Burry Paper Promethea Lords
Jul. 10th, 2007 09:51 pmLords and Ladies, by Terry Pratchett
One of the few Pratchetts I hadn't read before. Not my favorite, but 'not my favorite Pratchett' just means I liked it instead of loving it. There were some chilling scenes, for a goofy comedy.
(126/250)
The Burry Man's Day, by Catriona McPherson
This one was a lot darker and less fluffy than the first one. I don't know if that is a good thing or a bad thing, but it was still fun. I think if you like WW1 era stuff and British folklore, these are a safe bet.
(127/250)
Y The Last Man: Paper Dolls, by Brian K. Vaughan et al
This one jumped around a lot, both spatially and temporally, but it held together well. Loving this series very much.
(128/250)
Promethea, Book 3, by Alan Moore et al
Large parts of this were more a magic textbook than a graphic *novel*, per se. But no matter how much I try to be irritated by this series, it's just. so. pretty. And I keep coming back for more - gratefully.
(129/250)
One of the few Pratchetts I hadn't read before. Not my favorite, but 'not my favorite Pratchett' just means I liked it instead of loving it. There were some chilling scenes, for a goofy comedy.
(126/250)
The Burry Man's Day, by Catriona McPherson
This one was a lot darker and less fluffy than the first one. I don't know if that is a good thing or a bad thing, but it was still fun. I think if you like WW1 era stuff and British folklore, these are a safe bet.
(127/250)
Y The Last Man: Paper Dolls, by Brian K. Vaughan et al
This one jumped around a lot, both spatially and temporally, but it held together well. Loving this series very much.
(128/250)
Promethea, Book 3, by Alan Moore et al
Large parts of this were more a magic textbook than a graphic *novel*, per se. But no matter how much I try to be irritated by this series, it's just. so. pretty. And I keep coming back for more - gratefully.
(129/250)