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Bone

BONE: Out From Boneville

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The three Bone cousins — Fone Bone, Phoney Bone, and Smiley Bone — are separated and lost in a vast, uncharted desert. One by one, they find their way into a deep, forested valley filled with wonderful and terrifying creatures. Eventually, the cousins are reunited at a farmstead run by tough Gran’ma Ben and her spirited granddaughter. But little do the Bones know, there are dark forces conspiring against them, and their adventures are only just beginning!

144 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 3, 1991

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About the author

Jeff Smith

622 books1,430 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See other authors with similar names.

Born and raised in the American mid-west, Jeff Smith learned about cartooning from comic strips, comic books, and watching animation on TV. In 1991, he launched a company called Cartoon Books to publish his comic book BONE, a comedy/adventure about three lost cousins from Boneville. Against all odds, the small company flourished, building a reputation for quality stories and artwork. Word of mouth, critical acclaim, and a string of major awards helped propel Cartoon Books and BONE to the forefront of the comic book industry.
In 1992, Jeff’s wife Vijaya Iyer joined the company as partner to handle publishing and distribution, licensing, and foreign language publications. In the Spring of 2005, Harry Potter’s U.S. publisher Scholastic Inc. entered the graphic novel market by launching a new imprint, Graphix with a full color version of BONE: Out from Boneville, bringing the underground comic to a new audience and a new generation.
In 2007, DC Comics released Smith’s first non-creator owned work, SHAZAM! Monster Society of Evil, a four-part mini-series recreating a classic serial from comic’s Golden Age. Between projects, Smith spends much of his time on the international guest circuit promoting comics and the art of graphic novels.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,966 reviews
Profile Image for Patrick.
Author 81 books243k followers
December 17, 2014

This comic shook up the comic industry something fierce when it came out.

From what I understand, it was one of the first big comics to not use any narration boxes or thought bubbles at all. The story was entirely what you saw people doing, and what you heard them saying.

Needless to say, this is a *huge* change from the 60's style of superhero comic where people were constantly flying around and thinking stupid things to themselves like, "It's a good thing I can use my freeze breath to stop this forest fire!"

The first time I read it, I didn't know any of that. I just thought it was a good story.

Reading it again now, I still enjoy it. It holds up amazingly well given that it's over 20 years old. A lot of things I read from 20 years ago seem really dated. Or I find that I remember them differently than they really are. (Like Sandman.) But not this one.

It's worth your time. Especially if you want to read the "classics" in the genre. This is one of the foundation stones of modern comics.

Dealbreakers: It's in black and white. That didn't bother me at all. But I'm guessing it might throw some people off.
Profile Image for Sam Quixote.
4,801 reviews13.4k followers
November 9, 2015
Fone, Phoney, and Smiley Bone are run out of Boneville after Phoney’s latest shenanigans. Lost in the desert, they become separated and Fone Bone, our protagonist, ends up in The Valley, a human-dwelling part of the world, for the winter. There he meets a beautiful young woman called Thorn and her kindly cow-racing grandmother Ben. But danger looms on the horizon as the Lord of Locusts and the rat creature army are massing…

I first read Jeff Smith’s Bone nearly ten years ago in the all-in-one black and white edition – a massive brick of a book at well over 1000 pages! Re-reading this first chapter in the saga, the obvious difference is Steve Haymaker’s colours. They’re not bad, and I’m sure they make the books more appealing for the intended kid’s audience, but for me they detract from Smith’s razor-sharp inks which made the comic look so awesome originally.

Because I’ve read the series straight through before I know it evolves into this grand, sweeping Tolkien-esque epic but looking at just this first chapter? It’s not a great start and a tad boring especially if you’re re-reading. It starts off slapstick-y in a Three Stooges/Laurel and Hardy way that’s not very funny and then goes very Disney-esque with the talking woodland animals that’s a bit sickening in its overly cutesy style. But then it’s a kiddie book so maybe younger readers will respond more positively to these aspects?

