astralstreeting started reading The Playboy by Chester Brown

The Playboy by Chester Brown
As with every Chester Brown book, The Playboy—originally published in 1992—was ahead of its time, illustrating the fearlessness and prescience …
This link opens in a pop-up window
No books found.
As with every Chester Brown book, The Playboy—originally published in 1992—was ahead of its time, illustrating the fearlessness and prescience …
"A gritty collection of graphic short stories by a Japanese manga master depicting life on the streets among punks, gangsters, …
An autobiographical story of childhood and family from the international sensation and bestseller, Karl Ove Knausgaard. A family of four …
"A gritty collection of graphic short stories by a Japanese manga master depicting life on the streets among punks, gangsters, …
This comic presents the idea that the Book of Matthew is a subversive text because it includes the genealogies of different women who may or may not have been sex workers. It includes all of the necessary footnotes, citations, and discussion to follow his train of thought. In these footnotes, the author describes himself as a religious guy and lays down his positions on faith. What he actually believes is even more subversive than the premise of this book, and I can appreciate it even as a very non-religious guy.
It reminded me of King Jesus by Robert Graves. One of the plot points in that book is that the marriage between the elderly Joseph and the young Mary was to protect her honor after some sexual impropriety (consensual or not).
Mary Wept Over the Feet of Jesus was a perfect antidote to the polemics of CS Lewis that made …
This comic presents the idea that the Book of Matthew is a subversive text because it includes the genealogies of different women who may or may not have been sex workers. It includes all of the necessary footnotes, citations, and discussion to follow his train of thought. In these footnotes, the author describes himself as a religious guy and lays down his positions on faith. What he actually believes is even more subversive than the premise of this book, and I can appreciate it even as a very non-religious guy.
It reminded me of King Jesus by Robert Graves. One of the plot points in that book is that the marriage between the elderly Joseph and the young Mary was to protect her honor after some sexual impropriety (consensual or not).
Mary Wept Over the Feet of Jesus was a perfect antidote to the polemics of CS Lewis that made me stop reading the Space Trilogy. I read this stuff for both pleasure and research purposes. The two books of the Space Trilogy were a frustrating blind alley for me. But Brown's comic has re-oriented me in a fruitful direction.
@CorpusChristi420 Chester Brown’s Mary Wept Over the Feet of Jesus is pointing me to this comic…
Dr. Ransom is ordered to Perelandra by the supreme being, and there he finds a Garden of Eden.
Lots of beautiful prose but it starts to lose its charm when one of the characters starts ranting against dualism moments before revealing he is possessed by a demon.
At points I felt like CS Lewis was stopping the fiction to beat me over the head with his belief system — like with the long rant about gender and how mountains are metaphysically masculine, yada yada.
I haven’t read Paradise Lost so I suspect a lot of stuff from this book is lost on me from a “oh look he is referencing great literature” standpoint.