Cartoons Books
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Used price: $15.45

good for allReview Date: 2008-03-11
Cool book. Review Date: 2007-04-22
A top pick, especially for college-level art and computer libraries strong in Maya references.Review Date: 2007-02-04
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
For the Beginning to Intermediate UserReview Date: 2006-11-16
This book has an interesting combination between a theoretical/reference book and a tutorial book. Each chapter starts with a theory or reference section that gives the basic concepts for that chapter. This is followed by a detailed tutorial or two. For instance Chapter 2 is entitled 'Fundamentals of Computer Animation.' The theory section goes into the physics of how things move. This is important because people have an instinctive understanding of movement. The first tutorial then is on making a light and then a heavy ball bounce on the screen. Then the second tutorial makes the ball squash as it hits and then stretch as it bounces back into shape.
At the end of the book you won't be quite up to Pixar standards, but you'll be well on your way.
The CD-ROM supplied with the book contain project files including all of the figures from the book, organized into folders by chapter, all of the movies, organized by chapter and contained in folders called movies, and all of the Maya working files.
Used price: $76.52

Totally imaginative.Review Date: 2002-06-20
Take a Trip With MookieReview Date: 2000-06-18
A Most Excellent Book For Any AgeReview Date: 2000-06-17
mookie (a girl in maximsubornia)Review Date: 2000-06-02

A wonderful look into the life and loves in the lesbian commReview Date: 1998-03-26
Just cool comicsReview Date: 2002-08-24
Mo episodes 1-23. RecommendedReview Date: 1997-03-20
My Favorite "Soap Opera"Review Date: 2000-08-01
For example, although Watterson's "Calvin and Hobbes" series has some wonderful characters in it, they never change. He took a moment in a child's life, froze it, and riffed on that. Bechdel starts at a time in her characters' lifes, shows a lot of personality within one or two panels, and moves them forward through time. Their characters have an arc and they do change.
These strips are all from a series published as she went along. So, it's all rather Dickensian, isn't it? I wonder sometimes how she decides how things will go. Given that they are published in real time, she has an opportinity to map the character's lives to those of her community and to current events.
I view this as the only "soap opera" worth following.
For those unfamiliar with her work, be advised that the subject matter (certainly in the supplemental bit added to the end of the book) is on the mature side.

Used price: $4.79

Mortal Coils is the new Twilight ZoneReview Date: 2004-11-10
Overall, this series has great potential. Anyone intrigued by the Tales From The Darkside, Twilight Zone or Outer Limits shows should grab this up.
Tasty & Twisted Tales Review Date: 2005-02-24
Comic IntrigueReview Date: 2005-01-18
Original and intriguing, Bodylines is a great read.Review Date: 2004-07-22
Used price: $5.38
Collectible price: $21.87

Lynda Barry is Funk Queen of the GalaxyReview Date: 1998-08-13
This book saved my mind in junior highReview Date: 1997-08-06
Not Just Cartoons, But LiteratureReview Date: 1998-10-14
Lynda saw what you did...Review Date: 1997-05-13

Used price: $4.00

Best manga everReview Date: 2006-03-08
Like One Piece?? What???Review Date: 2006-05-17
An elaborate, mature seriesReview Date: 2006-05-06
The series then brings us down a horrifying trail of serial murders as Dr Tenma goes down his path in search of the serial murder - the boy whom he resurrected. He accumulates clues and evidences, which ultimately point towards a greater, more horrifying social experiment.
While the series may be slow in pace, its intensive execution of emotions is well-played: there is enough time for transition between multitudes of emotions. This is important and lends the story depth, for as the story progresses, characters are fleshed out, like multi-faceted gems. Therefore, though it may be slow, it is certainly not boring; the psychological aspects of small characters bring to life the conspiracy and makes it a very real experience for the reader.
Urasawa's art is also competantly executed and highly dynamic in its own right.
The storyline itself brings us face-to-face with death and the darkest aspects of human nature. It goes beyond its genre and dishes out very poignant, but illuminating questions about human nature and what it means to be human.
If you are looking for easy entertainment, don't bother reading this series. On the other hand, if you want to learn more about life, finish this series. It is a ride through the kindest and the cruellest aspects of human nature, a ride which began and culminated with this fundamental question: The value of life.
Brilliant, but a Little SlowReview Date: 2006-04-20
Once I finished this second volume of Monster, I was amazed at how such a simple manga could achieve what this one did. The multi-tiered plot continues to get thicker, and the tension builds as the characters interact. Plus, the simple art style seems to add rather than take away, and in many ways legitimizes this story by taking away some of the exaggerated models found in most manga. And, as if I didn't have enough to make this good, the dialogue is top-notch and believable, which is key to me when reading manga as matching the words to the art is often mishandled, especially in translated manga.
The story, continuing from volume one, follows Tenma as he searches for the twin of the boy Tenma saved. But he's having a difficult time digging up information, and finding people to take him seriously. That's mostly because the twin does not have her memories from that time, and even goes by a different name... Later on, we also get to see how desperate Tenma becomes during his search for the killer of the families. He changes drastically, almost to the point of inhumanity, all in the efforts to stop a plague he believes he released on Germany.
To be honest, the continuing story in this volume slows a bit from the previous volume, which was slow itself. Though the first few chapters where Tenma searches for the twin is dramatic and in direct correlation with the last volume, it gets away from that when old characters are reintroduced and new ones are brought in. It doesn't make it bad in any way, but it seems to lengthen an already massive story, and it leaves me hungering for the third volume in this series so that things can get back to normal.
I can still recommend this manga above any other right now, though, as the story is as intelligent as I've ever found in manga. The technical details and nonchalant style of art doesn't weigh the plot down in any way, and the constantly building suspense makes you wish that they released graphic novels in larger formats (say four-hundred page hardbacks). To compare, Monster goes well alongside Death Note in terms of suspense, but because it has no fantasy elements, there is something about the horror in Monster that puts it above Death Note.

