Showing posts with label tony moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tony moore. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

The Walking Dead: The Covers

Slight change of plans. Today was going to be another item from one of the recent cons, but someone bought this book from me and so I figured I'd read it and review it before I ship it off.

By the way, if you read and appreciate my comic reviews and are wondering if there was a way to support the effort, I would point you in the direction of my own comic book small press, my books for sale on half.com, my assorted geeky ebay auctions, or my books for trade on paperbackswap.com.

Title: The Walking Dead: The Covers
Date: 2010
Publisher: Image Comics
Writer: Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, Charlie Adlard
Artist: Tony Moore, Charlie Adlard
Colorist: Tony Moore, Cliff Rathburn
Cover: Charlie Adlard, Cliff Rathburn
Editor: Sina Grace

This hardcover edition collects the cover illustrations from the first fifty issues of The Walking Dead. Each cover gets a full-page treatment (just the art without the cover lettering), and on the facing page are notes from Robert Kirkman and from the artist along with sketches and alternate versions.

The artwork is great, and the book's format does an excellent job of showcasing it. The notes sometimes tend toward the technical side of the artwork, with some decent insights for artists into the processes involved. Tony Moore writes a lot more than Charlie Adlard does, but I thought there were some good anecdotes from both artists.

Rating: 8/10

Friday, March 18, 2011

The Walking Dead Volume 2: Miles Behind Us

Title: The Walking Dead
Issue: Volume 2: Miles Behind Us
Date: 2004
Publisher: Image Comics
Writer: Robert Kirkman
Penciler: Charlie Adlard
Inker: Charlie Adlard
Letterer: Robert Kirkman
Gray Tones: Cliff Rathburn
Cover: Tony Moore

The second trade paperback volume (reprinting issues 7-12 of the original comic series)of the zombie apocalypse comic saga features a group of survivors on the run, looking for some kind of sanctuary to settled down in.

A gated housing community nearly becomes a deathtrap, and the group moves on to finally locate a possible haven with another small group of survivors holed up in a farm. But the leader of the farm group has a very different view on how to deal with the walking dead.

There is a ton of good character development between the moments of danger and horror in this book. The series continues to be a story about people, rather than about the zombies. As the characters are pushed to the breaking point by and increasingly desperate situation, they make new friendships, alliances, and romances, and find their own ways to cope with the destruction around them.

Kirkman's writing is sharp, and the art team of Adlard and Rathburn capture the post-apocalyptic landscape in vivid detail.

Rating: 8/10