I approached this with an open mind, but after the first few pages I couldn't put it down. Oh well, the book is great! And they got what they deserved/had coming. Who did they think they were fooling? Not me. The whole Henry "Brent Jackie Cornel Menz" Rollins and Glenn "Brent Harwood" Danzig thing, is very ridiculous. I have known, (ALL), of the Henry loves Glenn comics story as fact all of these years, this is a good permanent record of the so called "underworld". Together, they’re a bromance made in heaven." deleted user These caring cartoon curmudgeons might be on individual highways to hell. ".ans and casual readers alike will find the homoerotic adventures of the beloved musical meatheads to be heartwarmingly hilarious. The saga of Henry and Glenn is a true testament to the power of love to overcome even the biggest, manliest egos of our time. This ridiculously complete edition collects four serialized comics, the trade paperback, the original 6圆" book, and adds stories, pin up art, and full color covers from the original series. These are two men who truly suffer best alone together.Īmong other hijinks, Henry and Glenn go to therapy together, battle an evil cult in the forest, and profess their love for each other, all while dealing with jealousy and other normal relationship problems and trying to figure out if their soft-rocking neighbors are actually Dungeons and Dragons playing Satanists. Henry, "a loud guy with a good work ethic," shows his darker side and indifference to a fan as he drinks black coffee and bonds with Glenn over their distaste for their own bands. Later, Glenn tries to sell his signature to a UPS driver, takes a punch, and has some daydreaming adventures with a plunger. Glenn's issues come to the surface as she critiques his art, replaces his wardrobe, scrubs their dungeon, and recalls his childhood. Freshly unearthed, she moves in with him and Henry. This epic tome features twenty short stories about the domestic life of "Henry" and "Glenn" and sometimes their neighbors "Daryl" and "John." Digging beneath Glenn's bricks in the front yard, Henry uncovers Glenn's mother. Get over it.The greatest love story every told has finally been released in graphic novel form. But still, at heart, we’ve got this milk crate strapped to the back of a bike and we’re riding wildly across town to hand you the book that might just be the one that saves your life. We’re not as drunk or dirty as we used to be. We have a staff, we have relationships in the industry that send our books to places we wouldn’t have dreamed we could walk into ourselves. Now we have contracts instead of handshakes, a warehouse instead of a fanny pack full of zines. We set out to save ourselves from not caring, but out there in the margins we’ve found communities worth always doing it better for. We’ve brought our brightly colored books to infoshops, zine fests, media summits, bicycle conferences, parks, street corners, house shows, dirty bars, allnight coffeeshops, art museums, and every corner of the mainstream where we can clear away a little space to set up shop. Microcosm has lived in milk crates, in closets, in a mud room, in a windowless basement, in a church, and under a desk at a major credit card company. Microcosm constantly poses the question “How can we remove barriers to success for marginalized people in our industry?” on post-consumer papers, and the company doubles the industry average in number of women authors. Microcosm focuses on relating the experiences of what it’s like to be a marginalized person and strives to be recognized for spirit, creativity, and value. Microcosm was started by Joe Biel in his bedroom as a distro and record label in 1996 and is now among the oldest independent book publishing houses in Portland, OR. Microcosm emphasizes skill-building, showing hidden histories, and fostering creativity through challenging conventional publishing wisdom with books and zines about DIY skills, food, bicycling, gender, self-care, and social justice. Portland’s most colorful, authentic, and empowering publishing house and distributor, Microcosm Publishing is a vertically integrated publishing house that equips readers to make positive changes in their lives and in the world around them. Microcosm describes itself as having “a reputation for teaching self-empowerment, showing hidden histories, and fostering creativity through challenging conventional publishing wisdom, influencing other publishers large and small with books and bookettes about DIY skills, food, zines, and art. Microcosm Publishing is an independent publisher and distributor based in Portland, Oregon. All ListingsArtCollectives and CooperativesCommunitiesEatsEntertainmentEventsfoodlawyerPeopleplace_of_worshipPoints of InterestsSites of Resistance
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |