Showing posts with label Studio Farlaine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Studio Farlaine. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

#IReadsYou Book Review: OUCH

OUCH
STUDIO FARLAINE

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

AUTHOR: Pug Grumble
COVER: Cutlip
ISBN: 978-0-9890058-9-0; hardcover (November 2020)
264pp, B&W, $12.95 U.S.

Ouch is a 2020 comic novel from author Pug Grumble.  Comic book people may know Grumble from his seven-volume fantasy graphic novel series, Farlaine the Goblin.  Ouch is a prose novel that offers up a quirky love triangle made up of a masochist, his sadistic girlfriend, and the klutzy girl who enters the picture.

Ouch introduces Sylvester, a man with a bit of thing for pain.  He enjoys everything from splinters and stubbed toes to the pain caused by food burns and getting a tattoo.  Sylvester really gets to experience pain when his kinda-sorta girlfriend, Felicia, gets a hold of him.  A sadistic siren and queen of torments, Felicia will put out cigarettes on Sylvester's back and use sharp objects, even tools, on him.

However, fate steps in one evening while Sylvester is shopping for the ointments, medications, and bandages he needs to recover or even to survive the sadist in his life.  At the Wong Chen Supermarket, Sylvester hears a commotion on another aisle,  There he meets Natalie, a girl under a pile of products that fell on her.  You see, Natalie is a klutz, and not just any kind of klutz.  She is a colossal klutz who could end up in the hospital from a series of events that begins with a mere stumble.

As fate would have it, Felicia must leave Sylvester's life for a while, and happy coincidence (or fate) keeps bringing him to Natalie.  And so nothing will ever be the same for Sylvester, Natalie, or a vengeful Felicia.  Watching it all, from a safe distance, of course, is Sylvester's pal, Socket, who is obsessed with electricity and the shocks he can deliver to people with it, and Poke, Sylvester's narcoleptic porcupine.

THE LOWDOWN:  Ouch is one of those novels that deserves to be called “truly unique.”  It is one of the most different novels that I have read over the last two decades, at least.  Being a fan of Farlaine the Goblin, I requested a copy of Ouch from Pug Grumble, curious about what he would do in a storytelling medium like the prose novel, obviously so different from comics.

Pug has a surprisingly deft touch with prose, and his execution of Ouch's narrative yields a read that is as engaging as anything you, dear readers, will find on the bestsellers list.  What is different is the cast of characters.  For instance, Sylvester, as a masochist, is not usually for popular consumption.  He is an addict, but he is a joyful adventurer in the realms of pain both familiar and unfamiliar.

Felicia is gleeful and shameless, and is more prankster than sadistic villain, although she has dark dreams.  Natalie is a klutz on the level that goes beyond mere bad luck and seems supernatural, as if she and her accidents exist partly in a place that is like “The Twilight Zone.”  The author simply presents them as characters with which we can identify.  Like us, they have needs and wants and confuse which are really important and which are merely indulgences.

If I would find a fault with Ouch, it is that both Felicia and Natalie seem more like the ideas for characters than like actual characters for much of the first half of the novel.  It is when Pug introduces trouble, change, and confusion into their lives that Felicia and Natalie spring to life.  They become whole characters, full of color, conflict, and motivation, and they grab the spotlight from Sylvester, who seems fully formed and complete right from the start of the novel.

Ouch calls to readers looking for something different in a comic novel, and it is truly a comic novel.  Pug offers a misadventure that presents a side of addictions and afflictions that might be off-putting, but is quite interesting, so we can't help but want to get inside these characters.  Ouch is timely, or it seems so.  In an age of strife and pandemics, when self-interest … trumps caution, Ouch is fresh and vibrant and gives us lovable afflicted and addicted rogues and foils.

I READS YOU RECOMMENDS:  People who are really looking to read something that isn't the same old thing will want to read Ouch.

8 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"

https://puggrumble.com/


The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Review: FARLAINE THE GOBLIN Book 6 The Winglands


FARLAINE THE GOBLIN No. 6
STUDIO FARLAINE – @TreeGoblin

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

CARTOONIST: Pug Grumble
MISC. ART: Larry MacDougall; Jeremy Treece
COVER: Pug Grumble with Jean-Francois Beaulieu
VARIANT COVER: Larry MacDougall
ISBN:  978-0-9890058-6-9; paperback (May 2018)
48pp, B&W; $5.00 U.S.

