Itemize About Books The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5)
| Title | : | The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5) |
| Author | : | Eddie Campbell |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 96 pages |
| Published | : | May 2nd 2006 by First Second (first published April 1st 2006) |
| Categories | : | Sequential Art. Comics. Graphic Novels. Art. Mystery. Fiction. Comic Book. Graphic Novels Comics |
Eddie Campbell
Paperback | Pages: 96 pages Rating: 3.36 | 449 Users | 67 Reviews
Description Concering Books The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5)
In this pseudo-autobiography, the subject of the memoir has vanished without a trace. Through six separate threads, each one typographically and stylistically distinct, a private investigator tries to discover the artists' fate through false trails, family and daily life reenactments, and even an imaginary Sunday comic strip. As the narrative threads intersect and collide in surprising ways, the reader is carried along on a fantastic journey through the life of the artist.A master comics artist, here Eddie Campbell offers a complex, caustic, and surprising meditation on balancing the lonely life of the artist with the demands of everyday life.

Present Books In Favor Of The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5)
| Original Title: | The Fate of the Artist |
| ISBN: | 1596431334 (ISBN13: 9781596431331) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | Alec #5 |
Rating About Books The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5)
Ratings: 3.36 From 449 Users | 67 ReviewsComment On About Books The Fate of the Artist (Alec #5)
Eddie Campbell deconstructs the "Alec Stories" (see THE YEARS HAVE PANTS), his own life, his work as an artist, and to some extent the idea of comics themselves. Full of wit and melancholy, and sporting lovely color production values, I don't think the whole thing ever really comes together (perhaps it's not meant to), but I like a lot of the parts, and I [particularly like the creator's ambition and risk-taking. This reader hopes THE FATE OF THE ARTIST is not so much a Coda to the ALEC storiesCool and curious, this "autobiography" is more akin to an art installation by the late Joseph Beuys, e.g., or some of Beck's earlier compositions than it is to my ideas about story or even graphic novel. This is a book in pieces -- a bunch of interpolated yet recurring texts, comic strips, photo panels, watercolor scenes, sketches, interviews -- that have something to do with their maker, the artist Eddie Campbell.It's a really cerebral, weird, and challenging experience. Read it, yeah, but read
Has Eddie Campbell lost his shit? Eddie Campbell has always been a sentimental favorite for me. I straight up ripped off his work for an AP Comp assignment in high school. He, along with Bukowski and Li Po, made me romanticize drinking before I ever drink, drank, drunk.This book is a formal experiment, an attack on Scott McCloud's definition of comics, the detritus of an attempted History of Humor that he never completed, a prose/photo/comic assemblage, and, clearly, a total mess. But still

Eddie Campbell continues to detonate and deconstruct the idea of "comics" and "sequential narratives" while spiralling closer and closer to brilliance. "The fate of the artist" is a meta-memoir mixed with an incomplete history of humor and peppered with a bunch of weird Sunday Funnies-esque comic strip pastiches that mirror and augment the main story. There's actually very little "comic art" here - instead, there's a ton of watercolor painting, assembled photographs, and some sketchwork. It's
A waning artist and his fate. It's a common story, I sense. The most memorable thing about this is the mix of aesthetic styles (previewed on the cover). There are prose sections, comic sections, comic strip sections, more graphic novely bits, and at least one interview using photographs. And it does all blend seamlessly to tell one tale. It just wasn't a particularly memorable tale. Insecure white male cartoonist who's getting older.
Eddie Campbell's pseudo-autobiography. Full of different types of graphic novel - comic -type stuff: real pictures of his daughter with word bubbles, fake newspaper strips, watercolors with drawings paper clipped to them. Regular typed prose. The premise is that this autobiography contains no appearance of the author himself. It's kind of like Hemingway's TRUE short stories, I suppose. Half way through it I was pretty enamored with the book, but at the end the momentum of the thing kind of got
I honestly did not understand most of this, and didn't really feel connected to Campbell in any way. Parts towards the end reminded me of It's Such a Beautiful Day , and I kind of enjoyed the slight poignancy, but as a whole I really wasn't into the lack of coherency.Maybe fans of Campbell would enjoy this more, or maybe even those just familiar with his work, but I won't be picking up anything else of his anytime soon. I feel like whatever Campbell was going for was lost in the attempt, and


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