Sleeping Jeremy ([info]sleepingjpb) wrote,
@ 2008-07-07 11:59:00
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Entry tags:book_commentary, lists, projects

100 book challenge: part five: comics, art books, graphic design

Thirty books left to go in the 100 Book Challenge!

Last time I left off on the cusp of "comics," so let's proceed into that realm. I'm fortunate that a lot of the comics I want to bring are actually in comics form, in long-boxes under my bed, and are thus exempt from the purge. But in terms of "trade paperbacks," let's see.

  • Watchmen, by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
    [Totally essential; besides being a gripping thriller, this is also a decade-by-decade history of the archetype of the "costumed hero" in the twentieth century, with an appreciation of the form of the "horror comic" thrown in to boot. It's also one of the best examinations of what it means to be an aging superhero; in this regard it is joined by Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns, which I'd bring if I hadn't lost my copy somewhere.]

  • From Hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell
    [If I can bring another Moore, I'd pick this paranormal retelling of the Jack the Ripper story.]

  • Read Yourself Raw, edited by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
    [A giant, oversized version volume collecting selections of the first three issues of "the comics magazine for damned intellectuals." My introduction to Spiegelman, Charles Burns, Mark Beyer, Gary Panter, and Windsor McCay. Speaking of whom....]

  • Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend, by Windsor McCay
    [Surreal, fantastic dream comics, circa 1904 (predating Surrealism by a comfortable margin).]

  • Rabid Eye: The Dream Art of Rick Veitch, by Rick Veitch
    [More dream comics, these circa 1996. But no less fantastic.]

  • Cheating: I have most of the run of G. B. Trudeau's Doonesbury in a series of volumes: The Portable Doonesbury, The People's Doonesbury, The Doonesbury Chronicles, etc. Any of the individual volumes might not be that valuable, but together they make a form of the Great American Novel.

  • Another cheat: volumes 4, 5, and 6 of the book-sized comics anthology Kramer's Ergot
    [Probably the most important comics anthology since those 80s RAW volumes. I'm not sure I could part with a volume.]

  • And another cheat: volumes 1-4 of Joss Whedon / John Cassaday's Astonishing X-Men
    [I've been reading a lot of comics this year, and I'm prepared to say that, although this isn't high art, it's probably the best stuff that mainstream comics is putting out these days.]

  • American Splendor Presents: Bob and Harv's Comics, by Robert Crumb and Harvey Pekar
    [Crumb and Pekar are both essential comics creators, and getting both of them, at the top of their respective games, makes this volume a must-keep.]

  • Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth, by Chris Ware
    [Ware's world-view is bleak enough to nearly constitute a form of comedy, but there's no doubt that he's an absolute master of comics form and vocabulary.]

  • Monkey Vs. Robot, by James Kochalka
    [A little bit of brilliant minimalist stuff... his American Elf collection is also great, but I have that in individual-issue form.]

  • The Frank Book, by Jim Woodring
    [Jim Woodring drew my LiveJournal user icon, a character named Frank who roams about in a creepy, psychologically-rich cartoon universe. This stuff is a good example of the kind of things that can really only be done in comics (they've been turned into animated films, but their eerie, airless logic works best on the page).]


The Frank Book is a big coffee-table style book, so let's transition and throw a few more of those into here:

  • Robert Rauschenberg: A Retrospective
    [Published by the Guggenheim, this 632-page tome contains somewhere around 500 color reproductions of Rauschenberg's work, and another couple hundred in black-and-white. This is also probably the most expensive book I have ever bought for myself (and it would be even more expensive to replace, apparently.) Worth it, though: Rauschenberg, to me, is one of the key artists of the 20th century, bringing together (in a single figure) strands of Abstract Expressionist, Pop, and Fluxus.]

  • Paul Klee
    [Another Guggenheim edition. Klee is another of my favorite visual artists, and although this volume isn't as comprehensive as the Rauschenberg one, it's well worth hanging on to.]

  • I'll bundle two graphic design books here as a final cheat: Sonic: Visuals for Music and 1 + 2 Color Designs, Vol. 2. Neither one is a masterpiece, which is part of how I can justify bundling them, but I do flip through them fairly frequently when needing ideas for graphic design projects, and books of this sort are expensive, and thus a pain to replace.]


Fifteen books left to go, and what's left in the collection? Mostly just miscellany. Stay tuned!



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[info]angela_la_la
2008-07-07 05:37 pm UTC (link)
So how many books do you have, exactly? Since I've already pared my collection down considerably, it feels like cheating to get to pick 100--I only have 500.

Will you be posting a list of your discards so all the literary vultures might swoop down and have a go? ;)

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[info]angela_la_la
2008-07-07 05:41 pm UTC (link)
Of course, if we are to discuss cheating, one might bring up that you have already posted a total of 100 books. Heh.

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[info]sleepingjpb
2008-07-07 06:13 pm UTC (link)
I'm not exactly sure how many I have. Or had, rather: I've been culling from the bottom all the time I've been culling from the top: I took about seven boxes of my worst and least favorite books to the used bookstore this week.

What that leaves is a large middle ground of stuff that's not good enough to be in the top 100, and too good to readily wish myself free of. When I'm through with this exercise perhaps I'll count them and post them as a list and see if I can put some of them in good homes.

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[info]angela_la_la
2008-07-07 06:41 pm UTC (link)
Damn. I don't have much middle ground in my books, since I've been on my regimen of book-purges: now, all my books are either very special to me and I would never part with them, or they are totally disposable. I "rent" lots of 25-cent books from the local thrift which go straight back there when I'm done. Examples of this from my current pile are Kitchen Confidential and Kurt Vonnegut's Galapagos, both of which were fine books but which I'll probably never read a second time. Slaughterhouse 5, on the other hand, I've read twice this YEAR.

Frankly, I consider books to be an integral part of the home and thus exclude them from any mental exercises regarding what I don't "need". They're structural features, in some emotional way. Most of the shit I lost in the latest round of basement flooding, on the other hand? Good riddance! Six rolls of Christmas wrap? Gone! WinXP manuals, expired bottles of hand lotion, limp origami flowers, old cat toys, scraps of faded felt: all packed into trash bags, never to be missed.

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[info]sleepingjpb
2008-07-07 07:57 pm UTC (link)
I put a bag of wrapping paper on the curb last night (it was gone by morning) and am currently Craigslisting 200 empty jewel cases. (Three takers so far!)

I get what you're saying about the "emotional structure" that books provide, and I totally agree. On the other hand, of all the things I own, they are by far the most onerous thing to move, and my current apartment is literally hip-deep in piled-up books in some places. I feel like I can cull substantially and still have the emotional structure I need.

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