Read Moore's Swamp Thing, All Star Superman and Batman Year One.
Read Moore's Swamp Thing, All Star Superman and Batman Year One.
Eh, the first two issues come together to essentially say "fuck everything that came before, you don't need anything else to appreciate what I'm about to do."
Thanks. Your approval is all I've ever needed!
If you like Ms. Marvel, check out the Miles Morales books. Better dialogue, plotting and themes, while being the most revolutionary take on Spider-Man since Bendis's Ultimate Spider-Man in 1999.
I just don't get the hype. It's fine but it's not great, and I've never interacted with a 16 year old who talks or acts like Kamala…not to mention stuff like Bruno's "friend zone" rant being an obvious strawman insertion on the part of GWW.
Sex Criminals just really doesn't do it for me, for whatever reason.
Swamp Thing is the first place to go when looking to get non-comic readers on board.
I re-read Dark Knight Returns a month ago.
That first issue is so definitive.
I think he recognized his inability to write team books, and effectively counteracted it by really narrowing his focus to Jean and Kitty in ANXM and Cyke and Eva in Uncanny.
My version of this list:
Marvel:
Fraction's Hawkeye (obviously)
Read Man Without Fear and Born Again before you start Bendis's Daredevil.
Bendis's Miles Morales run rather than Ms. Marvel (his original Ultimate Spider-Man is also the definitive Spider-Man story).
Morrison's New X-Men followed by Whedon's Astonishing.
DC:
Best…
Hahahahahahahaha
Hahahahahahahaha
So the issue isn't that that Scout idolizes her father and sees him as being the center of everything…it's that Lee idealizes Atticus and makes him the center of everything?
So is the issue that you don't understand why a six year old girl would hero-worship her father and make him the hero of the story, or that you don't understand why an upper-middle-class white girl living in rural Alabama wouldn't interact often enough with dirt-poor black people for them to be more than tangential to…
I'm not "trying to change the topic of the argument."
So, you're asking me to explain what issues caused by the necessary limitations of Scout's perspective have to do with Scout being the novel's narrator?
So…what you're saying is…you don't understand why the book's hero worship of Atticus and the fact that its narrator is his six year old daughter are related?
…I just did explain that. Do you read?
…and that's the exact issue with these shallow critiques of TKAM.