I like some of the whimsical moments in the book like when winter comes it arrives in a ginormous white disc that plummets in an instant suddenly and blankets the whole world in snow. And I like how evocative Smith makes the Bone characters with their wandering wispy eyebrows – it’s such a simple design but so effective!

But some of the characters look derivative like Fone Bone (the Bones are weirdly white creatures with no hair) who looks almost identical to Caspar the Friendly Ghost. The Lord of Locusts looks like Emperor Palpatine and his vast, dark army of rat creatures looks very similar to the orc armies from Lord of the Rings. Speaking of the Rings Trilogy, while they look nothing alike, the Great Red Dragon feels a lot like Strider/Aragorn in demeanour and role.

Hilariously, Bone is actually a “challenged” book which means some people (probably Christian moms) have tried to get it taken out of libraries. The reason? There is smoking and drinking in a kid’s book. That’s true though both are shown in only a handful of panels, they’re never the focus and neither is done to excess nor are they glamorised or portrayed positively. But then some people are just idiots! The series is perfectly fine for kids.

Out from Boneville is a very slow-moving book with not a lot happening besides Smith setting up future storylines. A lot of first volumes do this but some do it more entertainingly than others and unfortunately Bone isn’t one of them. It’s not an encouraging start to new readers but I can assure you if you liked the Lord of Locusts bits, the series becomes almost all about that storyline after the first two books – the cutesy stuff and bad comedy drops off very quickly. It’s a mediocre first volume but the series as a whole is worth sticking with, particularly if you’re a fantasy fan.
Profile Image for Chad.
10.3k reviews1,060 followers
July 29, 2021
Bone follows the three Bone cousins as they are kicked out of Boneville and quickly lost in a wasteland before discovering the valley where the rest of the story takes place. Smith lays some of the ground work for the epic story to follow but these first couple of volumes are heavily influenced by cartoon strips like Walt Kelly's Pogo and old Looney Tunes type cartoons. There's lots of slapstick and jokes.

I absolutely love Smith's simple art style for the Bones. It's very expressive while cartoony while the humans are drawn more realistically. Smith also begins a lot of the running jokes in the series, especially with the stupid, stupid, rat creatures.

Bone was originally self-published throughout the 90's (when I first read it). It's a series I've read more than once over the years and is ripe for a TV series on a streaming network.
Profile Image for Calista.
5,432 reviews31.3k followers
March 1, 2019
I thought this was a cute and fun story. There are 3 Bones in this book and I really only like Fone Bone. Smiley was ok and I don't like Phoney bone at all. Lucky, the other 2 aren't in the story very much.

The story really gets going once Fone Bone gets lost and meets a dragon. Then he stumbles into some mysterious mountains and meets interesting characters including this huge scary rat creatures. There is very little information given to the reader about this new place. It is still all a mystery. We don't know why the rat creatures want Fone Bone so bad or why there dragon protects him and what this land is and how these people are. None of these questions are answered. It's all up in the air.

Still Fone Bone is sweet and I enjoyed the story. I looked forward to reading this book and that's a great sign. It's over a decade old now, but I can see how it would have been exciting to have a story like this for an age group back in the 90s. It is a great story for middle graders and those young at heart.
Profile Image for Ryan Chapman.
Author 5 books288 followers
August 6, 2008
I read Bone way back in the early 90s when it was serialized in comic book form, before these gorgeous collections by Scholastic. I recently revisited these and found them to have aged incredibly well. Like the best narratives for young audiences, the adventures of the three cousins Fone Bone, Smiley Bone, and Phoney Bone resonate with adults as well. The only other analogue that comes to mind is some of the work by Pixar. Jeff Smith has created a timeless series that I hope to read to my children someday. For now I'll make do with forcing it upon all of my friends.*

*If you don't believe me, just go to a bookstore and start reading it. I bet you'll walk out of there with at least a few volumes under your arm.
Profile Image for Mariah Roze.
1,056 reviews1,056 followers
November 22, 2016
This book was only OK. At the beginning I had a hard time keeping the "Bones" straight. Also, I didn't like how vague it was in the beginning about them getting kicked out of Boneville. Then, they all got split up somehow and then they all wanted to go back to Boneville. I thought this didn't create a strong storyline.

