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The Snakepit Book: Daily Diary Comics 2001-2003
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Snakepit Book: Daily Diary Comics 2001-2003
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Ben Snakepit
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:288 | Dimensions(mm): Height 203,Width 152 |
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Category/Genre | Comic book and cartoon art |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781621067146
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Classifications | Dewey:741.56973 741.5973 |
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Audience | |
Edition |
2nd edition
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Illustrations |
1 Illustrations, unspecified
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Microcosm Publishing
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Imprint |
Microcosm Publishing
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Publication Date |
1 May 2014 |
Publication Country |
United States
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Description
Everyday Ben White draws his life in three comic panels. There are punk shows, drinking binges, rotating girlfriends, some outstanding days and some where little happens. But each is chronicled by Ben into comic art. Jimmi Payne's Punk Zine summarises his work saying Taken individually, each strip resembles what a friend would say if you asked what they had done that day. Ben sifts through the minutiae of life as well as the full experience of time in a day...years of common actions load into a highly concentrated snapshot that wkaes you up."
Author Biography
Ben Snakepit is a freelance artist and author of the zinesGoing to California, Pills, and Snakepit. He is also a bass player for the popular punk band J Church. He lives in Austin, Texas.Aaron Cometbus has been publishing the zine Cometbus since 1981. He has been a songwriter and drummer in Pinhead Gunpowder, Harbringer, Astrid Oto, and dozens of other punk bands. He lives in Brooklyn.
Reviews"Ben's comic is the visual embodiment of what I really enjoy about DIY punk. On the surface, and to the casual observer, it may not look like much. But there are the watershed days [...] It shows that, yeah, music's important to Ben, but it's driven by the people behind it all, what beats in their hearts, and not what's on their t-shirts." --"Razorcake" "Ben's shitty comics have created a book that's impossible to put down, with lessons usually reserved for more pretentious art." --"Vice" "Every three-panel daily entry has a song-and-artist slug (e.g., 'Beat on the Brat--Ramones') as epigram more than title and very often begins or ends at a rock show. [...] Perhaps Snakepit's life is in a rut, but he's basically happy, especially when he has a girlfriend, and what he records simultaneously with his own adventures is a bohemian, or lumpen bohemian, scene healthier and miles less pretentious than, say, Verlaine and Rimbaud's Parisian niche or the Beats' conclaves in Paris and San Francisco." --Ray Olson, "Booklist " "Snakepit stands out for the foolishness of the protagonist's life. The endless punk rock shows, drinking binges, and rotating girlfriends makes life seem both utterly meaningless and yet still there's a power there . . . or at least an energy of some kind. A little crudely lived, but with gusto, and crudely recorded as little comic strips." --James Kochalka, Vermont Cartoonist Laureate
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