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New engineering  Cover Image Book Book

New engineering / Yuichi Yokoyama ; translated from the Japanese by Taro Nettleton.

Yokoyama, Yuichi. (Author). Nettleton, Taro. (Added Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780978972257
  • ISBN: 0978972252 :
  • Physical Description: 232 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
  • Publisher: Brooklyn, NY : PictureBox, c2007.

Content descriptions

Language Note:
In English, translated from the Japanese; includes Japanese with English summaries.
Genre: Graphic novels.
Comic books, strips, etc.

Holds

0 current holds with 0 total copies.


Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780978972257
Yuichi Yokoyama: New Engineering
Yuichi Yokoyama: New Engineering
by Yokoyama, Yuichi (Artist)
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Publishers Weekly Review

Yuichi Yokoyama: New Engineering

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

There is no other cartoonist like Yokoyama. The two dozen brief, deeply disquieting pieces collected here look like stories, but on examination, they're more like complicated, stylized diagrams of social, technical and ecological systems, dominated by Yokoyama's fascination with textures, costuming, repetition, landscaping and-above all-sound effects. "Engineering 3," for instance, shows a mountain being built out of boulders, then covered with Astroturf, fake trees and hand-drawn simulations of more rocks. (The Japanese sound effects that appear everywhere in the book are translated at the bottom of each page, which is how Anglophone readers know that "shuru shuru," for instance, is the "high pitched sound of boulders being dropped from plane.") Occasionally, blank-faced figures appear on a panel to run around and scream-a couple of pieces, like the opening "Book," even look like fight scenes-but Yokoyama disregards plot and character altogether in favor of atmosphere and technical details, which he draws with the kind of gusto and dramatic foreshortening other artists reserve for actual human interaction. Some of these pieces are nearly incomprehensible, as the author admits in his explanatory endnotes; he thinks of his work as "serialized paintings," extending in time from single images. Yet everything is delightful on the level of pure, mad design. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved


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