However, I started to enjoy the book more, around the last 30 pages. The characters were more developed and I felt like there was actually becoming a plot. This book ended on a "cliff-hanger," but not a strong one.

My boyfriend and I are reading this book and the 2nd book for our monthly Couples' Book Club read :)
Profile Image for Joe S.
42 reviews117 followers
December 9, 2007
People I love think this is a friggin masterpiece, and I love them less for it now.

I picked up the first volume of Bone because I'd heard it had such amazing comic timing, a great storyline and relatively solid artwork. No one mentioned that the dialogue reads as though it were written by a fifth grader, the humor is predictable and the story is so threadbare and uninteresting I began making up my own story for the panels. And to say that the artwork is well done is like saying the dreamcatcher hanging from my niece's rearview mirror is well done -- not inaccurate, but jeezus do I have higher standards for art.
Profile Image for Ray.
Author 19 books433 followers
March 4, 2023
Delightful classic, the introduction to Bone. Now colorized, it's a great series for all-ages with great cartoony art and a whimsical fantasy storyline. Also pretty funny.
Profile Image for Seth T..
Author 2 books959 followers
March 26, 2013
Bone by Jeff Smith
[Bad morning.]

I wasn't sure I'd ever review Jeff Smith's Bone. After all, is there much that can be said that hasn't already been said? Bone's so long been part of the canon of comics literature (such as one exists) that reviewing it at this point is like reviewing Watchmen or The Dark Knight Returns or Maus. Or for the non-comics-literate, a bit like if someone penned a review today for Huckleberry Finn. I mean, what's the point, really?

Still, I tell myself, there are those who haven't read the book yet. There are those who have read comics for years who haven't read Bone and ought to be ashamed of themselves. These are aficionados of the medium who need to be cajoled into reading something that will make them better participants in the medium. And there are those still new to the medium who might not be familiar with the canon and might not be aware of Good Places To Start. This review is probably mostly for them. And for people who might google the question, What's the first graphic novel I should read? (You hear that Google?)

Additionally spurring my interest in reviewing the book, I have a daughter. She's three and likes me to read to her in the evenings. I had read her The Little Prince and Just So Stories when she was two, but I thought she might get a kick out of comics before bed. She had previously seen book one of Gene Yang's Avatar: The Promise, which she loved because she was already familiar with the show. A father can only read so many times about Sokka and Toph getting the oogly-booglies from watching Aang and Katara getting frisky before that father just snaps—so I needed something fresh. Something new. Something I could stand to read repetitiously. So I pulled down Bone. She was almost instantly excited. And after she became interested and comfortable with the characters, she was wholly invested. Now Smith's characters thoroughly infest her imaginative play. She insists that she is Bartleby and her one-year-old brother is Ted the bug. I have become Jackal Bone, some fell hybrid between Phoncible P. Bone and, well, your common jackal. Though sometimes I am Kingdok and sometimes I am Roque Ja and sometimes I'm the Big Red Dragon. In any case, she and other kids love this book and rereading it several times to her over the last months has given me new appreciation for Smith's creation.

Also, there's the whole colour thing to consider. More later. Promise! First, a bit of history.

Bone by Jeff Smith
[There's always time for locusts.]

Bone was one of that first crop of creator-owned books that constituted a burgeoning movement away from the malaise of the corporation-directed folderol of the '80s. Smith spent thirteen years (from 1991 to 2004) publishing chapters of what would eventually be a 1300-page epic fantasy story. I hopped on in somewhere around the year 2000, when Smith was nearly 65% through. Waiting each month for the release of a new chapter was tortuous. I needed to see the conclusion and I needed to see it now. And then, as Smith approached his finale, several months would pass between chapters. It was grueling. Readers first approaching the book today are blessed with the option of purchasing the entire series in a handy, single-volume paperback version.1

But rather than just talk about the book, let's start with looking at some of Smith's art. Because while, yes, his characters and dialogue and verbal storytelling are wonderful, one of the foremost joys of the book is how he conveys his narrative through artistic choices.

