Showing posts with label Aliens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aliens. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

It's Graphic Time! Paper Girls Vol. 1 by Brian K. Vaughan


It's Graphic Time is a feature where we review graphic novels and comic books.

Paper Girls, Vol. 1Title: Paper Girls
Author: Brian K. Vaughan
Illustrator: Cliff Chiang
Publisher: Image Comics
Publishing Date: March 30th, 2016
Pages: 144
Genre: YA Sci-Fi Graphic Novel
TW: Teens being shot, some violence
Series: Paper Girls Vol. 1
Source: Book
 

In the early hours after Halloween of 1988, four 12-year-old newspaper delivery girls uncover the most important story of all time. Suburban drama and otherworldly mysteries collide in this smash-hit series about nostalgia, first jobs, and the last days of childhood.
Collects Paper Girls #1-5.
What made me pick this book up: 
Mostly the colors and the artwork on the cover.

What did I like about the cover: 
I love the colors, it all fits well together and it's very bright. 

What made me read this book: 
It sounded really good. I mean you can't really tell much about the book from the synopsis, but I saw it was from the 80's and I love the 80's.

Would I read the rest of the series/more from this author?
Absolutely! I can't wait to read more of this series.




The artwork is super bright, colorful and definitely looks 80's. I actually really like this art style, I know some people had a problem with it, but I feel like it matches the story and the book well.

I also love the blue/purple undertones.








I think the characters are written pretty well. They're normal 12 year olds from 80's. It matches any 80's movie I've seen at least.

Erin is the main character, sort of. She's the first one we're introduced to. She is a quiet girl, who has a lot of nightmares. I would say she's a goodie goodie, and she seems to have a good head on her shoulders.


Then you have Mac. She thinks she's a badass. She smokes and cusses and is probably what every 12 year old girl wants to be like. I didn't care for her, but that's because I kept thinking "Dude, you're 12. Not 21"


The other two main characters are KJ and Tiffany. I kept getting them mixed up and they don't really have much personality yet in this book. I haven't read the second book yet, so we'll see if they change.







This one starts off at a slow pace and then speeds up rather quickly. It has the right amount of build up and then just BAM. I feel like it works well. I wasn't bored but it also doesn't feel like it's rushed.





Paper Girls has a really interesting story. At first you think it's aliens, then it's time travel and then it's aliens again. So time traveling aliens? Everyone except the aliens/time travelers and these girls seem to disappear. We have no idea what happened, just that poof. 

This one keeps me wanting to read more and more and I can't wait to start the second one. (Which I'll be doing later today!)



Paper Girls was better than I thought it would be, and I can't believe I was so hesitant to read it at first. The 80's work well with the story, and it's really interesting.


Goldie Vance Vol. 1Lumberjanes, Vol. 1: Beware the Kitten Holy (Lumberjanes, Vol. 1)Giant Days #1



Born in Cleveland in 1976, Brian K. Vaughan is the Eisner, Harvey, and Shuster Award-winning writer and co-creator of the critically acclaimed comics series Y: The Last Man, Runaways, and Ex Machina (picked as one of the ten best works of fiction of 2005 by Entertainment Weekly).
Recently named "Writer of the Year" by Wizard Magazine, and one of the “top ten comic writers of all time” by Comic Book Resources, Vaughan’s work has been featured and/or reviewed in countless mainstream media outlets, including The New York Times, MTV, National Public Radio, and feminist magazine Bust, which photographed him for their “Men We Love” issue (don’t ask).
As an undergraduate film student at New York University, Vaughan got his big break as part of Marvel’s Stanhattan Project, a workshop for aspiring comic book writers. In the ten years since, he has written nearly all of the major DC and Marvel characters, everyone from Batman to the X-Men.
In September of 2006, Vertigo released Vaughan’s first original graphic novel, Pride of Baghdad, lavishly illustrated by artist Niko Henrichon. Inspired by an unbelievable true story of four lions who escaped the Baghdad Zoo during Operation Iraqi Freedom, Pride is equal parts anthropomorphic adventure and Animal Farm-like parable about the ongoing conflict in Iraq, and was described as "the best novel so far" about the war by the UK's Telegraph.
Along with his creator-owned work, Vaughan is currently writing The Escapists, a Dark Horse miniseries inspired by Michael Chabon’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, as well as a new Doctor Strange limited series for Marvel with artist Marcos Martin.
This summer, the new WGA member/CAA client transplanted his poor playwright wife to Los Angeles, where Vaughan is currently working on the screenplay adaptations of Y and Ex Machina for New Line Cinema, as well as other new creations in film and television.

