Church & State I (Cerebus, Volume 3) buy bestselling books in print, audio books
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Church & State I (Cerebus, Volume 3) description
Church and State is volume three of the Cerebus the Aardvark series and picks up right where High Society leaves off. To compound matters further, this reprint volume is part one of a two-part story that is self-contained within the larger framework. A face from Cerebus's past returns with an offer he can't refuse. But the gray one has learned a few lessons from the powers that be and turns the tables on the would-be puppet masters. This volume also marks the addition of Gerhard as a background artist, and the artwork begins to create a visual impact equal to the creative impact of the comic book's ideas and stories. The storytelling also becomes subtler, the beginning of a stylistic trademark in Cerebus that leads the reader to believe more action is taking place peripherally than in the actual pages. High points include a two-part dream sequence, which is visually unparalleled in the history of comic art; a pee-break which is unrivaled in length in the history of comic art; the return of Jaka; and "the baby incident." Don't forget to pick up Church and State, Volume Two , as volume one ends with the cruelest of cliffhangers. This is the Ivan the Terrible of graphic novels, both in terms of its subject matter and the creative peak it represents for the author. |
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Church & State I (Cerebus, Volume 3) Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥
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Darkly Humorous and touching
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I loved this book so much. Cerebus is an odd character, as Dave Sim never tries to make him likable. His entire mindset is mercenary, and he only desires ale and the money to buy it with. And yet we still love him.
In this book, Cerebus (through much political maneuvering) goes from being a cynical ex-prime minister writing his memoirs/ how to be a prime minister ("Don't listen to Lord Julius") to being an even more cynical (and married) Pope. As soon as he becomes Pontiff, he declares that the world's going to end and that everyone's going to die horribly if they don't give him gold. Lots of it. And forget about benevolence: annoy him with pleas or prayers and he'll throw you off a building.
Besides being a quite good satire of religion and religious leaders (I wish I'd have read this when Pope Benedict was appointed), this also includes quite a lot of just plain funny humor (Sophia's mother, the bit at the end where Lord Julius starts popping out of hidden compartments all over Cerebus's room), geniune emotion (The conversation betweeen Cerebus and Jaka especially), and a great and complex story. Now, to get to Church and State 2... |
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