All-Ages

Book 6” “The Winglands”

Farlaine the Goblin is a series of fantasy graphic novels published by Studio Farlaine and written and drawn by the cartoonist who goes by the nom de plume, “Pug Grumble” (but was previously credited as “Anonymous”).  Mr. Grumble recently provided me with a PDF review copy of the the latest Farlaine edition.

Each Farlaine comic book/graphic novel is published as a paperback (landscape dimensions 11.8” x 7.75”).  The story focuses on Farlaine the Goblin, a tree goblin and a shaman from the forest of Fin-Din.  He has spent years wandering the many Oddlands of Wug in search of a forest that he can call his own.  Farlaine has two companions.  The first is Ehrenwort, a tree he carries in a sack on his back; Farlaine also talks to Ehrenwort, whom he describes as his “Verdan.”  The second companion is a “Tink” from an earlier adventure in the “Tinklands.”  A rotund, mechanical fellow (think Star Wars' BB-8 with two wheels), he has been named Drowsy by Farlaine.

Farlaine the Goblin: Book 6, The Winglands begins as Farlaine, Ehrenwort, and Drowsy leave the Vaultlands behind... in a hurry.  Now, they are in the Winglands where everything has wings... or can have wings... and can lose them.  To return to the land below, Farlaine and company need parachutes, but in order to get chutes, they need “barter.”  They can earn barter by getting jobs, so as they settle in, they are shocked by how well they fit it.  Then, a recent enemy proves difficult to avoid.

As I have previously written, I read Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Volume 1, which collects the first three graphic novels in the series, and was surprised that a comic book of such high quality could not find a publisher, forcing Pug Grumble to self-publish it.  After reading the sixth edition, I feel the same as I did after reading the fifth.  I am surprised that Farlaine the Goblin is not a huge hit and a multiple Eisner Award and Harvey Award nominee.

I wish I could say what the best thing about Farlaine the Goblin: Book 6, The Winglands is, but I cannot.  I can say what the worst thing is about it and previous volumes:  damn, there is never enough.  The rapturous joy of reading ends to soon, but then, I can read it again to recover that feeling.

Seriously, the truth is that there are so many “best things” about this delightful edition of a fantastic series, which is also what I said in my review of Book 5, The Vaultlands.  Farlaine is a fantasy adventure in the spirit of Looney Tunes and Lewis Carroll, and Book 6 also has a classic comics feel, as if the hand of Carl Barks subtly provides signs and hints for Pug Grumble, who shares a spirit of imagination and adventure with Barks.

The Winglands is, as the other volumes are, funny, delightful, and inventive.  To paraphrase what the movie Joker asked about the movie Batman, I will ask, where does Pub Grumble get all those wonderful ideas?  Where is the well of whimsy in which he dips his pin?  No more questions; let us simply enjoy.  I highly recommend Farlaine the Goblin: Book 6, The Winglands.

10 out of 10

facebook.com/FarlianeTheGoblin
twitter.com/treegoblin

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2018 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Sunday, July 2, 2017

FARLAINE THE GOBLIN: Book 5 - The Vaultlands


FARLAINE THE GOBLIN #5
STUDIO FARLAINE – @TreeGoblin

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

CARTOONIST: Pug Grumble (formerly “Anonymous”)
COVER: Pug Grumble
VARIANT COVER: Skottie Young
ISBN:  978-0-9890058-5-2; paperback (May 2017)
58pp, B&W; $5.00 U.S.

All-Ages

Book 5” “Farlaine in the Vaultlands”

Farlaine the Goblin is a series of graphic novels published by Studio Farlaine and written and drawn by the cartoonist who currently uses the name “Pug Grumble” (but was previously credited as “Anonymous”).  Mr. Grumble recently sent me a review copy of the the latest Farlaine edition.  [I first contacted Studio Farliane in 2015 and received review copies of two Farlaine the Goblin books, including the fourth book.]

