- dirty water
- tears
- rain
- blue
- sweat
- puddles
- steam
- condensation
- snow
- sea/ocean
- fountain
- hoses/ water cannon
- toilet
- snow globe
- perfume vase
- mars
- harbor
- dog slobber
- snot
- reflecting
- pool
- beverages
- alec the great
- blood
- jesus
- ketchup
- glaciers
- sewer
Monday, April 28, 2008
Water Motif in Watchman
Sunday, April 20, 2008
hahaha.... I think of the Incredibles when I read Watchman
The Incredibles and Watchman are so completly different, they tend to have a few aspects that are the same. Listed below are some of the similarities and differences I found when reading the book.
Similarities:
- Superheroes are living out in the open
- Are being killed of by someone
- Both have a war type thing that is going on
- While most of the superheroes have retired, they have to come out of retirement to fight
Differences
- Watchman is ten times darker then the Incredibles
- The problems that are looked at in Watchman are a little more complex then the ones in the Incredibles
- There are a lot more symbols in Watchman then in Incredibles
So yes, the Incredibles is a Disney Movie... and yes I am probably not making any sense. But I really did think of the Incredibles when I read Watchman.
Watchman... and Moby Dick
So I am not going to lie, this book was really dense and a lot to take in. It was still really good, but at the same time it was funny that the last book we read in the class is soo dark and ridiculous.
I was reading an article somewhere online about Watchman and the creator Alan Moore. There was a quote in the article that kind of made me go "ahhh... that's why the book is so deep." Moore states "a superhero Moby Dick; something that had that sort of weight, that sort of density." So it only made sense that one of the reasons I couldn't get through Watchman was because Moore wanted it to be as dense as Moby Dick. And while both of these books are great, they both carry so much symbolism that its very easy to loose your place while reading.
So let's just say that it took me a while to get through Watchman, because I had to keep reading over and over again.
Top 5 Iconic Superheros
Batman
- Humanity
- Duality
- Emphasis on the bat (echolocation, nocturnal, blind- justice)
- Tragic origins
- intelligence
Captain America
- Patriotism
- Shield
- Morality
- Tragic Turn
- Liberty
Wonder Woman
- Lasso of Truth
- Supernatural origin
- Morality
- Feminism
Spiderman
- Responsibility
- Webs
- Problems
- Tragic Origins
- Spider Symbol
- Youth
Superman
- Hope
- Strength
- The Big "S"
- Cape and tights
- Messiah situation
- Tragic origin (death of the planet)
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Colors and Shapes
Everywhere you look you can find an icon. With every color and shape that you encounter you can somehow match it with an important icon in today's society. While some of these shapes and colors may not make a huge icon, they still can create something that is really important to someone. To me I can almost always relate a certain color or shape I have seen to an important icon. For instance whenever I see the color pink I automatically think of the breast cancer ribbons. When I look at an apple, my mind wanders to think of the apple company. Sometimes these icons are more important to the world then others. And then there are some that are just important to you. To me it doesn't matter how you look at it... an icon is an icon no matter how big or small.... no matter how important.
Religion Icons and my bowl of cereal
In today's society religion icons are around us 24/7 wither we know it or not. The cross being the most popular is just the tip of the iceberg in regards to just how many of these icons populate our culture. In my British Literature class all we do is talk about the references to religion and how most of the paintings in our book have at least one religious icon woven into it. Wherever you look you can somehow place a religious icon into it. It was funny because just the other day I was eating a bowl of lucky charms. I look down and notice one of the shapes in my bowl is of the "Jesus fish." I inform one of my friends of my discovery and he then proceeds to relate all of the non marshmallow shapes in my bowl to something religious. It was kind of a shock that my once meaningless bowl of cereal could hold so many important icons. They are all around us.... in cereal, paintings, literature, cars, TV etc etc. These icons have survived centuries and centuries only to be put into the most obscure places.
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Confessions of a Superhero
So I don't know if anyone has heard of it but there is a pretty recent documentary out called "Confessions of a Superhero." It's about four people who dress up as superhero's and work for tips in the front of the Chinese Theater in Hollywood. Most people believe them to be panhandlers, but to these people it's a way of life. For some they are just trying to make it in the acting business, for others they believe that they are the superhero's they dress up to be. So check it out and learn to love Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman and the Hulk.
