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Loading... Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga, and Graphic Novelsby Scott McCloudSeries: Understanding Comics (3)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I really enjoy Scott McCloud. He is insightful and funny and his analytic method is always useful in dissection of concept. I find that the conscientious author tends to be the superior author, and for this reason, McCLoud is indispensable. Another thing that is refreshing about McCloud is that he takes the medium very seriously, and reminds us, as creators, that we have a responsibility to the art to do everything we can with it, and not simply accept the given standards. In a lot of ways, this book feels like an update of Understanding Comics, but with a greater mindfulness of the creator, and less for the pure history and development of the art. 'Making Comics' is an inspirational work which avoids treading the ground of other 'how to's, instead focusing on asking 'how might you'? Interested in learning to make graphic novels (or manga or comics)? Then you'll be entranced by Scott McCloud's Making Comics, which offers secrets from a pro on everything from the tools you need to the way to draw a face showing disgust or joy. The Casti library also has McCloud's Understanding Comics. If you *ever* had interest in drawing a comic, this book is a must! no reviews | add a review
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Thirteen years later, following the Internet evangelizing of Reinventing Comics, McCloud has returned with Making Comics.
Designed as a craftsperson's overview of the drawing and storytelling decisions and possibilities available to comics artists, covering everything from facial expressions and page layout to the choice of tools and story construction, Making Comics, like its predecessors, is also an eye-opening trip behind the scenes of art-making, fascinating for anyone reading comics as well as those making them. Get a sense of the range of his lessons by clicking through to the opening pages of his book, including his (illustrated, of course) table of contents (warning: large file, recommended for high-bandwidth users):
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:00 -0400)
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If you're interested in making comics (or even if you aren't, I totally wanted to be a comics writer after reading this even though I can't draw at all) or are interested in how to read them, why artists make the choices they do, or the history of them, or just want an interesting non-fiction read in comic book form, this one's for you.
see all my reviews at www.jenrothschild.com (