Rabu, 14 Juli 2010

[G165.Ebook] Ebook Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood

Ebook Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood

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Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood

Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood



Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood

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Starve Volume 1, by Brian Wood

Once the world's most famous chef, Gavin Cruikshank's been in a self-imposed exile for years. His little foodie television program has since evolved into STARVE, an arena sport that pits chef against chef for the pleasure of their super-rich patrons. It's a stain on a once-noble profession, and Chef Gavin is ready to go to war to stop it. Two things stand in his way: his arch rival Roman Algiers, and his adult daughter Angie, who probably just wants her dad back and acting normal.

  • Sales Rank: #247308 in Books
  • Published on: 2016-01-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.10" h x .50" w x 6.40" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 120 pages

From Publishers Weekly
In the first two pages of this story, Gavin Cruikshank appears to be little more than a narcotics-fueled trainwreck. Readers soon learn, however, that the drugs are just his escape. His real passion is Starve, a reality cooking show of his own making that, in the words of Emeril Lagasse, cranks things up a notch�€”by having competitor chefs kill live animals or engage in close-quarters hand-to-hand fighting. Gavin's ex-wife, Greer, furious that Gavin concealed his homosexuality from her for years, now has control of Starve, but he's about to make his long-awaited reappearance on the show. Wood (DMZ), Zezelj (El Diablo), and Stewart (The Massive) have put together an intense, driven story that's carried by the realism of the character interactions. This is a must-read for those who love a pinch of reality cooking, a dash of evisceration, and a liberal dose of strong graphic storytelling. (Jan.)\n

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Another cutting edge Brian Wood title
By Alt
Brian Wood is always cutting edge. Each title he writes is wildly different from the last. Starve is my new Brian Wood favorite. I’ve never read anything quite like it.

Starve takes place in a near future where global warming has left a chunk of the East Coast underwater and the Customs service has been privatized. Reality TV has been taken to a new level by Gavin Cruikshank, a chef whose television show, “Starved,” made him a celebrity. Then Cruikshank dropped out, leaving behind an angry wife and a disappointed daughter. Cruikshank’s wife is angry in part because she only belatedly learned that her husband is gay.

As the story opens, Cruikshank has gone native in Southeast Asia. His fun ends when the network insists he fulfill his contract by filming 8 more episodes. Cruikshank is pleased to learn that the show is now worth quite a bit of money, but displeased to discover that in his absence, his wife had him declared legally dead and now owns the rights to the show.

The celebrity chef challenges on Starve are more … challenging … than those offered by typical reality TV shows. And more dangerous, as Cruikshank learns when he returns to his show, which is now in the hands of a rival chef.

There’s always something deeper going on than the surface layer of the story that Brian Wood tells. Starve is about the gap between the rich and the poor. It’s about the over-consumption of resources by the privileged. It’s about the waste and excess and greed that kills the environment and assures that the poor will continue to starve. It’s about the difference between pride in doing something well and the desire to be recognized for doing something well.

And it’s about the love of food. Really good food, well-prepared.

And it’s about a father’s love of his daughter, and how that love demands that he get back in the game and make amends.

Good stuff. Really good. And the edgy, ragged, angular art is perfect for the show’s noir feel. So is the coloring, dominated by black and red.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Familiar elements in exciting, bloody setting
By Johanna Draper Carlson
Starve is an intriguing blend of food culture and science fiction layered with comment on the life of the privileged and a redemption story. In the near future, the economy has collapsed, and everything has been privatized. The distinction between rich and poor is greater than ever.

Gavin Cruikshank has run away from being a celebrity chef after creating Starve, a cooking competition show. The series, now dedicated to ridiculous excess, is a huge success, and he’s been living off the profits. Although wealthy, he’s been slumming, but now, the network demands he come back to fulfill his contract. He wants to leave it all behind, but he can’t get the resources to do so without reentering the world that he despises.

Much of the comic is Gavin’s internal monologue, juicy description of what he’s thinking while he’s eating or cooking. He’s the kind of self-centered, perpetually drunk jerk people tolerate because he’s just so talented. Only everyone here hates him, particularly his not-quite-ex-wife who resents him not being honest about his homosexuality and his rival, Roman Algiers, who now runs the show.

He’s also got a daughter on the verge of adulthood whom he hasn’t seen in years and wants to reconnect with. This is all part of a classic structure, a story we’ve seen many times before, but the blood on the page — in more ways than one, as live animals are butchered, but also the portrayal of very raw emotions — is addictive in an unclean way. The setting allows for exaggerated actions that somehow seem plausible in this dog-eat-dog world. I feel nervous about enjoying this read, as though it should be forbidden. But then there’s a delicious dish described, and different wants take precedence.

The art is dirty and edgy, much like the events on the show within the story, where contestants are asked to steal a delicacy or serve dog or literally fight their way through competing chefs in another kitchen. The text and the images may only slightly be related to each other, creating meaning through layering or contrast. The art is often monochrome, everything colored in shades of one hue, creating more of an atmosphere than a detailed image to pour over. It’s about the moment, with the artists drawing the eye skillfully to punch the emotion to the reader.

Brian Wood, Danijel Zezelj, and Dave Stewart don’t credit who’s doing what, a contrast to the chef-as-star aesthetic they’re portraying. As Gavin struggles to win, although he doesn’t want to but feels he has to, everyone cheats. There’s a layer of contempt over everything — the people who want to eat delicacies, the mass that have made a mean show a success, the participants and their base motivations, the way the competition is slanted. There are no heroes in this book, although Gavin, with his posturing and eff-you attitude, will be seen as an admirable antihero by some.

Starve collects the first five issues of the series. (The publisher provided an advance digital review copy. Review originally posted at ComicsWorthReading.com.)

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Starved
By Silly Billy
Gavin was a famous chef who starred on his own TV show, Starved. Then he fell off the face of the planet after getting divorced and indulging in drugs. Once he runs out of money, he is called back to the show to finish 8 more episodes and get paid.

I was surprised that I liked this comic so much. The artwork is dark, and not really my style, but it fit the story line and I ended up liking it. I can't help but root for Gavin, even though he walked out on his family and turned to drugs in a far off country. His ex-wife hates him (for abandoning their daughter and for divorcing her after admitting he was gay the whole time), but he is apparently a talented chef and is holding his own on the show. The idea for the cooking show is interesting. It is set in the near future, where certain foods have become so rare that only the super-rich can afford to eat it. This results in the chefs using illegal means to obtain the food, and it is displayed on television for everyone to see.

My only problem is that I don't really like the daughter--she is weirdly clingy towards the dad who left when she was 14.

Anyway, I'm looking forward to Volume 2 to see what new challenges are in store on the show, as well as to see what happens with Gavin's ex-wife, daughter, and assistant.

I received an ebook copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

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