Superman... popularity going down hill
So this week in class we are talking about icons and how sometimes have an impact on who we are as people. I took a close look at superman and realized that his popularity is going down hill. People are talking about how it's kind of hard to relate to a character that has all of these superhuman powers. It's easier to relate to say Batman who has no abnormal power at all. Whats interesting is that people are getting bored with Superman. I mean there is only so much you can do with a man who can't die. Also people are getting sick of his boy scout views on life, it was fine in the good ole days but now it sucks. All and all people are getting bored with the whole superman aspect. While the symbol on his chest will always stand for something, the person who wears it may be fading away into history.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Allison..... Sleeping through life
To me Allison is kind of like sleeping during the whole book. Even when something major happens like when she tells her parents she is a lesbian, it doesn't even phase her. It's like that throughout the story, no matter what she does it is always said with a sad tone. Even the way the story is drawn, they all have these bored looks on there faces. Now I don't know if thats how her life was...boring and sad, but thats how the book is. At certain points during the story she kind of realizes that she is sleeping and that she wakes up just in time to witness something intense. She is sleep walking through a very nonchalant.
More in-depth look that the literary references
Bechdel
- The choice of direction is both the same in the book and the article. While they talk about different parts of the book, the narrator still has the option of what they want to do.... stay awake or go to sleep
- The father being compared to the part in the story about the traveling person, finding excitement due to being in a strange place, to doing unusual things
- The father uses his children as a comfort.... his obsession with he house and the landscape to make comfort for himself, so he always has something to go back to
- The fact that she wants to be called Albert instead of Allison... not only is her father hiding but she is hiding as well
Kenneth Graehame
- Page 146 talks about the parallels of both landscapes, and how they are really close together
- page 116 the very last line "after all...holiday" thinking in terms of the father is always busy and yelling at them to do things, once everyone is busy doing his things he can finally sit down and relax
Ulysses
- Everytime she talks about her dad it seems to reference the language that james joyce uses... page 6 is good example of the dramatic language
- many references to the greek classic world
- the book owes a lot to joyce and proust
- transformations, being stuck in the middle of two things
- Odyssey- fathers and sons
Portrait of the lady
- comparison between the mother and the older character in the book (direct comparison)
Importance of Being Ernest
- Identity crisis, mask and disguise especially when it comes to relationships... whats appropriate and whats not, building up this image
- masks in regards to relationships, more business like then love like
Literary References in Fun Home
- Icarus/ Daedelus
- Proust: remembrance otp, shadow of a young girl in flowers, Guermante
- Joyce: Ulysses, Portrait
- Albert Camus: Happy Death, myth of Sisyphus
- Kenneth Clark: The Nude
- Fitzgerald: The Far side of paradise, Gatsby
- Anais Nin
- Kenneth Grahame: wind in willows
- Tolstoy: Anna Kaerinia
- Hemingway: The sun also rises
- Dahl: James and the giant peacj
- Charles Addams: Addams family
- collette: earthly paradise
- Esquire, GQ, Vogue Magazines
- Wilde: Importance of being Earnast
- Kate Millett: Taming Hamlet
- Homer: Odyseey
- Ruskin: Sontes of Venice
- Looney Tunes: Wile E Coyote and road runner
- Blind Faith
- Watergate
- Sesame Street
- Tolkein: dies
- James: Portrait Washington sq.
- Radclyffe Hall: Well f loneliness
- Sunbeam Bread
- E.M. Forester: Maurice
- Capra: It's a wonderful life
- Addison: Worm Ouroboros
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Banning of Books
It is my personal opinion that books should never be banned from schools. If they don't the books taught in the school system that's fine, just let the book be offered in the library so that student themselves have the chance to go and get it. I also don't think that the pride of Baghdad should be completely ruled out of being taught. Yes it is a current event, and yes it is troubling for some students to hear this story. But this fight could be given to any book out there. While they may not be current event they could focus on a sore subject for one student. The thing is that no matter how much you want to you can't cater to every child's need, it's just not plausible. So while I see where people are coming from when they say that this book shouldn't be taught, I can also see where this book maybe should be taught. To help further educate students on this war and wars in general.
Overall thoughts
Overall this book was extremely depressing. Even though it was sad and heart wrenching it did give us a interesting view of the war. I had never heard of the story about the American soldiers killing four escaped lions and for a while during the story I thought it was not a true story. Then as we talked about it in class I understood that this was a true story which kind of made it interesting. What made it interesting was that it is such a clear comparison of the Iraqi people and the lions. Like stated in previous posts the lions showed us what other stories of the war do not. They show us what can happen to even a smaller portion of the population, the animals.
