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Laddar... Violent Cases (urspr publ 1991; utgåvan 2002)av Neil Gaiman (Författare)
VerksinformationViolent Cases av Neil Gaiman (1991)
![]() Det finns inga diskussioner på LibraryThing om den här boken. ![]() ![]() ‘Violent Cases’ is a graphic short story written by Neil Gaiman and drawn by Dave McKean. The first panel shows the narrator, a man in his thirties, lighting a cigarette. The illustrations that follow show the story he’s telling but occasionally cut back to him. On pages 5-6 it cuts to the present day and him asking his father to clarify something. The events he is recounting took place in Portsmouth, England when the narrator was four years old. His father accidentally hurt the little boy’s arm and took him to see an osteopath, who turns out to have been Al Capone’s osteopath. He tells the four-year-old about the good old days and the splendid parties Al used to have. On the return visit, he tells the boy more about the American gangster. Later, there’s a children’s party at a seafront hotel and the narrator bumps into the old man again. The theme is partly memory and how accurate it may be. That’s where the title comes from in a clever bit of misunderstanding. Dave McKean’s art is in the style of Bill Sienkiewicz, not my favourite, but to be fair many of the illustrations are beautifully done and the story is well told. I enjoyed the reading experience and was only let down by the ending which was either vague or incredible, depending on how you take it. That’s deliberate, I’m sure as Neil Gaiman knows what he’s doing with a story and quite common now. Definite conclusions are old hat. Unfortunately, I still like them and not having one kind of ruins the preceding for me. The tale is interesting and well crafted but rather slight. I’m not sure it merits this deluxe format and hardcovers but clearly, the publishers think so. It has an interesting introduction by Paul Gravett about the burgeoning eighties British comic scene in which the story was created and an introduction from the 1987 edition by his eminence, Alan Moore, to whom it is dedicated ‘with thanks and gratitude and, after all these years, still with a smidgen of awe. There’s an introduction by Neil Gaiman from the 1991 reissue. There’s an afterword by Neil Gaiman from the 2003 reissue and there are short biographies of Neil Gaiman and artist Dave McKean. In general, it’s packaged as something awesome and wonderful. I’ll have to read it again and have a rethink. I mean, if Alan Moore likes it…I have more than a smidgeon of awe for big Al. Much more. Eamonn Murphy This review first appeared at https://www.sfcrowsnest.info/ In Violent Cases, Gaiman and McKean explore the flawed nature of memory. The narrator attempts to recall his childhood visits with an osteopath, but these reflections bring him no closer to discovering the "true" version of the events in question. Instead, the memories remain skewed by time and subject to any number of external influences - a reluctance on his father's behalf to discuss the doctor, his memories melding with cultural references, the narrator's own naivete as the child making these memories, and perhaps even a confluence of real events and imagined (or dreamed) events. Fragmented and nebulous, it is impossible to separate fact from fiction, and this inability continues to burden the narrator. I'm on a real Gaiman kick these days and I thoroughly enjoyed this. McKean's illustrations are amazing. The story was fluid and abstract. I read it right before work and it definitely set a strange tone for my day. Gaiman and McKean don't offer any answers. This may be a look at the complexity of memory and the human psyche, but they don't offer analysis. So if you're looking for that, look elsewhere. The questions Gaiman asks, the uncomfortable observations he makes, his ability to verbalize what many of us understand only in incomprehensible and abstract terms is what keeps Gaiman readers (or at least this Gaiman reader) coming back for more. Well, it's not the worst thing Gaiman has done, in fact it's probably near the top of my list of his non-Sandman graphic works (with Coraline ranking above it). But that's not saying much. I keep reading them, because I think McKean does some amazing things, and because Sandman was so wonderful. So I keep hoping I will pick up another of his graphic endeavors and it will wind up being anywhere near that good. But they never are. And this one is no different. The story is rather morose (which is also fairly typical), and really not at all what I expected based on the blurb. Disappointing. inga recensioner | lägg till en recension
Before The Sandman, there was Violent Cases, the first teaming of multi award-winning writer Neil Gaiman and innovative artist Dave McKean. Now, to celebrate the 30th anniversary of this seminal work, Violent Cases is being re-issued in a hardcover edition of one of the most influential and groundbreaking graphic novels of all time. A sensitive and ingenious work, Violent Cases reveals the often murky nexus between memory and imagination through the narrator's cloudy childhood remembrance of a visit to Al Capone's osteopath -- and the impact of his seedy stories on an impressionable youth. Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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