Each comic book/graphic novel is published as a paperback (landscape dimensions 11.8” x 7.75”).  The story focuses on Farlaine the Goblin, a tree goblin and a shaman from the forest of Fin-Din.  He has spent years wandering the many Oddlands of Wug in search of a forest that he can call his own.  Farlaine has two companions.  The first is Ehrenwort, a tree he carries in a sack on his back; Farlaine also talks to Ehrenwort, whom he describes as his “Verdan.”  The second companion is a “Tink” from an earlier adventure in the “Tinklands.”  A rotund, mechanical fellow (think Star Wars' BB-8 with two wheels), he has been named Drowsy by Farlaine.

Farlaine the Goblin: Book 5, Vaultlands begins as Farlaine, Ehrenwort, and Drowsy leave the Twistlands behind.  Now, it is on to the next land as Farlaine continues his search for a forest.  Welcome to the Vaultlands!  The first person the trio meets is Jabs Jibber, Vaultlands realtor and guide, but he seems like scam artist.

Farlaine and friends discover a land full of... well, vaults.  There are vaults the size of post office boxes (and stacked like them, also) to ones that look like lock boxes.  The deeper they go into Vaultlands, the more diverse and stranger the vaults become, and farther still, they are older, larger, and more mysterious.  There is a treasure hunter to meet and also a creature with a taste for one of the crew, but will Farlaine finally find that forest?

After reading Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Volume 1, which collects the first three graphic novels in the series, I was surprised that a comic of such high quality could not find a publisher, forcing the creator to self-publish it.  After reading the fifth issue, I am still surprised that Farlaine the Goblin is not a huge hit and a multiple Eisner Award nominee.

I wish I could say that the best thing about Farlaine the Goblin: Book 5, Vaultlands is the Uncle Scrooge reference, but the truth is that there are so many “best things” about this delightful edition of a fantastic series.  Farlaine is a fantasy adventure.  It is epic fantasy on a small, but no less engrossing scale.  Farlaine the Goblin is in the spirit of the Looney Tunes and Lewis Carroll, and Book 5, The Vaultlands epitomizes all of that.

The Vaultlands is funny and inventive, delightful and imaginative.  How the heck can a land full of vaults deliver so strongly as it does on whimsy and wonder?  Maybe, it is the magic of Pug's beautiful black and white art that recalls classic illustrated books for children from the 19th and early 20th centuries.  I could see Farlaine and company at Toad Hall.

I highly recommend Farlaine the Goblin: Book 5, Vaultlands and this series in general.

A+

www.farlaine.com
facebook.com/FarlianeTheGoblin
twitter.com/treegoblin

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Sunday, November 8, 2015

Review: FARLAINE THE GOBLIN: Book 4: The Twistlands


FARLAINE THE GOBLIN #4
STUDIO FARLAINE – @TreeGoblin

CARTOONIST: Anonymous
COVER: Anonymous
VARIANT COVER: Charles Paul Wilson III
ISBN:  978-0-9890058-4-5; paperback (September 2015)
56pp, B&W; $5.00 U.S.

All-Ages

I am having fun reading the Farlaine the Goblin graphic novels series.  Published by Studio Farliane, this all-ages comic is written and drawn by a cartoonist credited  as “Anonymous.”  I contacted Studio Farliane, and they sent me review copies of two Farlaine the Goblin books.

This graphic novel series focuses on Farlaine the Goblin.  He is a tree goblin and a shaman from the forest of Fin-Din.  He has spent many years wandering the many Oddlands of Wug in search of a forest that he can call his own.  His companion is Ehrenwort, a tree he carries in a sack on his back; Farlaine also talks to Ehrenwort, whom he describes as his “Verdan.”

Published this past September, Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Book 4, The Twistlands (landscape dimensions 11.8” x 7.75”) is the most recent release in the series.  As The Twistlands begins, Farlaine only has seven lands left in which to find his own forest.  The story opens with Farlaine and his new friend and companion, “Tink,” of the Tinklands, entering the “Twistlands.”

Farlaine and Tink soon learn just why this place is called the Twistlands; it is full of twisters, and one of them just spirited away Ehrenwort.  With the help of the cute “Twistcatchers,” Farlaine chases the tree-napper, which just so happens to be the most powerful twister in the land, the “Dowager.”  Can this home-seeking tree goblin and Tink and their new companions survive an arduous journey to the domain of this most powerful twister.