It's sad that in order to get this point across the author had to use animals. If the author had used actually Iraqi people then the book would be even more depressing and even more controversial.
The Ending
I was extremely pissed of at the ending of this book. These lion's were bombed out of their home. The place where they have been feed and cared for over the majority of their lives. Once escaped from the zoo they had to survive in the city. The city was a place that used to thrive, but was destroyed by the same bombs that killed the lions home. The lions had no idea what was going on with both the town, the zoo and the world. They had to fight to find both food and shelter to survive. It didn't happen though instead they were killed by American soldiers because they looked as if they were going to attack the soldiers. One of the final lines is that they are "free." How is it that in order for them to be free they have to be killed? If the lions are the picture of the Iraqi people then why is it that the only way they can be free is if they are killed. For some reason this gives a mixed message. I don't see that in order to be free they have to die. They should have been free because they had escaped from the zoo, because they were given another chance at a better life.
Lions and The people of Baghdad
Throughout the book Pride of Baghdad I viewed the lions as the people who lived there, not as lions. In the story the obstacles that the lions had to under go seemed for me to be obstacles that the Iraqis undertake everyday during this war. When the bomb hit the zoo it destroyed the lions home and their safety. The people of Iraq go through that on a daily basis. While the bombs were not intended to hit the civilians of Iraq it's kind of hard to exactly determine where a bomb is going to hit. Once their homes are destroyed the people are forced to go out into a desolate city and try ad find a new place to live and a new way to survive..... just like the lions.
While it might not have been the purpose of the authors to make the lions and the people of Baghdad be the same, it's kind of hard not to look at them as the same.
Friday, March 21, 2008
Archetypes.... they all relate to Bone
- the stoner (smiley)
- the beauty queen (thorn)
- the bully (kingdok, rock jaw, lucious, phoney)
- the smart kid (bone)
- the artist (bone, smiley)
- the bookworm (bone)
- that guy (phoney, two stupid rat creatures)
- the wiseman (the red dragon, grandma ben)
- the arch villian (kingdok, briar, lord of the locust)
- the good wizard (old master, red dragon)
- the whore (the bee in the square, briar)
- the warrior maiden (thorn, grandma ben)
- the useless sidekick (smiley)
- the bartender (lucious, ted)
- the loyal friend (ted)
- the damsel in distress (thorn, grandma ben)
- the knight templar (lucious, bone)
Moby Dick and Bone..... the connection
THE BOOK
- Phoney's lust for treasure (in contrast to ahab), starts with no money in his purse... and is still trying to find money throughout the entire book, keeps looking for ways to find treasure (they are both in the first sentence/ pages of each book)
- no time line
- the idea of a search that destroys you
- lost of setting references, waterfall, farm, magical places
- ideas of a force driving from the known and mundane to the new and or mysterious
- the idea of stepping into new territory, and adventure
- not being able to resis the unknown, it draws you in
- voyage
- ahab and a white whale- phoney and home, phoney and money, phoney and power, phoney and status, kingdok and thorn, kingdok and the valley, kingdok and the power, kingdok and the pride, bone and thorn, lucious and briar
- pride (vice rock jack, briar, kingdok) (virtue torn and bone)
JEFF SMITH
- a man's pursuit of something great that they hold a greater passion for
- a writer who's set himself up to create an epic
- smith makes the valley in bone into a place of destiny as Melville makes the sea
- builds on the idea of a great journey as a spiritual and philosophical one
- starting with nothing. questing for something and seeing the process as inherently valuable regardless of the end result
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
BONE- FONE BONE MAP
Fone Bone as the Hero
1. Home- Boneville
2. Call to Adventure- getting separated from Smiley and Phoney
3. Reluctant- wants to return to Boneville, ignores danger, Fone wants to go home but then he gets stuck in the valley during the winter and this starts his journey
4. Supernatural- dragon
5. Crossing the Threshold- helping the villagers, attack by rat creatures, meeting thorn and grandma ben
6. Belly of the Whale- rat creatures, dreams, attack on the farm
7. Friends (grandma ben, thorn, stick eaters, Lucious, Phoney, Smiley, Ted, Little animals, villagers, red dragon) and enemies (locust lord, briar, rat creatures, rock jaw)
8. Ordeal- war, attack on city, saving them
9. Master Both Worlds- touching the crown or horns, dreaming sequence
10. Return with Elixir- return to the farm, going back to Barrelhaven
11. Return Home- return to Boneville
Monday, March 17, 2008
BONE- THORN MAP
Thorn as a Hero
1. Home- The Farm
2. Call to Adventure- meeting with dragon, attack on the farm
3. Reluctant- doesn't want to go when she find out she's a princess, denial/anger at grandma
4. Supernatural- grandma ben or thorn as veni-yan-cari, her dreams, the sword, locust in her
5. Crossing the Threshold- locust lord puts part of him in her, her turning, post rat creature attack, saving the dragon
