Here'sanother Amazon shopping list of mine. This is a list of most new wave French comics currently available in English... now updated with a few titles that will be out this fall. Many of these now legendary cartoonists - Trondheim, Satrapi, Sfar, Guibert etc - got started through the publishing house L'Association, which was kind of a French version of North American independent Publishers Fantagraphics and Drawn and Quarterly.
"The "Dungeon" fantasy series is a collaboration between several of the key cartoonists of the new wave. "Zenith" is the main series, "Early Years" is about (you guessed it) the early years of the dungeon, "Twilight" about the twilight years."
Marlene Dietrich will have to wait a bit, can't wait to post a few Josephine Baker photos, but then josephine was anti-nazi too. And a great dancer and singer, and one of the first true black superstars.
Too bad I can't resist cheating a bit and posting a few photos from her late 20s semi-naked 'Dancing Savage' period, that probably means that this blog will be 'flagged' by Americans so I won't become a trusted future resource for American School kids. Too bad. At least there shouldn't be anything to offend most European readers, not even the younger ones... Well not unless they find my bad writing and none-native grasp of English grammar vaguely offensive.
The beginning of my current fixation on the 30's.. well, actually it began two years ago when I finally got round to listening to the legendary Harry Smith "Anthology of American Folk Music", which is something every music fan HAS to get round to sooner or later. But the REALLY current fixation started when I got into two books by French comic book artist Joann Sfar, "The Rabbi's Cat" and "Klezmer". Sfar is Jewish.
"The Rabbi's Cat" is based on stories from his fathers Algerian family - it's about a nice old rabbi living in Algeria in the 30's, and about his (sometimes) talking cat. The book is a mix of historical and theological information, magical realism and fantasy. I particularly liked the last story in the English language volume 1 (which contains three French volumes), which is about the Rabbi going to Paris with his daighter and her new husband, on their honeymoon. At first he's grumpy about 'going all the way up to the eskimos', but he slowly gets to like Paris. It's a really sweet story. :)
Here's the cover for the Spanish edition of the Paris story - like I said,the same story is in the English book too, they just chose a different cover.
"Klezmer" is based on stories from his eastern european Jewish mother. I couldn't find an exact date in the book, but I think it's supposed to be set in the thirties too. It's pre world war Eastern Europe. It's a darker series than "The Rabbi's Cat", the Eastern European Jews probably had lives that were a lot rougher than the ones in Algeria. I loved the sweetness of the rabbi series, but this works great too, as a dark flip-side to the other series, the art is rougher too. Sfar is always a fast working cartoonist - apparently he's got around a hundred books in print in France - but in "Klezmer" his art is VERY rough. But it's great, the drawing are like those wonderful first sketches a lot of artists do that they're never able to quite match in the finished art. Except in this book the sketches ARE the finished art. Highly recommended!
(page above is from the French edition, but it's in the English edition too.)
Sfar also does great (none 30's) books about vampires and golems and space pirates and sword-fighting ducks. I've liked everything I've read so far, will get round to reading more.
I started this as a blog about the 1930s, but it was too restricting , and I'm too easily distracted, so now I'm blogging about everything that strikes my fancy. I'm from Denmark, so there will be occasional lapses in English grammar.