alivemagdolene: (Books are Magic)
[personal profile] alivemagdolene
The Fifty Books Challenge, year three! (Years one, two, and three just in case you're curious.) This was a library request.

Photobucket



Title: The Hive by Charles Burns

Details: Copyright 2012, Pantheon Books

Synopsis (By Way of Back Cover): "Doug wants to tell his story...get it all off his chest. But there's a dark, sad secret from his past that he just can't face up to yet. The story that began in X'ED OUT continues."


Why I Wanted to Read It: This was favorably reviewed by the AV Club Comics Panel. Having now read the first book in the series, I could move on to this one.


How I Liked It: It wouldn't seem quite right to say that this book really continues from the first, given the complex nature of the storylines, but in as much as it can, it does.

While we're there, though, countless more stories and questions arise and while you're more likely to get lost than in the first book, it's still a fairly remote possibility: the author has a deft hand for keeping the reader engaged.

At a slim fifty-some pages and apparently the next work ("Sugar Skull" as foretold by the end of this book) not coming for one assumes the same length of time as it took for this sequel to arrive (two years), one might be tempted to wait until the series is finished, particularly if it's offered in complete form in a single binding. However, with the ending (that presumably ties all these loose ends together) dangling still, it's hard to want to wait, another testament to the author's ability to lure and engage.

It's hard to rate these as stand-alones, since they really aren't, but the quality of art as well as the diligent storytelling ensures that even if this series isn't an epic story, it's at least a memorable one.


Notable: Less brand names abound this time (and especially not in so distracting a manner), but is that a Pabst Blue Ribbon on the cover?

Changing the subject is my speciality

Date: 2012-11-10 03:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rehime.livejournal.com
Haven't checked out this series, but I have read Black Hole. That was a harrowing experience, if only for the subject matter; I won't deny his talent with storytelling and a very mid-2oth century vibe to his art style.
Edited Date: 2012-11-10 03:44 am (UTC)

Re: Changing the subject is my speciality

Date: 2012-11-10 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alivemagdolene.livejournal.com
Damn, now I kinda wanna read it, although if it's trippier than this (which I'm assuming it is), I feel like I should have water or vitamin C handy since this kinda fuzzed up my brain. I get that it's (sort of) about a voyage into a guy's mind and memories and it's SUPPOSED to feel like that, but damn.

I'm largely trying to wash the taste out of my brain from this book (http://alivemagdolene.livejournal.com/449589.html) so I've been trying to accumulate some graphic novels in my "reading queue".

About the Authoress

alivemagdolene: (Default)
Madame Mxgdxlxnx Lxvxs, esq™

July 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930 31  

Tags I Use A Lot

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 1st, 2025 05:54 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios