List Out Of Books Eartha
Title | : | Eartha |
Author | : | Cathy Malkasian |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 256 pages |
Published | : | April 4th 2017 by Fantagraphics (first published March 15th 2017) |
Categories | : | Sequential Art. Graphic Novels. Fantasy. Comics. Fiction. Graphic Novels Comics |
Cathy Malkasian
Hardcover | Pages: 256 pages Rating: 3.83 | 413 Users | 76 Reviews
Relation Supposing Books Eartha
Malkasian’s stunning landscapes and depictions of nature, gestural character nuance, and sophisticated storytelling are on display in her latest graphic novel. For a thousand years, the unfinished dreams—sex fantasies, murder plots, wishful thinking—from the City Across the Sea came to Echo Fjord to find sanctuary. Emerging from the soil, they took bodily form and wandered the land, gently guided by the fjord folk. But recently they've stopped coming, and Eartha wants solve the mystery. Without thought or hesitation—the city isn’t on any map, or in anyone’s memory—she ventures into the limitless waters, hoping to find the City.Mention Books Concering Eartha
Original Title: | Eartha |
ISBN: | 1606999915 (ISBN13: 9781606999912) |
Edition Language: | English |
Literary Awards: | Ignatz Award Nominee for Outstanding Graphic Novel (2017), Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards Nominee for Best Graphic Album—New & Best Writer/Artist (for Cathy Malkasian) (2018) |
Rating Out Of Books Eartha
Ratings: 3.83 From 413 Users | 76 ReviewsWrite-Up Out Of Books Eartha
I love the art and the central character - the original idea, that dreams are visible and pop up in one world by agreement with another looking to have them removed, was really interesting. However, it turns dystopian in a way that felt like the reader was being scolded without showing any real resolution, almost like some diet propaganda. It's not actually that bad, but the storyline was disappointing overall considering how much I liked the art. Hope this author will create other books withI don't really know yet how I feel about this book. The art is stunning with a shifting spare color palette used to excellent effect. The story is...a lot. And there were a couple really big turnoffs that I don't know whether they were necessary. Still processing. May update.
I dont know about this one. I almost stopped reading it at one point, and I skimmed certain parts, but it does have some interesting things to say about happiness and our obsessive culture.This follows Eartha who lives in a land where the people capture the dreams of city folks and lead them to their end. Its a little confusing why they have to do it, but do it they do, until dreams start getting scarce. They wonder what happened to the city people and why no more dreams are showing up, but no
Cool story with nice allegories and lovely style of drawing. Let me tell you my dream out of it:City: Twitter and Facebook, where most people are reading/sharing sad/extreme things, whining/complaining about the world we live in and doing nothing to fix it.Echo Fyord: Goodreads, where everyone holds dreams (books) and connect them.Eartha: Regular lovely people who are taking photos of blooming trees on spring and helps elderly to carry their shopping bags. The ones make life beautiful. Caring
The first thing I noticed when I opened this up is the quality of the art. It's not your average cartoony comic book (though there's nothing wrong with cartoony). Eartha has lush settings and the characters have detailed, unique faces. The prose is worthy of the illustrations--beautiful, suprisingly weighty, and thought-provoking. This book is more generous, more whimsical, more kind than I had guessed based on the description "sex fantasies, murder plots, wishful thinking." The other part of
Ok, I did not really get this story. The style of artwork was kind of interesting, and the connections between a few of the characters, and well, the cat really was the best part of the story. Because everything's better with cats. So,the cat's presence adds a star to my initial one-star rating.
I wasn't sure if I would like this story. At first glance, the art didn't blow me away, and, once I started reading, the world took some getting used to.I'm glad I persevered, though. This world is a bit bizarro, but has plenty of thematic parallels to (my) world, and the story goes someplace and wraps up neatly. Eartha herself is a character I'd be able to cosplay well if I did more of that kind of thing. I loved the dreamy little world Eartha starts in - it felt like a maze - and of course the
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