Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comics. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Aleister & Adolf by Douglas Rushkoff (PDF)


Media theorist and documentarian Douglas Rushkoff weaves a mind-bending tale of iconography and mysticism against the backdrop of a battle-torn Europe. In a story spanning generations, and featuring some of the most notable and notorious idealists of the 20th century, legendary occultist Aleister Crowley develops a powerful and dangerous new weapon to defend the world against Adolf Hitler's own war machine spawning an unconventional new form of warfare that is fought not with steel, but with symbols and ideas. Unfortunately, these intangible arsenals are much more insidious and perhaps much more dangerous than their creators could have ever conceived.

"Rushkoff is a cultural treasure and an eccentric author of big, strange ideas, never less than fascinating and always entertaining." -Warren Ellis, author of Gun Machine, Red, Trees, and Transmetropolitan

"Douglas has been one of my personal heroes, and I've been a most attentive reader of anything he cares to put between covers, knowing that his combination of a cold eye and a warm heart is guaranteed to astonish and embolden my own thinking about what's possible in the world--about what's possible to enact in the space between one human being and another. He occupies the ground of our most immediate perplexities, and his reports of what he finds are breaking news." -Jonathan Lethem, author of The Best American Comics and The Fortress of Solitude

Download:
http://viid.me/q0JqY0

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Suicide Forest #1 by El Torres and Gabriel Hernandez (CBR)


Just outside Tokyo lies Aokigahara, a vast forest and one of the most beautiful wildernesses in Japan… which is also the most famous suicide spot in the entire world. Legend has it that the spirits of the suicide victims are still roaming—haunting those ancient woods. This series, from the creators of the acclaimed “The Veil,” examines the lives of Alan, an average-joe from Tokyo, his girlfriend Masami, and Ryoko, a forest ranger who recovers the suicide victims’ bodies from the woods, hoping to find his father. After their experiences with the Suicide Forest, their lives will never be the same again.

Download:
https://yadi.sk/d/_x03W9GYtZoLm

Nankin 1937 by Nicolas Meylaender & Zhou Zongkai (CBR)


Nanking 1937, the first ever cartoon book on the Nanking Massacre, saw its copyright introduction meeting held in the Belgrade Book Fair. The book was written by a famous French playwright Nick Meland and drawn by Professor Zhou Zongkai of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute (SFAI) along with his son Zhou Weizong.

Nanking 1937, planned by the French FEI Publishing House to be presented in a style of woodcut, tells the true story of Xia Shuqin, a survivor from the Nanking Massacre, revealing the anti-human crimes committed by Japanese troops from the angle of a survivor.

On 13th December, 1937, Xia's grandparents, parents, 2 elder sisters and 1 younger sister were killed by Japanese troops, leaving behind only Xia and a 4-year-old sister. At that time, Chairman of the Nanking International Safety Zone, Rabe, kept Xia's story in his diary. An American missionary videoed the miserable conditions of her home located at No. 5, Xinlukou in Zhonghuamen, Nanking.

Zhou Zongkai got in contact with Nanking 1937 in 2010, when the Chinese reprisentative in charge of FEI Publishing House, Xu Gefei, came to SFAI for a visit and had a talk with Zhou in his studio in Huxi Commune (Huxi Gongshe), known as the largest domestic Village of Artists in China.

Xu told Zhou about her intention of adding more Chinese material to the publishing industry, and due to the lack of knowledge of Chinese history around 1937 among European society, it would be informative to put forward her idea.

After viewing the pictures drawn by Zhou for the book of The Diaoyu Fortress, Xu decided to have Nanking 1937 drawn by Zhou.

Nanking 1937 was written by Nick Meland, a famous French playwright. When asked why a foreigner was chosen to write a Chinese story, Xu stated that a foreigner could tell the story in a more objective manner, enabling readers to gain a more balanced impression.

In August 2010, Zhou received the manuscripts of Nanking 1937.

For an entire month, Zhou and his 25-year-old son Zhou Weizong, a young cartoonist, worked on the drawings in his studio for over 10 hours every day.

In 2011, the French Edition of Nanking 1937 was put into the markets in France, Belgium, Luxemburg and Switzerland. On the memorial day of the 7th July Incident of 1937 in 2014, the book’s Chinese Edition was published by the Sichuan Children's Publishing House.

In 2012, the book's French Edition was awarded the Best Painting prize in the Amiens Animation Festival.

Download:
https://yadi.sk/d/m8d_dzEntZoHA

Aleister Crowley – Wandering The Waste by Martin Hayes & RH Stewart (CBR)


England’s finest Magician? Scoundrel? Occultist? Mischief-maker? Explorer of realms? Or simply, as he’s often remembered ‘the wickedest man in the world’? Hayes and Stewart tell a very human story of an extraordinary man, and leave the final decision to the reader. Master magician or deluded manipulator? Read on….

