Afbeelding auteur

Justin Green (1945–2022)

Auteur van Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary

9+ Werken 191 Leden 5 Besprekingen

Werken van Justin Green

Binky Brown Sampler (1995) 42 exemplaren
Sign Game (1995) 13 exemplaren
Sacred and Profane (1976) 2 exemplaren

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Bijou funnies, No. 5 — Illustrator, sommige edities3 exemplaren
Mineshaft #31 (2014) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Prime Cuts: Words & Pictures #1 (1987) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Bijou funnies, No. 6 — Illustrator, sommige edities2 exemplaren
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Besprekingen

"Our little half-breed becomes a lone wolf whose favorite pastime is hiding out and trancing."
 
Gemarkeerd
uncleflannery | 3 andere besprekingen | May 16, 2020 |
A charming book that's part history of signpainting, part how-to tutorial, and part amusing little comic. Every artisan field should have a historian as personable as Justin Green.
 
Gemarkeerd
mrgan | Oct 30, 2017 |
This is a reprint of the 1972 comic. I have the original in the garage, and when I first read it I was kind of put off by it. It's an autobiographical story of a young boy and his struggles with sexual urges and Catholicism. Now I find his scrupulosity and neuroses interesting but then I just thought he was kind of weird. I just didn’t get it – I was thoroughly in the late 60s – 70s mindset of sex is groovy, guilt is for squares, if it feels good do it, and couldn’t understand the shame and conflicting urges he’s portraying here. I’ve come to feel differently about these things. Art Spiegelman wrote the intro to this edition and worshipfully opines that Green invented the autobiographical comic. I don't think so – Robert Crumb was way ahead of him - but it's a great personal story.
Green has an odd, boxy style that I wasn't sure about but have come to really like. Again, it's very personal. And, we're Facebook friends and he’s commented on flea market photo finds that I've been posting!
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
piemouth | 3 andere besprekingen | Oct 26, 2015 |
The deluxe McSweeney's edition is an oversized book that reproduces the original art pages exactly as they are. White-out, tanning, and all blemishes are printed onto the page exactly.

Binky Brown is the original graphic memoir - it inspired Art Spiegelman to author Maus as Spiegelman noted in his introduction. Justin Green retells the story of struggling with his OCD as a child, especially when he was being raised Catholic. Explicit art - penises are literally on almost every page of the comic itself.

The story itself is what is considered a traditional memoir about growing up - heartbreak, struggling with adolescence, and then it adds the extra layer of attempting to reconcile Catholic taboos with his OCD. The OCD manifested into beating himself senseless while saying his prayer every night as a child, then gradually morphed into some strange condition where he believed that his penis emanated sinful rays 2 miles long, and if it struck a church or holy statue, he had sinned. The world that Justin Green lives in is a strange one.

Originally written in 1972, Justin Green has written an afterword nearly 40 years later for this edition. He still struggles with OCD, but has married and has had children. He explains his life and struggles with OCD.

I would neither recommend nor criticize this work, and award it three stars out of five. It's worth examining to see what inspired Maus and the entire genre of the graphic memoir. Other than that, it retains no value for me and as such, I haven't kept it in my personal library.
… (meer)
1 stem
Gemarkeerd
nicklong | 3 andere besprekingen | Mar 15, 2013 |

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Statistieken

Werken
9
Ook door
19
Leden
191
Populariteit
#114,255
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
5
ISBNs
9
Talen
2

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