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photo 2016-04-10 02:19
Stan Lee!
Amazing Fantastic Incredible: A Marvelous Memoir - Peter David,Stan Lee,Colleen Doran

The Los Angeles Times Festival of Books is this weekend. Of course, this is the 3rd or 4th time it has rained this year (our MONSTER El Niño, haha).

 

We have been planning to go since last year. But I kept a little secret from my 7th grader until this morning. That secret was Stan Lee, at 11am, on the main stage. Free, no tickets required.

 

And we got there in time to get good standing spots, in spite of the fact that hubby cannot get anywhere on time and dawdles constantly. And the mics worked! We could see and hear!

 

We did not get an autographed copy of his graphic memoir, just a plain one. We would have had to be truly early--and I am pretty sure that the folks who got their copies signed did not get hear him speak. And he was great. It was an interview format, and he was funny. Kid is happy, that interview made his day. He loves Marvel.

 

 

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photo 2015-02-13 03:11
The Zodiac Legacy: Convergence - Andie Tong,Stuart Moore,Stan Lee

So this showed up today! Pretty cool swag if I do say so myself, and a book by Stan Lee? A MIDDLE GRADE book by Stan Lee? Well, suffice it to say that this bookworm is pretty darn excited.

 

Has anyone read this? Thoughts? I don't want to get my hopes up TOO high...but...woohoo!

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photo 2014-08-15 04:18
Deadpool by Joe Kelly Omnibus - Shannon Denton,James Felder,Ed McGuinness,Joe Kelly,Aaron Lopresti,Bernard Chang,Stan Lee,Pete Woods

1160 pages, the complete Joe Kelly run, the defining Deapool run... 

 

I R EXCITE

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review 2013-06-16 13:58

The Basics

 

Various, old school adventures of Captain America and The Falcon.

 

My Thoughts

 

The real test of comics from an older era is the test of time. This is true of any book, but comics will especially fall under this scrutiny. At the time this volume was originally being written, more emphasis was put upon quantity than quality. It rightly amazes people the amount of work that Stan Lee and Jack Kirby were putting out. And at such a ridiculous rate. The amount of story they carried on their shoulders really is impressive.

 

But it’s not good. Writing a lot, drawing a lot, cannot be equated with creating things that stand the test of time. To put it bluntly, stories and drawing of worth. In these comics, people talk out loud to themselves for the benefit of the reader. Even when the dialogue is between two characters, it’s stilted. The descriptions are overly verbose, as if using big words can hide the fact that the writing is weak. And Kirby’s Cap is consistently wall-eyed, cross-eyed, or contorting in ways that I can’t imagine are comfortable.

 

If I was going to cite something I enjoyed, it was finally finding a story that incorporated The Falcon. It didn’t always incorporate him well. There were some iffy moments where he was off-screen doing whatever-who-cares while Captain America got in on the real action. That disappointed, but in the same breath, I like this character, like his potential, and enjoyed reading about him.

 

When you hear something is a classic and fans lift it up and exalt it, you expect more than this. Everything was awkward. In fact, that’s the word I feel sums up the culmination of Lee and Kirby’s run here: awkward. Nothing looked right or sounded right. Maybe I’m spoiled by modern comics, where the standards for art and storytelling are incredibly high, much higher than they were then. Knowing that, one would hope I’d at least get a giggle out of how quaint the old stuff was. No. Rather I thanked my lucky stars we’ve come so far.

 

Final Rating

 

2/5

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