Do you believe in magic? Do you reckon Crowley was the real deal? or just a deluded fool? Whatever you think, there’s no denying that there was little that was simple about the man, or his life, and this fool may well have been a genius. Believe in magic or not, the life of Crowley the man is far too interesting to be cast to history a simple cartoon character, the evil magician. Crowley’s ambition seems to have been to transcend his life, to have his mortality wiped away by journeying to other realms and live on after other men have long gone… in so many ways he has.

One thing this graphic novel does leave you with, no matter what you believe, no matter what you think of Crowley the legend… he lived a life that can only be described as rich and full, epic even. Healthy, sensible, good… perhaps not, but certainly epic. He travelled, he shocked, mastered chess, an accomplished mountaineeer, travelled the globe, influenced so many, rubbing shoulders with the greats of his time. Epic indeed.

And it’s dutifully and entertainingly detailed by writer Martin Hayes and artist RH Stewart in this graphic novel that concerns itself primarily with Crowley the man, at the end of his days, 72 years old, terminally infirm, living in a guest house, the man in room 13, more concerned with consulting his tortoiseshell sticks than consulting a doctor.

Immediately Hayes and Stewart strip away some of the mystique, after all it’s hard to truly hate the dying, and we begin to look at Crowley the idea, the legend through the story of Crowley the man, as we venture right back to the beginning, Crowley detailing his life to a visiting writer, intent on chronicling the life of the famous occultist.

Looking back over his life, we see the boy born into the Plymouth Brethren, religious zealots more concerned with preparing for the imminent reappearance of Jesus than looking after a child. His nickname of Beast came not from newspapers or enemies, but from his own mother, faced with evidence of the boy finding pleasures of the flesh too inviting as adulthood approached.

With such an upbringing, it’s small wonder that the boy grew to become a man with unusual ideas, indoctrination failed, religious ideals overthrown, a conviction to embrace his name as Beast, after all … if Mother believed him truly to be the Anti-Christ incarnate, is it any wonder he played up to it?

That’s one way to look at it certainly, but alternatively, he was just bad. Very bad. Evil? We may never know. But at least Hayes and Stewart’s tale is always clever enough to leave both options open. As we read of mother’s obvious religious madness in casting her son as the devil for having sex a few times, the final lines on the page immediately reveal an alternative viewpoint….

    “Oh, and then there was the incident with the cat.”
    “The cat?”
    “Well, I had been told that a cat has 9 lives…”

So as we travel through Crowley’s life there’s a sense of getting a measured view, granted it’s from the viewpoint of Crowley himself, but there’s opportunity aplenty for Hayes to have Crowley present all manner of ideas, to present the man as a flawed thing, capable of great acts, and just as capable of the worst human traits. Proud, strong, intense, passionate, driven, ambitious, selfish, spiteful, jealous, kind, generous…. all aspects of Crowley come through across the years. And above all, the idea that Crowley, no matter what, genuinely believed in his magic, as he ascended the ranks of the magical elite, even as he acknowledged that many of their number, indeed most of their number, could be classed as mere “charlatans and non-entities“.

The problem here is that Hayes’ words work a lot better than Stewart’s artwork, which feels out of time, something akin to early McKean, feeling just that little dated and a case of seen it done better many years back, this mix of scratchy figurative work, cut and paste collage and digital effects here and there. It’s by no means terrible, and at its best it succeeds in creating the required atmosphere of the magician’s life.

Where the early parts of the book are all concerned with a strict biographical narrative, this structure breaks down as the adult Crowley immerses himself in his own magical world, events come thick and fast, and there’s an unfortunate (although somewhat necessary) reliance on simply throwing a list of events at one of Stewart’s collage like pages at times. It means we’re jettisoned from the narrative at this point, and that’s a real shame, as the wotrk done early on to immerse us in Crowley’s life was really well done.

However, just as this approach is getting too tiresome, the finale, detailing the final hours of the great magician’s life, break free from this structure and veer into the realms of speculative fiction once more, with Hayes composing a possible end involving something as magical as the practices Crowley convinced himself were oh so real.

The ending really is something quite interesting and special, Hayes and Stewart finding a really involving, and yes, a magical way to end their tale, to end Crowley’s life. But the thing the graphic novel leaves us with, as it should, is that Crowley’s desire to transcend death, and to live in the imagination and the memory of the world, was accomplished. Death took the man, but his legacy lives on.

Wandering The Waste succeeds in putting this legacy into context, and although there’s a fair few faults here, there’s nothing that really spoils the story, nothing that stops the message from coming through, and does it damn enjoyably to boot.

Download:
https://yadi.sk/d/PoPhb5eYtZoF8