Posts Tagged ‘ben templesmith’

What I read in January 2010

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I read six books in January! I know that Sasha over at Sasha & the Silverfish has me beat (she read twenty-two this month), but I’m still proud.

  1. Under the Dome by Stephen King
  2. The Bermudez Triangle by Maureen Johnson
  3. My Clockwork Heart by Joely Sue Burkhart
  4. Fray by Joss Whedon
  5. Wormwood: It Only Hurts When I Pee by Ben Templesmith
  6. Wormwood: Calamari Rising by Ben Templesmith

This month, I’m going to try to beat my own record and read 10! What did you read in January?

Wormwood: Calamari Rising

Saturday, January 30th, 2010
Wormwood: Calamari Rising

Wormwood: Calamari Rising

I loved the first two Wormwood books. They were genius; how can you possibly beat stripteasing Leprechauns and giant squid? The third book, Calamari Rising, took the Wormwood trilogy to a whole new level.

The Brothers Calamari visit Earth to take revenge on Wormwood and to absorb his knowledge into their already huge pot of knowledge. The gang — Medusa, Phoebe, Mr. P, the Leprechaun queen, and Medusa’s girls — band together to fight the squid. I can’t tell you the rest without spoiling anything, but oh, man, was it great.

I would have to say that this book was my favorite Wormwood book. I really, really hope that Ben Templesmith does more.

Wormwood: It Only Hurts When I Pee

Saturday, January 30th, 2010
Wormwood: It Only Hurts When I Pee

Wormwood: It Only Hurts When I Pee

Rumpa pumpa, friends. If you enjoy Leprechaun curses, stripteasing queens, and dead little girls with lollipops, the second Wormwood book is right for you!

It took me a while to read this one, but only because I was super busy. As usual, Ben Templesmith‘s writing was witty, fun, and very imaginative. His ideas are a little strange, but that’s what makes Wormwood so much fun. I love that Templesmith seemed to completely give himself over to his imagination in these books — especially in this one. He introduces the Calamari brothers, these alien squid creatures who absorb world and whom Wormwood has a dark history with. He also introduces the Leprechaun queen, who is so gross you just can’t help but love her. (Personally, I think she and Mr. Pendulum would make a great couple.)

We also get to see what Wormwood does for a living (you know, aside from hanging out at Medusa’s place drinking beer and neglecting his tab).

What I love most about the Wormwood series is that the art is not perfect. Templesmith is very talented — see his art archives — but the style he uses for Wormwood is more rough than his other stuff. For example, when he draws Medusa, her proportions are slightly off, making her look skewed. This gives her an otherworldly appearance. She’s damn sexy for a drawing, but it’s hard to forget that she is a guardian of the gate.

While I enjoyed Birds, Bees, Blood & Beer, I loved It Only Hurts When I Pee. Have you read it? What did you think? Leave a comment and share your thoughts, please!

Wormwood: Birds, Bees, Blood & Beer (Video!)

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Yes, I know I cut off my head. It was an accident and I am not ashamed. I am also too lazy to do another video, as it was a great video, headless me and all!

Wormwood: Birds, Bees, Blood & Beer: Leroy's Special Brew

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Wormwood What the hell should I read next? I wondered, as soon as I finished Accidents of Nature. Tongue just wasn’t holding my interest anymore (there is only so much “wah, he left me” that I can take), I wasn’t much in the mood for Thunder and Blood (even though the first chapter was decently intriguing), and in all honesty, I’m too busy to do much of any reading anyway. (The hazards of being a part-time and also freelance web designer: sometimes things just get insanely crazy!)

While I was at Mike’s tonight, he mentioned that he is out of box space for his comics and graphics novels. “Speaking of which,” he said. “I have to give you something to read.” He jumped up and dug out his three Wormwood graphic novels. He’d shown me them when he had first read them. The artwork is ghoulish and gothic, reminding me of a much more violent Jhonen Vasquez. The guy who does Wormwood also did 30 Days of Night (the movie was meh, but I hear the graphic novel is sick).

All I knew about Wormwood is that the main character is a dead body controlled by a little worm.

Totally up my alley; I was the token goth girl of my graduating high school class.

I took the books home and read the introducing chapter, “Leroy’s Special Brew,” in one sitting. I so wish I had the time to read more; these books have read-in-one-sitting potential, which is what I think Mike did. The scene opened with Wormwood and his robot sidekick — a ZZ Top lookalike — sipping beer at a demon strip club. They chat with Wormwood’s apparent ex-girlfriend, Medusa (the owner of the club), when a tentacle sprouts out of one of the other patron’s mouth, turning him into a venus flytrap — but scarier. The tentacles grab Wormwood, start to choke him, and the ZZ Top robot shoots Wormy’s head off.

AWESOME.

They then have to track down who started the whole mess, as Wormwood tells them that the tentacles are contagious and are implanted in people who come into contact with someone or something else infected with the fungus. Wormwood is a beer loving corpse. He deduces that the fungus is being put into the beer, and is pissed that someone is fucking with his beer.

It was a great introductory chapter. The author is also the artist, so what you see is what is exactly what was in his head. This, in my opinion, is how all comics should be. (Kudos to my future brother-in-law Robbie for writing and drawing his own graphic novel.) I feel like, with all of the chefs contributing to the stew, a lot of the original idea is lost and turns into something else entirely. I know I would go mad if I couldn’t draw, had to write a graphic novel, and couldn’t properly communicate to my artist what I was seeing.

Templesmith uses this prelude to explain that the demon strippers are actually guardians to the gates of Hell. His dialogue is colorful and witty, and it has less of a potty mouth than I do. (Seriously; we’re lucky the name of this site is not Fucking Bookworm. And this is why I will probably never get any advertisers.)

I also love the colors used; each page sticks to the same color palette, and the result is the feeling of being in a world full of witty undead, demons, and a few humans thrown in the mix.

There’s no strong language, but it’s pretty suggestive, so I wouldn’t recommend giving this to a kid. For anyone who can appreciate dark humor mixed with everyday humor, this is for you.

So what are your favorite graphic novels? Leave a comment and tell me about them!

PS: Take our poll so we can decide on our first book club read!