Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brutally Honest; Look @ R Crumb, See Yourself!, April 22, 2005
Forget comix. R. Crumb is amongst the most brutally honest writiers in any genre, ever! What is more, when we look at his dead-on observations of himself, what we really see are universal characteristics about ourselves. If you laugh at Mr. Crumb, you better make doggone sure you ain't taking your-own-self too seriously.
There isn't anyway to begin describing this book. Each page jumps up and slaps your around equally. Lots of our old favorites are included, but the thing that is most vital to me as a reader are the solutions Mr. Crumb proposes. Like it or no, he has a keen sense of life's fairness, inequities, balance and absurdity.
Anyone can bitch, few can propose workable answers. Therein lies the depth of Mr. Crumb's thinking, albeit masterfully integrated within the fabric of highly personalized and skillful artistic abilities.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful (but not for the easily offended), April 27, 2005
R. Crumb is a famous underground comic, who in recent years has been elevated to cultural icon. Crumb's work is an exposition of his psyche - sometimes autobiographical, sometimes concentrating on his obsessions with sex and large, powerful women, sometimes, rather disconcertingly, both. His work divides critics - some hail him as a satirical genius: he has been compared to literary satirists Rabelais and Swift; and by art critics to Breughel and Goya. Others view his work as misogynistic pornography, socially degrading, emotionally immature, racist and sexist. There is merit in both views, I can certainly understand why some find his work offensive. However, I love his work and tend to agree with the former view, even if I do find some of the more lavish praise tends towards hyperbole. I suspect that Crumb does not really buy all of the hype - for example the book contains two well-known cartoons, both self-portraits: one with the line "Broigal it ain't", the other with the line "Yeah, but is it art".
This book is part biography including numerous photographs and commentary from critics, part collection of cartoons and sketches with together with a fantastic CD of some of Crumb's music (rooted firmly in the 1920s - an interesting mixture of blues & bluegrass played mainly on the banjo).
The cartoons amazing, the music CD brilliant (to be honest the CD on its own is worth the price of the whole package) and the biography is very interesting (personally I found the photographs the most disturbing part of the book - the picture of Crumb's wife Aileen giving him a piggy back while striking a `muscle' pose is too close to the imagery of the drawings for comfort). This is a wonderful introduction to Crumb, the man and his work, but even readers already very familiar with Crumb's work will find much to enjoy here.
A final note: if you have not seen it then I recommend the wonderful documentary Crumb, directed by Crumb's friend Terry Zwigoff.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect bedside book. Entertaining, dip-in-able and yeah...somewhat raunchy too. Crumb is a remarkable artist., January 17, 2006
The R. Crumb Handbook is a superb collection of his art is a fine record of his lifetime body of work. Crumb himself writes frankly about his childhood, his youthful fascination with comics and with early blues, and his voyage since the 1950s through drugs, the counterculture and his rise to fame (and concurrent depression) and his subsequent rehabilitation mentally, emotionally, as well as professionally in the world of serious art.
Crumb is by turns flaky, bemused, gutsy, sentimental and always 100% honest - and this beautifully produced volume helps us get to know and understand the complete life of this man: a true outsider who touches our collective inner nerve.
His essays make great reading, and he illustrates these with samples of his work that suddenly take on new meaning. I never realised the degree to which his Keep on Truckin' character became a millstone around his neck.
This book is perfect bedside material. Good for dipping into, and as our librarian belatedly found (below), somewhat raunchy too. I was given this volume as a gift, and it has not only entertained, it has filled in a juicy piece of my cultural upbringing. Robert Crumb is a hero, and icon even, but above all he's an honest reporter of our human condition. What a unique and illuminating book.
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