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Alan Moore: Portrait Of An Extraordinary Gentleman

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Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman contains comic strips, illustrations, essays, articles, anecdotes and other pieces contributed by top American, English, and international comics creators paying tribute to the master of comic book writing, Alan Moore (creator of Watchmen and From Hell), as he celebrates his 50th year. Over a hundred contributors include Neil Gaiman, Will Eisner, Bill Sienkiewicz, Dave Gibbons, Denis Kitchen, David Lloyd, Jim Valentino, Sergio Toppi, Bryan Talbot, Steve Parkhouse, Mark Millar, Howard Cruse, James Kochalka, Jos� Villarrubia, Sam Kieth, Dave Sim, Oscar Zarate, DJ Paul Gambaccini, and novelist Darren Shan, to name just a few. The book jacket will feature a new photgraph by Piet Corr and other features will include interviews, biographies, and new and rare photographs.

352 pages, Paperback

First published December 30, 2003

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About the author

Leah Moore

238 books90 followers
LEAH MOORE is an author born in Northampton, England in 1978.

Leah's comic writing career began in 2002 with stories for America's Best Comics. Most recently her solo comics scripting has appeared as part of Dynamite Entertainment's Gail Simone masterminded crossover series Swords of Sorrow (2015, with Francesco Manna).

In 2006 Leah wrote the story and copy to accompany The Royal Mail's 40th anniversary Christmas Stamps. She has written columns and articles for The Big Issue, Lifetime TV online, and Comic Heroes Magazine.

In 2013 Leah was the Project Manager of digital comics reading platform Electricomics. She was also the contributing editor of Electricomics flagship release, co-writing the sci-fi story Sway, with art by Nicola Scott.

Leah and her husband, John Reppion, have been scripting comics together since 2003, writing for the likes of 2000 AD, Channel 4 Education, Dark Horse, DC Comics, Dynamite Entertainment, Electricomics, IDW, and Self Made Hero.

They have written established characters such as Doctor Who (The Whispering Gallery, 2008 with Ben Templesmith) and Sherlock Holmes (The Trial of Sherlock Holmes, 2009 with Aaron Campbell, and The Liverpool Demon, 2012 with Matt Triano), as well as creating their own including Brit-Cit Psi Division, Judge Lillian Storm (Storm Warning, 2015 with Tom Foster).

Together they have faithfully adapted notable works by Lewis Carroll (The Complete Alice, 2010), H. P. Lovecraft (The Shadow Over Innsmouth, 2012), Bram Stoker (The Complete Dracula, 2009), and M. R. James (Ghost Stories of an Antiquary Vol 1, and 2) into comics and graphic novels.

Most recently she wrote an adaptation of The Doors Morrison Hotel album , and Motley Crue, The Dirt Declassified, for Z2 comics, as well as stories for their Joan Jett Anthology and the Tori Amos Little Earthquakes Anthology. She is currently working on The Tarot Circle for Liminal 11, as well as several other books yet to be announced.