6. Belly of the Whale- dreams/passing into the ghost circles, trip to althenia, fight with kingdok, 5 million times captured by stupid rat creatures, locust infestation
7. Friends and Enemies- the three bones, grandma ben, stick eaters, Lucious, villagers, little animals, Bartleby, red dragon, dragons, rat creatures, kingdok, locust lord, rock jaw, briar
8. Ordeal- attack of athenia, finding crown, blowing up temple, dream about mom
9. Master Both Worlds- when she knows how to use the locust, flying, mastering the ghost circles
10. Return w/ elixir- the ending when she becomes queen, touching the crown of the horns
11. Return home- back on the farm, return to the city
HERO
The Hero's Story
- The hero starts off in a village, then leaves and there is usually there is a reason why the person leaves
- the hero doesn't want to leave but they are forced to go, they have no choice
- they are aided by usually some form of a mentor and they usually have a unique way of helping them out
- hero has to cross into the "underworld" a place they don't know or understand and it is dangerous
- the hero finds themselves in some sort of trial where they must use their abilities to progress on their journey
- along the way they find both friends and enemies
- the hero faces an ordeal that changes the way the character acts
- now that the ordeal is done they receive a gift
- then they have to go home
- the hero is reborn, they become a master of both worlds, they have changed somehow for the better
In simple forms
- birth/home
- call to adventure
- helpers/amulet
- crossing the threshold
- tests
- helpers
- climax/ final battle
- flight
- return
- elixir
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Random ABC thoughts
In class today there was a statement made that Jin was racist. I find this to be both true and false. I think that all Jin really wanted to be was accepted, so some of the things that he may have said could have been interpreted as racism. Jin really just wants to fit into the American mold and not feel like an alien.
The point was raised that if Jin just wants to be accepted then why right when Wei-Chang starts going to school there he has the need/desire to beat him up. It was concluded that he may not be racist towards others, but just toward his own raise. I think he wants so desperately to fit in that having someone else who is Chinese almost puts him as a set back in his eyes.
All in all I don't think that he was so much racist as he just yearned to fit in with his schoolmates and not have the looming stereotypical Chinese aspect hang over his head.
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Thank God for ABC
I loved American Born Chinese. It had such a childlike presence to it that was such a nice break from x-men, the spirit, and death note. It just was full of random stories that fit together perfectly. Also the colors and the way in which it was drawn was just so cute and really easy to read. I loved the language, the stories and the look. It was like I have said before, such a nice break from the depressing stuff we have been reading. I think that it's weird that people prefer to have us read depressing stuff in classes. I mean yes it does spark conversation and yes it's semi interesting. But what will all of the hate and violence already in the world, it would be nice to escape into something happy, and I think that this book does exactly that! I loved it!
Going back to the Death Note......really back to Light
In Monday's class we started by just finishing our talk about Death Note. The main focus was wither or not we thought Light was evil. Our group made some pretty interesting points. I mean here Light is killing people because they are killers themselves. His whole thing is that he is cleansing the world of all evil and really putting fear into the hearts of others so that they will not commit a crime. The thing is, by killing all of these people doesn't that in turn make him a killer? So what he is exempt because he has a set plan for good. Well we don't know what these murders were thinking, I mean to them they might have killed for the greater good. So isn't Light just like them? Why is his means better then there's?
We also mentioned that he was always evil. I personally believe that there is a little of evil in everyone. We just choose wither or not we want to use that evil. The death note was Lights way of releasing all of his inner evil, and really in the end sort of started destroying his soul
Last page of American Born Chinese
So on blackboard someone put up a link for a youtube video that explains what the last page of the book shows. I think it's funny because which came first, the video or the book???? Which makes me wonder if the video came first, why would the author put a still of the video in cartoon on the very last page. Anyway, here is the video for those who haven't seen it.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Need a Break
So I love that each of the graphic novels that we have read are different in there own special ways. But after The Spirit, Xmen, and Death Note.... I kind of can't wait to read something more light hearted. That's why I'm really excited to look at American Born Chinese, because well I have already read it and it was really good. Different, funny and all around entertaining. I part toady's post with today's nataliedee blog, she's hilarious and I always have a good time reading (or looking) at her new posts!
