Showing posts with label Steve Gerber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Gerber. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

When mudballs collide


Pages from Giant-Size Man-Thing #1, written by Steve Gerber and drawn by Mike Ploog. Man-Thing is one of my favorite series (hell, favorite in general) and this was near the peak from one of the amazing creative teams ever. Man-Thing was done decently by others later, but it was no comparison to the quirky observation of Gerber and the cute-but-creepy art of Mike Ploog, let alone both of them in a great package. The entire issue can be read in Essential Man-Thing.

And yes, I have to finally write my review of that damn book. I'm feeling more confident and perspective of it,(particularly with Gerber's death) so hopefully soon.

Friday, March 7, 2008

More Steve Gerber: Lilith, the Daughter of Dracula



More evidence of a great man lost. I'll try to find as much as possible for further evidence.

A third thank you(and probably not the last) to scans_daily.


Bonus Pin-Up:

Monday, March 3, 2008

Remembering Steve Gerber (1947-2008)


I’ve been thinking for days on end how to come up with the right words, the right pros/passages, and the right paragraph(s) to describe Steve Gerber’s talents. And I can’t, although I think I came close in the first ever article I wrote on him (check the subject links). I never knew the man, only his work. Therefore, I can only speak as a fan. All good writing has a goal to create material to read for pleasure, and on that front Steve Gerber wrote spectacularly. Yes, he wrote in a medium rightly controlled by the visual storytellers, but he worked magnificently with those craftsmen; never subtracting, only adding. The seventies is still my overall favorite decade for comics, and Gerber was THE man of the seventies. Go buy any his works and see why. The only thing I would like now is that all the loose ends of his writings (phantom zone, foolkiller, and misc.) get presented in a trade paperback form, so others can see his skill.

Other perspectives:

1) His own words: The infamous 1978 interview


2) A sample of his body of work (covers only)







3) His peers/colleagues memories:


If you have anything to add please do so in the comments, I will be glad to highlight them.