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Tuesday, July 27, 2010 ( 7/27/2010 07:10:00 AM ) Bill S. All of the expected tales of murder and madness are here, though none of Poe’s Dupin detective tales are featured, a notable omission since the author is largely credited to inventing the modern mystery tale with “ratiocinative” fictions like “Murders in the Rue Morgue.” Still, you can understand the appeal the more gothic entries have for visual artists: it’s much more fun to render the narrator’s guilt-ridden descent into insanity than it is to present the detective’s logical explanation for murderous events. You just know that Rick Geary, responsible for such detail driven graphic novels as his “Treasury of Victorian Murder” series, had a ball depicting the narrator’s outsized PoV in “The Tell-Tale Heart.” In general, the stories that work best are the ones (like Geary’s) that push the edge of storytelling rather than straightforwardly recounting event. Thus, a tale like “William Wilson,” a doppelganger story told from the evil twin’s perspective, comes across a little flat due to Dan Dougherty’s straightforward illustrations, while a piece like Pedro Lopez’s Alex Toth-inspired “Cask of Amontillado” proves more memorable. Other highlights include Milton Knight’s engagingly cartoonish adaptation of “Never Bet the Devil Your Head” (the memorable source for a Fellini movie adaptation, too), Matt Howarth’s ”Fall of the House of Usher” (which uses cross-hatching to suitably oppressive effect); Pomplun and Lance Tooks’ take on the more obscure “Imp of the Perverse” and J.B. Bonivert’s new-to-this-edition stylized adaptations of two death meditation poems, “The Raven” and “Annabel Lee.” The latter especially makes these two much-read pieces fresh and mutes the elements of Victorian sentimentality embedded in each poem. Not sure if Poe, that most modern of early American writers, would approve or not, but they definitely work for this 21st century reader. Labels: art comics # | |
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