Used price: $2.47
Collectible price: $12.50

Despicable, unconscionable, beneath contempt!!!Review Date: 2008-01-19
pressing an unexpected buttonReview Date: 2006-02-24
By the way, this might not be the best choice of reading matter for the exercycle at the gym. Especially if there are people sitting on exercycles to either side. As I learned this morning.
Forget the sunday comics.Review Date: 2005-12-10
Mr. Wiggles is the perfect character. Since he is a teddy bear, you can't help but find him very loveable despite the sickest acts and statements that come from his stuffed body.
Get volume 1 as well. It's interesting to see Neil's comic to continuously evolve. Besides, you need the whole collection right? Support good humor when you see it. Something like this is rare cause I haven't read a Mr. Wiggles comic I didn't love.
and no...Neil has not paid me off to say this...I have never even met him.
Pure GeniusReview Date: 2005-10-10

Used price: $3.50

A good readReview Date: 2007-11-17
It just gets better and betterReview Date: 2002-05-03
Sigh, this is not an anime for those prone to adiction...Review Date: 2001-11-20
If you have any intrest in anime you should at lest read the first valume.
Sinji is starting cope with his life, he tries to conect with his father but (I think you know what will happen). Shinji incuers Rei on how to talk with his father but she seems not to help. Faceing abandement Sinji(Asuka,and Rei) have to face the seventh angel!
This is the way the world ends.Review Date: 2001-11-08
More cannot be said without spoiling the surprises that wait inside the book. The art is superb, coming from the artist who designed the look of the series itself. I can't wait to see how it will all end.

Used price: $4.50

EngagingReview Date: 2007-05-24
A great book! Yes wonderful indeedReview Date: 2007-05-13
Worth The WaitReview Date: 2007-05-15
At Long Last!Review Date: 2007-04-11
The artwork continues to be outstanding, and my anticipation for the next volume grows. To fans of the anime and manga, I hardly need recommend it - to the curious, please give it a reading... but start at the beginning to enjoy it all. Having torn through this volume to see what happened, I will probably reread from the start to enjoy it all again.

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.95

Funny and perceptiveReview Date: 2002-02-15
Humor About Authors, Publishers, Book Sellers, and ReadersReview Date: 2000-09-21
I graded down the book because of the inexplicable lack of an introduction. What better subject for one than literary cartoons? The books in the series which featured such introductions are clearly more interesting than the ones that don't.
It was hard for me to pick a few cartoons to feature for you. I was tempted to include all but a few.
Author humor
(1) Man leaving home wearing suit and carrying a brief case: 'Wait a minute. Where am I going? I'm a writer.'
(2) James Joyce's refrigerator to-do list: 'Forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.'
(3) Raven says to Poe: 'Nevermore. And you can quote me.'
Publisher humor
(1) Editor to Dickens: 'I wish you would make up your mind, Mr. Dickens. Was it the best of times or the worst of times? It could scarecely have been both.'
(2) 'It doesn't work as a novel. But we're willing to publish it as a desk calendar.'
(3) 'Chicken Vindaloo for the Hindu Soul is but the tip of the iceberg in our initial strategy of global expansion.'
Book Seller Humor
(1) 'Let me get you another copy. Someone left a slice of salami in this one.'
(2) Book shelves organized by length of attention span.
(3) Book shelves organized by size of author advance.
Reader humor
(1) 'I do want to solve all my problems, but I'll wait till it comes out in soft cover.'
(2) 'Lately, I've been reading Jane Austen -- just to clear my palate.'
(3) Fan to author: 'I really enjoyed your hype.'
Media humor
(1) Talk show host holding enormous tome, addressing author: 'If you were to boil your book down to a few words, what would be its message?'
(2) 'Oprah is definite, Barnes and Noble is giving you front windows and Norman Mailer has agreed to a feud.'
The others are just as good or better. These are just samples to whet your appetite.
After you have read, chuckled, and enjoyed these wonderful cartoons, consider why we find these cartoons to be funny. Is it because books have become a commodity, rather than works of important ideas and art? Is that really so funny? What should we do about that? If you find these questions provocative, read The Business of Books.
LOVE IT!Review Date: 2000-12-09
A Collector's ItemReview Date: 2000-12-02
Related Subjects: Genres Eras Fan Pages Resources Seasonal Downloads Channels and Networks Fan Fiction Titles
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with simple exercises it teach about a character, from modeling to animation.