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
L......and randomness
Something that really pissed me off in the Death Note was that we don't find out who L is. I know that Death Note is a series and stuff but I kind of wish I knew who he was and if he had any relation to Light at all. Also just as a side note I thought the ending of volume one was kind of stupid with the whole gameboy advance silver. Kind of Lame. I also thought it was stupid that L was just thrown into the story, all of a sudden the detective was like, this is a job for L..... and bam there he is. No real explanation to the reason why. I also like that while Light was obsessed with the death note, L was obsessed with Light. I feel like, and this is coming from someone who has not read all of the volumes, that L is the same age as Light..... which makes me wonder where the fuck all these smart/scary 16 year olds are coming from.
Monday, March 3, 2008
Some thoughts on Death Note
So Manga for me is kind of hard to read. It took me a while to realize the way in which to read the story, but once I did it wasn't that bad. I always thought manga was kind of like anime and it could very well still be, but for some reason I really enjoyed Death Note.
First of all Light is really messed up. I mean who even thinks about wanting to experiment to see if the Death Note would actually work. It's like he is over taken by this book and nothing will stop him until he creates this pure world. In the beginning I thought that he was using the book somewhat ok, with killing the known terrorist/criminal people. But then he was like oh the reason why the criminals are all dying the same is so that I can get noticed. He wants people to know that if they do something bad they will get punished. Even something small and stupid could result in them dying by getting hit by a bus or something. It's kind of scary how all of this power is given to a 16 year old boy who thinks that it's his duty to pure the world of all evil people, when in the end he is one himself.
Love Note
In class today we had to create a new god and there god's note.
I created the God of Love and the Love Note
RULES
- The human whose name is written in this note shall love anyone you want them to
- anyone who touches the love not can hear and see it's original owner, a god of love and if they do touch it they can never experience love themselves
- the two people picked to fall in love must be written within 30 seconds of each other
- if the names of the people are not specified, they will never fall in love
BENEFITS
- good fortune will come to the owner as long as they continue to use it
RESTRICTIONS/LIMITS
- there are no restrictions or limits to the love note
CATCH
- If you use the love note, you yourself can not love
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Splash Pages and Character Design of The Spirit
In class the other day we talked about different aspects of The Spirit. Splash pages are a large part of the story as they are the very first page we see when opening the comic. The majority of them don't involve the Spirit at all, and they seem to be the layout of what you are going to be seeing the rest of the comic. Each of the pages are set up differently, but they stay with the theme of what the rest of the story will be about. It also always makes a very bold statement, one that is definatly garanteed to draw you into the story. Going beyound the first page, Eisner tends to change the way in which some of the stories are told. For intense in the Christmas issue the layout of the story is different, with the main story in the middle and helpful side lines outlining the borders. Then there's the Ratat story about the toy machine gun where is looks like a coloring book setting. So not only are the splash pages there to tell you what is going to happen but the way in which the story is portrayed keeps with the theme.
The characters are made in a very interesting manner, they all seem to have features that help to create who they are, for intense their accessories really help to shape their personality. The women of Spirit seem to be drawn the same just with different outfits, their persona though is very revolutionary..... they're not the shown as the stereotypical woman like they would have been if written by anyone else. It funny to because they all tend to have very descriptive names tat are puns based on their personalities. Also going to the Spirit he tends to be shown as the most realistic out of all of the characters. He seems to be more human like her makes mistakes and it down to earth with his decisions. It's also weird how the stories rarely focus on the Spirit, and he tends to arrive later on in the story
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
My own comic
So in class we were asked to create our own comic, modeled after the 24 page comic in 24 hours contest thats hosted every year. Well mine was the 2 page comic in 2 hours. I had no idea of a topic in which I could create a comic about, so i used my inspiration from the Stephen Lynch song Superhero. I basically just made drawings to go along with the lyrics, and while I think it's clever and funny, others might find it unoriginal. So here it is hope you enjoy!


