Poem Strip Explained

Poem Strip
Foreigntitle:Poema a fumetti
Publisher:Arnoldo Mondadori Editore
Date:1969
Creator:Dino Buzzati
Transdate:6 October 2009
Pages:222
Translator:Marina Harss

Poem Strip is a 1969 comic book by the Italian writer and illustrator Dino Buzzati. It retells the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, set in Milan in the 1960s. The aesthetics are influenced by 1960s pop culture. An English translation by Marina Harss was published in 2009.[1]

Reception

Richard Rayner of Los Angeles Times wrote in 2009: "The images are surreal, sexy and frightening, and the text (translated here for the first time into English by Marina Harss, with lettering by Rich Tommaso) is both compelling and poetic. There are shades of Fellini, shades of Dickens, shades of the great Italian horror director Mario Bava. A beautiful book."[2] Publishers Weekly wrote: "The text might have lost some of its lyricism in the translation from the Italian, as it occasionally seems stiff. The artwork retains its bold, sensual power, however."[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Poem strip. WorldCat. 299708098.
  2. Web site: Rayner. Richard. Richard Rayner. 2009-11-15. Paperback Writers: Greek myth is hip, so is Richard Milward's new novel. Los Angeles Times. 2015-05-09.
  3. Web site: Fiction Book Review: Poem Strip by Dino Buzzati. Publishers Weekly. 2009-08-10. 2015-10-26.