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The Graphic Canon, Volume 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway Infinite Jest

Current price: $44.95
The Graphic Canon, Volume 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway Infinite Jest
The Graphic Canon, Volume 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway Infinite Jest

Barnes and Noble

The Graphic Canon, Volume 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway Infinite Jest

Current price: $44.95

Size: Paperback

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The classic literary canon meets the comics artists, illustrators, and other artists who have remade reading in Russ Kick's magisterial, three-volume, full-color , volumes 1, 2, and 3. Volume 3 brings to life the literature of the end of the 20th century and the start of the 21st, including a Sherlock Holmes mystery, an H.G. Wells story, an illustrated guide to the Beat writers, a one-act play from Zora Neale Hurston, a disturbing meditation on , Rilke's soul-stirring , Anaïs Nin's diaries, the visions of Black Elk, the heroin classic (published four years before William Burroughs' ), and the postmodernism of Thomas Pynchon, David Foster Wallace, Kathy Acker, Raymond Carver, and Donald Barthelme. The towering works of modernism are here—T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and "The Waste Land," Yeats's "The Second Coming" done as a magazine spread, , stories from Kafka, by Virginia Woolf, James Joyce's masterpiece, , and his short story "Araby" from , rare early work from Faulkner and Hemingway (by artists who have drawn for Marvel), and poems by Gertrude Stein and Edna St. Vincent Millay. You'll also find original comic versions of short stories by W. Somerset Maugham, Flannery O'Connor, and Saki (manga style), plus adaptations of (and everyone said it couldn't be done!), , and by Hermann Hesse, "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" by Langston Hughes, , J.G. Ballard's , and photo-dioramas for . Feast your eyes on new full-page illustrations for , and three Borges stories. Robert Crumb's rarely seen adaptation of captures Sartre's existential dread. Dame Darcy illustrates Cormac McCarthy's masterpiece, , universally considered one of the most brutal novels ever written and long regarded as unfilmable by Hollywood. Tara Seibel, the only female artist involved with the Harvey Pekar Project, turns in an exquisite series of illustrations for . And then there's the moment we've been waiting for: the first graphic adaptation from Kurt Vonnegut's masterwork, . Among many other gems.
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