His home on the web is www.bkvcomics.com, and he’s become the last aging hipster to get a MySpace page:
www.myspace.com/briankvaughan

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

It's Graphic Time! The Woods Vol. 1: The Arrow by James Tynion IV


It's Graphic Time is a feature where we review graphic novels and comic books.

The Woods, Vol. 1: The ArrowTitle: The Arrow
Author: James Tynion IV
Illustrator: Michael Dialynas
Publisher: BOOM! Studios
Publishing Date: September 23rd, 2014
Pages: 128 
Genre: Sci-Fi Graphic Novel
TW: Death of teens
Series: The Woods Vol. 1
Source: Book
 

On October 16, 2013, 437 students, 52 teachers, and 24 additional staff from Bay Point Preparatory High School in suburban Milwaukee, WI vanished without a trace. Countless light years away, far outside the bounds of the charted universe, 513 people find themselves in the middle of an ancient, primordial wilderness. Where are they? Why are they there? The answers will prove stranger than anyone could possibly imagine.
What made me pick this book up: 
The cover of course. Look at those colors! It's beautiful, and looks... Adventurous? I guess. Like let's go on an adventure!

What made me read this book: 
The story sounded amazing. A whole school being transported to an alien planet!?! What!?! That sounds insane.


Would I read the rest of the series/more from this author?
Yeah absolutely! I even found a few other ones by this author that I want to read. Especially:

The Backstagers, Vol. 1: Rebels Without Applause




I love the artwork mostly because of the colors. It all has an underlying blue and purple color. It makes it look whimsical and very fantasy like. 

I also love the alien creatures and the scenes in this book. Absolutely beautiful.





Most of the characters are great, I don't care much for Adrian or Maria. Both are huge know-it-alls and feel like they're smarter than everyone else.


I just feel kind of meh about Isaac, Sanami, and Karen. We haven't gotten to see much about them yet.


Benjamin and Calder are my two favorites. 




This one starts off with a bang. And it's a constant go go go. There really isn't any slow parts, except for when it shows some scenes in the school, after the other kids go out. I could do without those scenes because they just seem to be thrown in.





Like I said, this one sounded interesting. The idea of an entire school being transported randomly to an unknown alien planet. It's intriguing and terrifying. Why do they get transported? What's really going on?

I feel like James does great in keeping this an interesting one. He makes you want to read more and more.


One complaint though, it says it's a horror and it's really not. It's more adventure, humor, sci-fi, than scary. I guess the idea itself of not knowing where you are is pretty scary, but the book itself isn't.

Also this ends in yet another cliffhanger. So that kind of sucked.




This book completely sucked me in, from the first page. I can't wait to read the next one!



Wayward, Vol. 1: String TheoryMind the Gap, Volume 1: Intimate StrangersPaper Girls, Vol. 1



Prior to his first professional work, Tynion was a student of Scott Snyder's at Sarah Lawrence College. A few years later, he worked as for Vertigo as Fables editor Shelly Bond's intern. In late 2011, with DC deciding to give Batman (written by Snyder) a back up feature, Tynion was brought in by request of Snyder to script the back ups he had plotted. Tynion would later do the same with the Batman Annual #1, w
hich was also co-plotted by Snyder. Beginning in September 2012, with DC's 0 issue month for the New 52, Tynion will be writing Talon, with art by Guillem March. In early 2013 it was announced that he'd take over writing duties for Red Hood and the Outlaws in April.
Tynion is also currently one of the writers in a rotating team in the weekly Batman Eternal series.

 
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