Sunburn
by Andi Watson and Simon Gane
Image
Source: Daniel Ashton (comicartfans)




#ao3#writeblr#ao3 fanfic#writing community#archive of our own
seen from T1
seen from China

seen from Argentina
seen from China
seen from T1
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia

seen from T1

seen from T1
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seen from Australia
seen from T1
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil
Sunburn
by Andi Watson and Simon Gane
Image
Source: Daniel Ashton (comicartfans)
Hellboy: Weird Tales #1 -February 2003- Dark Horse Comics
cover art by John Cassaday, cover colors by Dan Jackson
"Big-Top Hellboy" story and art by John Cassaday
colors and letters by Dan Jackson
"Sugar-Coated Wire" featuring Dr. Karl Ruprect Kroenen
art by TyRuben Ellingson
"Party Pooper" story and art by Andi Watson
"Children of the Black Mound" story by Fabian Nicieza
art by Stefano Raffaele, colors by Elena Sanjust, letters by Michael Heisler
Lobster Johnson in "Doc Hollow's Grand Vibro-Destructo Machine: Episode 1"
story and art by John Cassaday
colors and letters by Dan Jackson
Grendel: Black White And Fucsia
Art by Andi Watson
Have you read The Book Tour by Andi Watson (2020)?
yes
no
I've read parts of it
I've never heard of it
Andi Watson
Paris by Andi Watson and Simon Gane
Slow News Day #1-5 (2001-2002) by Slave Labor Graphics
Written and drawn by Andi Watson.
Weekly comic reviews N°1
The book tour, by Andi Watson
Published First in 2019
This book came in to my possession almost by chance. I had some money to spare this month and wanted to spend it on a graphic novel (living lavish, i know) this one, out of all the other ones in the book store that day, looked most appealing to me after a quick sift through the pages. Its fitting then, that the book is all about a guy that gets majorly screwed over by circumstance.
The book tour tells the story of G.H Fratwell, a relatively unknown english author who, upon the publication of his latest novel has to now go on a book tour to promote It. The book tour is a colossal disaster from day one, and on top of that he becomes the main suspect of some murders he didnt commit.
The story is almost simple in its structure, with Fratwell going from bookstore to bookstore, and hotel to hotel, and misfortune to misfortune, all without cracking that very British "politely inconvenienced" face.
Its a very kafkaesque tale, not only in its themes and presentation, but with a lot of references peppered in. For example, the title of Fratwells novel -- "No K" is one of many references to The trial, a short story that this book is clearly inspired by. You can see a very heavy kafka influence not only in the plot itself but the tone of the story, finding humour in the absurdities that Fratwell goes through, and in Fratwell himself almost perpetuating some of the things that happen to him by wanting to not inconvenience whoever It was that was making him miserable at the moment. It is a book ultimately about Fratwell and his downward spiral, as he realizes no one around him really cares about him, his book, or wether or not he killed a woman. I wont spoil the ending here, but make sure to be prepared If you like things neatly tied up. The ending DID work for me, and it kind of gets me reflecting upon the work and making me want to read again, which is good!
The art also wraps around the story pretty perfectly, with very simplified designs for every character (especially our main character) and more detailed backgrounds and buildings. It is pretty to look at and delicately drafted, and gave me the feeling that the street itself was swallowing up Fratwell, while providing a lot of character to all of the generic european towns and bookshops he visited. One of my favourite sequences in the novel is the opening one, where we see a character arriving in town through a lot of big wide pannels of cityscape. It reminded me almost of a movie, and in fact the timing displayed throught the whole story is really tight, this being not only pacing, but the pannel-to-pannel and page-to-page timing that really makes you feel those akward situations Fratwell puts himself in, and even the timing of the "jokes" the book has.
Ultimately, while i could write a lot more about the themes and overall message of the story (its pretty dense and would take me at least another re-read), its a light read that one could do in a rainy afternoon. It IS quite derivative of Kafka, but in a way that didnt bother me as someone who didnt really know all the references going in (but might bother someone who does for all i know) id definately reccomend this if you want a real dream-like experience, where in the end you can really chew on the story for a while.
I give It
7 kafkas out of 10.
Thanks for reading and make sure to tune in next week where i will read uhhh another comic.