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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sim at his talented best,
By A Customer
This review is from: Melmoth (Cerebus, Volume 6) (Paperback)
Dave Sim certainly took a risk pushing Cerebus off to the side during this story and the previous Jaka's Story, but I think it worked out for the best because it allowed him to explore other means of narration and art.Every part of Melmoth is perfect, from the opening scenes with the Roach, to the gripping finale. The first gaunt shot of Oscar stepping from the shadows is priceless, and Sim and Gerhard create new levels of creativity by melding their two artforms together Even though the narration is taken from actual letters, the pace is still suspenseful, even though the reader knows Oscar is going to die. But above all, Sim's story is about life and people doing what they do normally, and he showcases it all brilliantly. This is possibly one of the finest comic works ever written, ranking up with Sim's previous Jaka's Story, Moore's Watchmen and Miller's Dark Knight Returns
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Every good story needs a break!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Melmoth (Cerebus, Volume 6) (Paperback)
I've seen a lot of reviews about Melmoth and I think most people are wrong saying that this is not an important story for Cerebus.In the last book, Jaka's Story, Cerebus was living with Jaka and Rick. Then he decided to go out to get some paint, but when he comes back, what he sees? He is shocked by the apparent death of Jaka (don't forget, his only true love!)!!! What would he do now? Dave Sim had to give a break, for the character to recover, since he went catatonic! This is the break that the story needed. In parallel, he showed the last days of the true Oscar Wilde (it is interesting to notice that there was other character called Oscar in Jaka's Story, also based in Oscar Wilde). What is impressive in this story is to see all the details of a natural death, written in letters by his close friends. At the beginning of the story, Oscar Wilde is still lucid (making comments about everything - literature, society and politics, etc.), drinks champagne and seems to be happy together with his friends. Then he gets more and more sick, the physicians notice that he is dying. At last, he cannot speak anymore, and there is no more hope. I think that this story might have some parallel with the death (in the end of the series) of Cerebus. Cerebus also is going to get old and die (we still don't know how, if naturally, or killed, or other thing). At last, it is important to comment that this book finishes (finishes?) with Cerebus finding out that Jaka was imprisoned by the Cirinists and that they tortured her. So, he recovers immediately and begins to kill all the Cirinists in his path (in a way we didn't see not even in the first book of the series). Then, you will be quite compelled to buy the next book in the series, which is Flights.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The finest graphic novel created by a North American to date,
By A Customer
This review is from: Melmoth (Cerebus, Volume 6) (Paperback)
The overall strength and creativity of Cerebus has made Dave Sim one of the great success stories of the independent comics field, but if one Cerebus story stands out, it is Melmoth. Unlike some Cerebus graphic novels, Melmoth is tightly plotted, largely thanks to the fact that Sim actually did very little in the way of plotting; the storyline concerning the death of Oscar Wilde is taken from actual letters. Much of the dialogue and narration is excerpted nearly word-for-word from the notes penned by Wilde friends Robert Ross and Reginald Turner. Locked into previously written narration, Sim is forced to discipline himself, and the result is the finest graphic novel created by a North American to date. Melmoth achieves its success despite -- or perhaps , because of -- the fact that Cerebus himself has less to do in this graphic novel than in any before or since. In a strange way, the minor role of his series' main protagonist sharply emphasized the best traits of Sim: slick and startling page layouts, seemingly-effortless pacing, witty dialogue and an unfailing touch with gestures and facial expressions that belies his sometimes clumsy draftsmanship. Because it has less to do with the "main" Cerebus storyline than any other entry in the series before or since, Melmoth makes the best graphic novel for those who have never had the pleasure of reading Sim's work. Don't pass it up.
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