Thursday, September 30, 2010

A step in the world of graphic novels baby

exileWhen I announced on Facebook that I could check officially cheerily "read a graphic novel" my bucket list, I heard several interested parties.

"Is this one that I sent you ten years ago?" asked my sister.This was one of the Sandman graphic novels (There are several, right?), and no, it wasn't what I read .j's admitted it was exile, who is a graphic novelization almost from the first third of the Outlander, a book I read Gabaldon repeatedly.

My friend Diana (not Gabaldon) thought I had taken an important first step, but couldn't really nothing on my list of bucket up to what I had read "the Shakespeare of graphic novels, Maus I and II". My cousin Shannon agreed with him (maybe because they are both professors of English?) and also recommended Persepholis, which my sixteen year daughter loved too.

Maybe I'll make 'em... sometime.I really enjoyed the exile, but I am not sure that I am still a .j conversion ' get that this is an art form, and that is something more than the novel-meeting-drawn. But I also have a big, fancy that I have no problem with reading books without images imagination. And my list of books I "should" read - and have not yet been able to-is quite long.

That said, I found my first experience of graphic novel intéressant.Gabaldon mentioned at the beginning of the book that she actually his beginning as a writer of fiction with graphic novels; she has written for Disney years and has been pre-compiled to like the idea of a graphic novel Outlander since the beginning. It certainly is another way to tell the story, sometimes a single page with multiple frames can display multiple pages of text equivalent. I felt that I helped me essentially by the fact that I already knew that pretty much history. It mostly follows the story, although it indicates events primarily perspective instead of Claire, and throws in some things with this guy, Kenneth (a fellow countryman Geillis Duncan) that I am pretty sure Jamie shape was not there before.

Although I had my predesigned image of all the characters, I loved the illustration; I thought it was beautiful. Marie and Claire were fairly close to how I've imagined, as was Laoghaire. But I have a confession: I couldn't really tell the rest of the separate Scottish. They were all wearing kilts, and everyone except Mary had brown hair of a similar shade.Above all, I thought that they were context.

It is worth your money? if you're a big fan of Outlander, probably.I can certainly see play me nouveau.Est times read other graphic novels? maybe.To read other graphic novels by Gabaldon?No doubt.

What is your experience with graphic novels? and do I really listen to Diana and Shannon and play Maus I and II?

-AAR Blythe

This entry was posted on September 20, 2010 5: 00 and classified under AAR Blythe, lecture.Vous can follow responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0.Vous can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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