The Plucker: An Illustrated Novel by Brom
by:
Brom (author)
Brom (author)
The Plucker, now updated with new art and an afterword from world-renowned dark fantasy artist Brom, is a window into a world where fairy-tale tradition collides with vileness and depravity, love and heroism, suffering and sacrifice. In this shadowy land of make-believe, Jack and his box are...
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The Plucker, now updated with new art and an afterword from world-renowned dark fantasy artist Brom, is a window into a world where fairy-tale tradition collides with vileness and depravity, love and heroism, suffering and sacrifice. In this shadowy land of make-believe, Jack and his box are stuck beneath the bed with the dust, spiders, and other castaway toys, and forced to face a bitter truth: Children grow up, and toys are left behind. Jack thinks this is the worst fate that can befall a toy. But when the Plucker, a malevolent spirit, is set loose upon the world of make-believe, Jack is thrust into the unlikely role of defending Thomas, the very child who abandoned him, and learns that there are worse ends for a toy than abandonment. As desperation mounts, Jack is thrown together with Thomas’s other toys—Monkey, the Nutcracker, and the ethereally beautiful porcelain doll Snow Angel—as they struggle to rise above their simple roles as playthings and save the boy they love.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780810996021 (0810996022)
Publish date: September 1st 2010
Publisher: Harry N. Abrams
Pages no: 252
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Young Adult,
Childrens,
Art,
Fairy Tales,
Thriller,
Picture Books,
Horror,
Sequential Art,
Graphic Novels,
Comics,
Dark Fantasy
This is a book whose cover sums up all the good qualities of the story. The art is beautiful, the writing is abysmal. Bad does not even begin to cover it. The narration is stilted and amateurish, none of the characters have their own particular voice besides some ill-fitted attempts at dialect, the ...
After having read only a few pages I felt awfully guilty about having discarded my childhood toys in a fit of rage at my parents and with the scathing declamation that "Childhood is obviously over for me." And I used to care so much for my toys when I was a child. Not one was allowed to feel neglect...
I love, love, love Brom's artwork. However... well, as a writer... It wasn't terrible, at all. It actually had some very spooky moments. But it wasn't the most original of stories (the drama that toys get up to when a child is asleep). It had a bit of stereotyping, and some mildly crude moments that...
One of Brom's first fiction works (instead of just illustration), 'The Plucker' is quite succesful. It's an illustrated novella laid in a form that would appeal to older children (large print, lots of pictures), but which contains plenty of dark and gruesome motifs to make it more something for adul...
The art gets 5 stars, story/writing 3 for me.