Tuesday, February 12, 2008
X-Men..... the dark piece of crap
I was not fully prepared for what was in store when I started to read x-men. It was basically a soap opera in book form, with a hint of 7th heaven. I hated ever second I spent reading this book, and while I am probably being very dramatic when I say hate, I just could not get through it. There was so much narrative that I wanted to pull out my hair every time I was informed that someone was running. I KNOW THEY ARE RUNNING I CAN SEE THE PICTURE. There was a point in the story where I just stopped reading the book and just looked at the pictures. Even though I didn't know what they were saying to each other I still got the gist of the story. It just amazed me that the author thought 11 year olds could read this, I mean bing a sophomore in college I had trouble with the wording at times. Using big words doesn't make the comic any better.
I also hated how I was just thrown into this story knowing nothing about the characters and there background. I have seen all three x-men movies which did help me to identify most of the characters and who they were, but some of the time I was just plain confused. I was just not happy with this book at all, and it really has turned me away from other x-men comics.
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Understanding Comics

SOOOOOO..... I was not a fan of this quote on quote textbook. I was really just confused the whole time by a lot of his wording and lengthy explanations. A comic is a comic not a juxtaposition definition. I feel like he was kind of mocking me the whole time, telling me that he knew more about comics then I did and not to mention he kind of made me feel dumb. I think he may have written the book soul to listen to himself talk.... in well book form. He also was in cartoon form which made me not want to take him seriously. It would have been better if he were somewhat real looking, HE DIDNT HAVE A NECK or EYES.... kinda creepy. The whole pyramid thing really just made me want to reach through the book and punch him, I don't believe that the whole visual arts can be placed inside that pyramid. I also didn't like how he wanted the artists and the writers to be separate to master their skills, I would think that they should be together and master their skills as a whole so that they can work of each other.
Now that I have just bashed McCloud here are some of the things I did like about him and his book:
I loved his semi interesting humor
I loved his definition of art (the whole strip about cavemen, survival and reproduction)
I loved the fact that it was a comic book itself; it kept my attention a lot more then if it was just writing
Finally I liked his drawings they were pretty nice
I feel like I will get a lot more out of this book as the semester goes on and we read more and discuss the graphic novels, but as of right now I'm just not a fan of this book. So if I later make a post about how I connected this book with another graphic novel that we read later then you can disregard this random rant.
Friday, February 1, 2008
It's raining/snowing....this is why i hate maine
So i'm sitting in the 3rd floor lounge of my building listening to the freezing rain on the window and I think about how warm it is in California and how I could very well be swimming right now. Getting away from the horrible Maine weather however, I wanted to share my favorite comic site. Now the comics featured here aren't ones that we would read about in our class or along the lines of them whatsoever, butttttt there fun nevertheless. Calvin and Hobbes is and always will be my favorite comic, and this site just lets me read as much of them as I want, along with more favorites.....dilbert, foxtrot, zits, and yes I'm a sucker for adam@home. Basically I love the Sunday comics. They are never about violence (unless you consider dilbert violence) and for some reason can almost always bring a smile to my face. So if you want a comic relieve from comics check out mycomicspage.com
Sunday, January 27, 2008
Essex County vol.1 Tales From the Farm
I really liked Tales from the Farm. The graphics themselves were very nicely drawn and the story line was extremely interesting. I felt so bad for the uncle. He has no idea how to raise a child and he did it all for his dying sister. It was hard on both the uncle and Lester to deal with her death and they both dealt with it I felt in different ways. Lester uses the cap and mask as a crutch for his emotions. Its a way for him to hide how he is really feeling inside, a way to make himself invisible. He as an overactive imagination that helps him deal with the fact that he doesn't have a lot of friends and is constantly bored. The uncle has Lester as a reminder for how amazing his sister was, and even though it's hard for him to raise a kid; he is doing the best that he can.
One thing that really kind of freaked me out was the fact that Jim befriends Lester. It's just weird for an older man to play "alien attack" with a younger boy. Even though there is a slight hint towards the end of the story that Jim could be Lester's father, it stills makes me feel awkward about them hanging out alone together. Also with the presences of Jim, Lester drifts further away from his uncle. His uncle wants to help him and be a fatherly figure, but Lester wants nothing to do with it. Towards the end of the book though Lester finally realizes that his uncle is trying his best and that his uncle truly loves him. It is with this new found realization that Lester looses the cap and the mask. He finally feels content with the life that he has now, enough to shed his mask.
As much as I love superhero books, I REALLY love real life books. Ones that take stories that are around us everyday and put it into an interesting form (like graphic novel). All in all Tales from the Farm was an amazing graphic novel.
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