Join Books.org — it's free

Alternative & Underground Comics, DC Comics & Graphic Novels, Superhero Comics & Graphic Novels
Bizarro World by Various β€” book cover

Bizarro World

by Various, DC Comics
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Where else could the world's greatest alternative cartoonists run rampant through the DC Universe in an allnew anthology of utterly unhinged stories and art? It could only happen in the BIZARRO WORLD!This big slab o' comics features work by many of the fantastic creators who worked on the BIZARRO COMICS book (and made it an awardwinner)! This time the contributors weaving strange and wonderful tales about the quirky Bizarro include Tony Millionaire, Kyle Baker, Evan Dorkin, Dylan Horrocks, Harvey Pekar, James Kochalka, Peter Bagge, Scott Morse, Ben Dunn and a host of others, along with some doublesecret surprise guests! All this, topped off with a cover by Jaime Hernandez! It's big! It's indisputably rectangular! It stays crunchy even after you pour on the milk!

Synopsis

Where else could the world's greatest alternative cartoonists run rampant through the DC Universe in an allnew anthology of utterly unhinged stories and art? It could only happen in the BIZARRO WORLD!This big slab o' comics features work by many of the fantastic creators who worked on the BIZARRO COMICS book (and made it an awardwinner)! This time the contributors weaving strange and wonderful tales about the quirky Bizarro include Tony Millionaire, Kyle Baker, Evan Dorkin, Dylan Horrocks, Harvey Pekar, James Kochalka, Peter Bagge, Scott Morse, Ben Dunn and a host of others, along with some doublesecret surprise guests! All this, topped off with a cover by Jaime Hernandez! It's big! It's indisputably rectangular! It stays crunchy even after you pour on the milk!

Publishers Weekly

This sequel to 2001's Bizarro Comics anthology again invites underground and alternative cartoonists-and a few other unlikely types-to get nutty with the DC Universe's characters. This time, curiously, almost all the stories are written and drawn by two different people. Contributors include some very big names: Craig Thompson draws a Spectre story, and Harvey Pekar of American Splendor fame imagines himself as Bizarro. A few of the highlights are by creators who also appeared in the first volume, notably Chip Kidd and Tony Millionaire, who collaborate on another totally out-to-lunch Batman story. A couple of themes and favorite characters recur; more than one story uses the "Jingle bells/Batman smells" schoolyard song, and everyone seems to love playing with the Legion of Super-Heroes. And a few creators take the "bizarro" mandate as an excuse to imitate the look and feel of early MAD comics. The best stories imagine the superheroes' world colliding with the plebeian realities these cartoonists specialize in: Kyle Baker's dryly amusing riff on Batman's butler custom-ordering a Batmobile, Mike Doughty and Danny Hellman's deadpan tale about Aquaman playing an open-mike night and getting upstaged by Robin, and Peter Bagge and Gilbert Hernandez's "The Red Bee Returns," in which the most deservedly obscure superhero ever attempts to update his image. (Apr.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This sequel to 2001's Bizarro Comics anthology again invites underground and alternative cartoonists-and a few other unlikely types-to get nutty with the DC Universe's characters. This time, curiously, almost all the stories are written and drawn by two different people. Contributors include some very big names: Craig Thompson draws a Spectre story, and Harvey Pekar of American Splendor fame imagines himself as Bizarro. A few of the highlights are by creators who also appeared in the first volume, notably Chip Kidd and Tony Millionaire, who collaborate on another totally out-to-lunch Batman story. A couple of themes and favorite characters recur; more than one story uses the "Jingle bells/Batman smells" schoolyard song, and everyone seems to love playing with the Legion of Super-Heroes. And a few creators take the "bizarro" mandate as an excuse to imitate the look and feel of early MAD comics. The best stories imagine the superheroes' world colliding with the plebeian realities these cartoonists specialize in: Kyle Baker's dryly amusing riff on Batman's butler custom-ordering a Batmobile, Mike Doughty and Danny Hellman's deadpan tale about Aquaman playing an open-mike night and getting upstaged by Robin, and Peter Bagge and Gilbert Hernandez's "The Red Bee Returns," in which the most deservedly obscure superhero ever attempts to update his image. (Apr.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2006
Publisher
DC Comics
Pages
200
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781401206574

More by Various

Similar books