office Poison   August 19, 2005
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Robinson's new book is simply wonderful. It has edge to it, but the characters still fly off the page and you can imagine all the things that happen to them really happening. Each character is fully drawn and explored, even to the point of one character's struggle with mental psychosis revealing itself in the lettering getting harder to read the faster he falls away from reality. You must pick this up; it's definitely one of the best of 2005.


5 out of 5 stars Alex, of BOP fame, does it again.   November 21, 2005
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Thanks to the work of gifted authors and artists the likes of Alex Robinson, the genre known as graphic novel is finally hitting its stride. Each three-dimentional character is brought to life by striking black and white images that accentuate the stark reality of each characters life. You may find yourself looking into this art as you would a mirror, learning from the lessons of its grossly human leads.

Following the lives of six people, Alex Robinson shows what lies at the depths of a reclusive and unproductive former rock legend, a forlorn server (aren't they all?), counterfeit artist, an obsessive crank, an adolescent daughter, and a backstabbing lover. Whose adventures he skips among in chapters presented in a countdown, 49 to 1, that reinforces the story's innate anticipation. They unknowingly stride towards the pulse-pounding climax, spiraling into each other in what can only be described as real life.

If you liked works such as "Blankets" or "Epileptic", you will find this nothing short of remarkable.



5 out of 5 stars Amazing, like a good film   April 3, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a tremendous graphic novel. I am new to the form, and came across the author quite surrendipitously, but it unfolds like a luminous feature film, and the story has several arcs that are compelling throughout. Rarely a mistep; at worst, a passager or two of wooden dialogue. The linear narrative unfolds like one of the ensemble films of Robert Altman ("Short Cuts," "Dr. T and the Women," "Nashville") or Paul Thomas Anderson ("Boogie Nights," "Magnolia"), with intersecting stories with thematic similarities. Here, we have stories from the world of popular music, a large company's disgruntled IT technician, a big city diner, and the double-life or a family man/sports memorabilia forgerer.

The difference is it is sometimes hard to absolutely love a character in a vignette in one of those films. Here, though, we feel and inhabit the characters completely (in particular the flawed heroine "Capris"). The artwork is tremendous.

On a par with the work of Mazzachelli on Paul Auster's "City of Glass." I highly recommend this book.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic

T-shirts, Posters

Pentagram T-shirts, bags, etc...


Gothic Posters

Related Links
Dark Videos

Terra Naturals - All Natural Products






© Darkpub.com 2001-2007. All rights reserved. Domain Registration and Hosting