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5 stars
53 (19%)
4 stars
103 (37%)
3 stars
95 (34%)
2 stars
18 (6%)
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5 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Camilo Guerra.
1,215 reviews20 followers
July 12, 2016
Libro de hace algun tiempo, cuando se celebraban los 50 cumpleaños de Alan Moore...puedes tomarlo como un agradecimiento, carta de amor, poema , quitada de sombrero, como sea, de muchas personas del medio que saben lo que ha hecho Moore y te lo cuentan, desde la increible presentación de Moore que hace Bissete, contando como se conocierón en la Cosa del Pantano, los liso que se dierón con los años y su alejamiento del escritor, el muy divertido fragmento escrito por sus hijas, Mark Millar te saca una sonrisa, Gaiman se cree mas listo de lo que es, y datos, información que no conocía, como su problema óptico, su invocación del dios serpiente, su musica...es un libro que intenta adentrarnos en la obra de una de las mentes mas grandes que ha tenido el arte, el mejor guionista de comics de la historia, además ,con tiras e lustraciones dedicadas a su pbra y persona. Esencial para fanáticos del trabajo del barbudo Inglés.
Profile Image for DeCarabas.
56 reviews1 follower
August 24, 2017
Se trata de un homenaje y una macro carta de felicitación en forma de libro al genio escritor y mago conocido como Alan Moore, con el pretexto de sus cincuenta años cumplidos en el 2003, es decir, hace casi catorce años, y en donde constan las palabras e ilustraciones de alabanza y agradecimiento de muchos grandes creadores como Will Eisner, Terry Gilliam, Michael Moorcock, Jeff Smith, Neil Gaiman (por supuesto!), Jim Lee, Mark Millar, Stephen R. Bissette y, entrañablemente, de sus hijas Leah y Amber Moore; es un libro ecléctico y hermoso, y más que una invitación a leer a Alan Moore es una cuantificación de las pérdidas al no conocer y disfrutar TODO en lo que ha participado el místico de Northampton.
Profile Image for Dominick.
Author 16 books32 followers
December 13, 2021
Interesting, if mixed, volume celebrating Alan Moore, in honour of this 50th birthday. The focus on European artists--the book was put together in Italy, I believe--was cool, as it meant I saw a lot of good art from artists about whom In know little to nothing. Some of the tributes are short comic strips, others are single images, still others are prose reminiscences, and yet others are more or less academic essays on Moore's work. Some of these latter are especially interesting (e. g. one on sex in the Moore issue of Puma Blues). Overall, though, the most enlightening piece in the book, though hardly what one might expect as part of a tribute, was Steve Bissette's long essay on his working relationship with Moore and how it soured. The book's worth reading for this piece alone. Also noteworthy is that it includes as its longest selection (close to a sixth of the total length of the book) the full dialogue between Moore and Dave Sim on From Hell (well, ostensibly; it ranges widely) that originally ran in several issues of Cerebus and had not afaik been collected before. This piece provides fascinating insights into Moore but is perhaps even more fascinating for the Sim fan, displaying as it does not only how truculent Sim can be (in the new preface to it, about talking with "pagans") but also how the ways in which Sim would eventually go off the rails were pretty much spelled out in this exchange.
Profile Image for José Rafael.
125 reviews13 followers
May 14, 2020
Penoso. Por un lado, los textos de los diversos colaboradores oscilan entre lo interesante (los menos), lo aburrido (los más) y lo pretencioso. Con todo, eso no es lo peor. Lo verdaderamente vergonzoso es que, en un libro en el cual el contenido visual ronda el 50%, la reproducción de los cómics y de algunas ilustraciones es de muy mala calidad, con abundantes casos de sangrante pixelado. Lamentable.
Profile Image for Chris.
717 reviews3 followers
December 30, 2018
I picked this up out of curiosity since I had only read a few of Moore's stories (Watchmen, V for Vendetta, The Courtyard). Although I had no reference for a lot of the discussion articles, the high praise for his work has motivated me to see out more.
2 reviews1 follower
Read
October 29, 2019
The letters at the end between Dave Sim and Alan Moore were Excellent reading. Recommended to anyone with an interest in Moore.
609 reviews5 followers
May 2, 2020
Moore's life and works are totally fascinating.
Profile Image for D.M..
727 reviews13 followers
July 22, 2013
Gary Spencer Millidge and the mysterious Italian smoky man engineered and edited the tribute to hugely popular and instrumental comics writer Alan Moore, in honour of the bearded one's 50th birthday. It is a fitting, informative and (mostly) entertaining collection of essays, personal recollections and art centring on Moore, his life and creations. Though there is a biographic comic, newly created by Millidge for this volume, Portrait... makes no attempt at being a biography, a bibliography or even a thorough study of Moore's work. It is more a celebration of the remarkable influence Moore has had on the creators and the medium of comics since his arrival-proper on the scene in the 80s.
The art herein (mostly black and white, though there are four full-colour sections) ranges from the wonderful to the mundane and even the questionable, while the occasionally insightful essays tend to take for granted a thorough familiarity with Moore's work. The contributors are a nice surprise in that they don't draw solely from comics superstars, but also from academes and comic creators from all over Europe and North America.
For me, the crowning jewel of this book is Stephen Bissette's touching, informative and behind-the-scenes 'Mr. Moore and Me,' which details first-person the establishment and eventual degeneration of Bissette's own relationship with Moore. A close second is the final entry, a reprinting (from the back pages of issues of Cerebus) of a fax-correspondence between self-publishing Cerebus creator Dave Sim and Moore himself.
Also included is a highlights-only bibliography with recommendations.
Any fan of Moore should have this book already, but those seeking a more indepth analysis/biography of him should seek out Millidge's more recent book, Storyteller.
Profile Image for Chloe Glynn.
337 reviews24 followers
December 30, 2019
This collection alternates between delightfully enriching and aggravatingly dull. It took me some two-hundred odd pages to recognize that a third of the tributes are thoughtful analyses of Moore's work, and the rest are self-aggrandizing recollections of, "When I was a young lad reading comics, Alan Moore had an impact on me." I'm not here to read about you, comic man; I'm here to read about Alan Moore. After realizing this dichotomy, skipping entries tremendously increased my enjoyment. It's a quirky little piece of unusual media with an excellent conclusion.
Profile Image for Fugo Feedback.
5,084 reviews172 followers
Want to read
March 9, 2010
Creo que de este libro llevo leídos sólo "Cómo escribir superhéroes" de Darko Macan. Bastante interesante, a ver cómo será el resto.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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