Understanding Comics

The Invisible Art

Paperback

English language

Published Jan. 5, 1997 by Kitchen Sink Pr (Nrt).

ISBN:
978-0-87816-243-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

(97 reviews)

Praised throughout the cartoon industry by such luminaries as Art Spiegelman, Matt Groening, and Will Eisner, Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics is a seminal examination of comics art: its rich history, surprising technical components, and major cultural significance. Explore the secret world between the panels, through the lines, and within the hidden symbols of a powerful but misunderstood art form.

29 editions

McCloud's observations are very often trivial – but nobody before him has made them

Everything you may have heard about this book is true: this is the most breathtakingly intelligent look at comics there will ever be, and it will give you an alarming number of new insights. McCloud's observations are very often downright trivial – but nobody before him has made them. Quite fittingly, he uses the medium he discusses to illustrate his points, and by giving his explanations in comic form, he can utilise a rich array of rhetorical methods.

Review of 'Understanding Comics' on 'Goodreads'

I never thought I needed this—do you need a guide for understanding chocolate or ice cream? (Now that I mention it, though, I bet those exist). I like what I like, and enjoy it, and that’s that, right? Well, now I wish I’d read this twenty years ago. McCloud adds new dimensions to my appreciation: he offers context, history, design insights, and makes it all accessible and enjoyable. It’s too early to tell how/if this will change my future reading of comics, but I’m looking forward to finding out.

Review of 'Understanding Comics' on 'Goodreads'

Scott McCloud's love and understanding of comics is beautifully and simply expressed here. So much so that it increased my love and understanding of comics I read in the past and definitely comics I will read in the future.

As I was reading other peoples reviews and discussions about this book I noticed that most people are intrigued with the idea that the simpler the character on the page is, the easier it is for the reader to identify with the character. This is something that I noticed myself long before I read this book, so it wasn't so revolutionary to me... BUT his chapter on time and expressing time in space in comics truly blew my mind when I read it. It made me see and truly understand so much about pacing in comics. It helped me form, what I like to call, my internal gear shift. As a …

Review of 'Understanding Comics' on 'Goodreads'

I have been getting into comics lately and I am quickly discovering there is so much about this medium that I do not know. When trying to review a comic or graphic novel, I find it easy to talk about plot but talking about the art is difficult. I picked up Understanding Comics because there is so much to learn and I wanted a better grasp on the art form. And it is art, it might not be as highbrow as artists like Vincent van Gogh, Claude Monet or my personal favourite Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, but it is still art. To exclude comics as an art form would be like removing Andy Warhol, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollack or René Magritte from the art world because you 'don't get it'.

Now that I have had a little rant about art, let’s talk about comics and Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud. …

Review of 'Understanding Comics' on 'Goodreads'

There is a reason so many smart people mention this book.
It is a foundational book for thinking about HOW sequential art works and appreciating the choices and techniques it uses.

It's not an instructional book for making comics - it is instructional for getting a deeper understanding of what's happening in front of your eyes. What choices are being made, what does that mean for the story, for the artist, for you?

I had to pause often to appreciate this, like a rich dessert or a smoky scotch.

Review of 'Understanding Comics' on 'Storygraph'

Like reading dumbed-down version of early film theory. McCloud desires to establish comics as a legitimate artistic and narrative medium, and he largely succeeds in doing that. However, he apparently couldn't (or didn't want to) get the rights to use other comics as examples. Because of this, the book operates almost exclusively in the abstract, rather than providing concrete examples to fully explain his theoretical musings.

avatar for maxbittker

rated it

avatar for aparrish

rated it

avatar for Elspeth

rated it

avatar for confusedmuse

rated it

avatar for sinie

rated it

avatar for astranoir

rated it

avatar for GucciGarbage

rated it

avatar for MagneticCrow

rated it

avatar for naomi

rated it

avatar for JoeGermuska

rated it

avatar for palefire

rated it

avatar for sa_zh

rated it

avatar for wakatara

rated it

avatar for BeachReader

rated it

avatar for ironicsans

rated it

avatar for gerwitz

rated it

avatar for ExQuaseFuturo

rated it

avatar for strikescanbeillegal

rated it

avatar for kwm

rated it

avatar for pburgos

rated it

avatar for teo

rated it

avatar for tartley

rated it

avatar for mpmurawski

rated it

avatar for sundaykofax

rated it

avatar for mikewilson

rated it

avatar for giantrobot

rated it

avatar for JohSny

rated it

avatar for Vertecks

rated it

avatar for satyajit

rated it

avatar for Allenshull

rated it

avatar for gilroi

rated it

avatar for JollyRoberts

rated it

avatar for Adem

rated it

avatar for greystar

rated it

avatar for travisseitlerisreading

rated it

avatar for neul

rated it

avatar for Enno

rated it

avatar for steezeburger

rated it

avatar for Retros_x

rated it

avatar for synthism

rated it

avatar for Gretrascis

rated it

avatar for thisisfranklin

rated it

avatar for HokieGeek

rated it

avatar for ion

rated it

avatar for Haunted_Toaster

rated it

avatar for peter_hall

rated it

avatar for jectoons

rated it

avatar for Mduritz@lectura.social

rated it

avatar for reiacorn

rated it

avatar for naught101

rated it

avatar for ilchinealach

rated it

avatar for EnigmaticLabs

rated it

avatar for alien_sunset

rated it

avatar for pd-bomber

rated it

avatar for abbybutinspace

rated it

avatar for Jameson

rated it

avatar for oobisan

rated it

avatar for kosure

rated it

avatar for abon

rated it

avatar for jjackunrau

rated it

avatar for guillevg

rated it

avatar for masukomi

rated it

avatar for lowclasshifi

rated it

avatar for Frdnspnzr

rated it

avatar for Parenthesis_Liker

rated it

avatar for fakeplastictrees

rated it

avatar for punitlad

rated it

avatar for Kattas

rated it

avatar for erflynnart

rated it

avatar for neurobomber

rated it

avatar for tresmante

rated it

avatar for eriolfox

rated it

avatar for Internet_Seer

rated it

avatar for maanbasis

rated it

avatar for RobynGoodfellow

rated it

avatar for ccamara

rated it

avatar for Smokler

rated it

avatar for OmniJan

rated it

avatar for chris_st

rated it

avatar for jao

rated it

avatar for arensb

rated it

Subjects

  • Publishing
  • Periodicals
  • Comic books, strips, etc.
  • Pop Arts / Pop Culture
  • Children: Young Adult (Gr. 10-12)
  • Form - Cartoons & Comics
  • Comic books, strips, etc
  • Authorship
  • Juvenile literature

Lists