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@Cormacaroni Anything would have been better probably than Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou, which doesn't mean anything to probably most of the people who would pick this up.
I also sell my children's book there. It's sturdy and cute. https://t.co/5X2lXRMxWV
Hey, just in case you feel like you need to do some Bible art, relax and know that Rick Griffen already did it for you.
But anyway, especially if you've never read Geis, DEFINITELY get cold 1 and 2 of Course Of The Chosen. It's absolutely hot stuff
Chainsaw Man is kind of like fine whatever not written for me tho I dig the astronaut part, but that guys one-shots? That's what I'm here for.
And beyond that, Van Amerongen's talent as an artist was astonishing. That he was able to squirt out these intricate drawings of dilapidated humans and the wreckage of their ingenuity on the daily? Astonishing!
Van Amerongen got at this sense of the world that I didn't notice in other comics on the pages of the LA Times and the OC Register in those days. Life was hard and life was weird, but with the right skew to your personal vantage, there was a joy to be found in there.
@letsgoayo I have five (?) versions but two are graphic novel versions.
1990 - Akira by Katsuhiro Otomo (translated by Yoko Emezawa w/ Linda M. York, lettered by Michael Higgins, colouring by Steve Oliff)
This blew my mind as an 8th grader. It blows my mind now at age 49. That Otomo ever existed seems a grace too good for our world.