After reading Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Volume 1, which collects the first three graphic novels in the series, I was surprised that a series this good could not find a publisher, forcing the creator to self-publish it.  After all all, many North American comic book publishers and some book publishers that publish comics claim to want to publish graphic novels for young readers.  The black and white Farlaine the Goblin is so worthy of being published by a big company, one that has major advertising and marketing resources.

This imaginative series, which mixes fantasy with situation comedy, is appropriate for young readers, but does not condescend to them.  The stories are action and adventure-oriented without being explicitly or aggressively violent.  Whatever its magic is, Farlaine the Goblin is appropriate for adult readers; after all, we deserve good comics, too.

In my review of the trade collection, I noted that Anonymous was going to improve in terms of his storytelling, as he was already a strong artist and illustrator.  I see that growth in Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Book 4, The Twistlands.  The story is tight and efficient, and this time, the guest stars, the Twistcatchers, are every bit as likable as Farlaine and Tink.  I find these little fellows to be both endearing and fascinating.

Sigh.  I did not want Book 4 to end, which is a feeling that a good comic book should evoke in a reader.  Still, like the best fantasy adventures, Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Book 4, The Twistlands is worth another read.  Fantasy readers of every age will want to try the imaginative, all-ages Farlaine the Goblin.

facebook.com/FarlianeTheGoblin
www.farlaine.com

A

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.



Friday, October 16, 2015

Review: FARLAINE THE GOBLIN, Trade Paperback Volume 1


FARLAINE THE GOBLIN, VOL. 1
STUDIO FARLAINE – @TreeGoblin

CARTOONIST: Anonymous
MISC. ART: Jean-Francois Beaulieu; Darrenn E. Canton; Jason May; Jyrki Vainio
ISBN:  978-0-9890058-3-8; paperback (August 2014)
136pp, B&W with some color; $13.00 U.S.

Farlaine the Goblin is a series of graphic novels written and drawn by Anonymous, a cartoonist also credited as “J.”  I think his name is Jean-Francois Beaulieu (which seems obvious to me, at least).  Studio Farlaine recently published Farlaine the Goblin, Book 4, which is available in comic book shops via Diamond Distributors.

J. sent me a review copy of Farlaine the Goblin, Trade Paperback, Volume 1.  This paperback (landscape dimensions 11.8” x 7.75”) reprints Farlaine the Goblin: Book 1 (The Tinklands); Book 2 (The Saltlands); and Book 3 (The Racelands).  It also includes bonus material, such as development art and early Farlaine comics, and a prequel adventure, “The Tinderlands.”

The series focuses on Farlaine the Goblin.  He is a tree goblin and a shaman from the forest of Fin-Din.  He has spent many years wandering the many Oddlands of Wug in search of a forest that he can call his own.  His companion is Ehrenwort, a tree he carries in a sack on his back; Farlaine also talks to Ehrenwort, whom he describes as his “Verdan.”

As Book 1: The Tinklands begins, Farlaine only has 10 lands left in which he can search for his own forest.  When he encounters a group of aggressive rotund robots, the Tinks, Farlaine finds himself on the run.  In Book 2: The Saltlands, Farlaine meets people made of salt and discovers that they are so desperate for shelter that they have tricked someone into seemingly permanent indentured servitude.  In Book 3: The Racelands, Farlaine may have found his forest, but he will have to race for it.

Apparently, Anonymous is self-publishing his Farlaine the Goblin series because he could not find a publisher to take on the series.  That is surprising considering all the publishers that claim to want to publish graphic novels for young readers.

Farlaine the Goblin is an imaginative series that mixes fantasy with situation comedy.  It is appropriate for young readers, but does not condescend to young readers, nor does it seek to be safe.  The stories are active and action-oriented without being explicitly or aggressively violent.  Don't be put off, you grown folks; Farlaine the Goblin will captivate both teen and adult readers.

Anonymous is a talented cartoonist who is quite skilled at producing black and white comics, and his color art has a quality similar to children's picture books.  His stories present obstacles and dilemmas that are honest and genuine with sensible and imaginative resolutions.  I expect this series to improve in terms of story and art with each volume, as the cartoonist seems like the kind of artist who is always growing, just like Farlaine grows trees.

facebook.com/FarlianeTheGoblin

A-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.