Bone by Jeff Smith
Bone by Jeff Smith

This is a simple chase sequence, but it's composed masterfully. Fone Bone jumps from a snowbank onto a lower bank and makes a little progress while fleeing furiously from the rat creature who dives into the snow at his heels. (Excitement!) In the next panel, we see another rat creature face-first in the snow at Bone's heels a second time. (Hot pursuit!) Fone Bone comes to an impassable river and waterfall but looks down to find an escape. We and he think he's found a respite but are surprised to find rat creatures to be more driven by instinct than by reason. While the page ends with some humour, the real punchline is on the next page as the branch fails to support their weight and the three tumble into the falls below. The second panel on this page is majestic as we see silouetted the three small figures against a mere portion of the formidable falls. If we hadn't taken in the awesome danger Fone Bone is in by panel two, Smith drives it home by completely obscuring the three characters in the tumult of the falls' base. The volatile energy in that scene is terrific. Panel four brings us relief again as Fone Bone breaks the surface with a gasp. We know how lucky he was to make it but are almost instantly dismayed in the next panel to see the heads of the rat creatures breaking the surface as well, and the pursuit is begun anew. Unfortunately, wet Fone Bone slips on the icy rocks and the tension crescendoes on the final panel of that second page.

Here's another one:

Bone by Jeff Smith

While the prior example was fraught with action, this shows Smith using entirely different techniques to build tension. Across these three panels, there is essentially no movement save for Thorn's eyes and from Fone Bone as he struggles then reacts to what he's seen. Otherwise, Fone Bone, Granma Ben, and Thorn retain the same position across the panels. The source of drama comes from a bright lightning flash in the second panel. We (and Fone Bone) see the scene unveiled for what it is, for what was wholly obscured by the dark and stormy nighttime. Fone Bone moves from being annoyed at Granma Ben to startled by the lightning to terror at what he's just seen.

It's a beautiful scene and the book is full of this stuff. Over the years since I first finished the story in 2004 I had remembered the characters and their plot points, but I had forgotten this. I had forgotten what a master craftsman Jeff Smith is when he chooses how to visually tell his story. Bone employs a lot of dialogue and Smith is not shy about using words. Still, he shows over and again that he knows when to shut up and let his art speak for him and his characters. Even if Bone was entirely wordless and plotless, it would be worth your time for the art alone.

So then, what about words? Another thing I had forgotten was just how funny these characters can be even while in the midst of terrible, LOTR-level, world-collapsing events. People are dying left and right and there's a tremendous war on and Smiley Bone is still a silly bastion of joy and laughter. And to Smith's credit, that never feels trite or abusive. That the book is riddled with funny moments even in the midst of dark doings and ill tidings may be exactly what saves it from being as grim and dour and thematically grey as some of its fantasy-genre cousins. The reader never feels that lives aren't at stake but simultaneously never feels overwhelmed by that threat.

Bone by Jeff Smith
[It's true. There is.]

As well, Smith populates his story with expressive, unique, and noteworthy characters. That my daughter would adopt so many for her waking dreams is impressive and is evidence of the good job Smith does. All of the protagonists are well-rounded and individuated (save perhaps for Smiley Bone, who remains a bastion of zany aloofness throughout). Even the supporting characters are given personalities and motivations. We spend the most time with Fone Bone and his opposite lead, Thorn, and by story's close we see them grow through the challenges they've had to overcome. They are full-fledged fictional beings. Smith's villains are worthy as well. Though he doesn't so much follow after the footsteps of Miyazaki, making his antagonists sympathetic figures, he does at least make them interesting.

Bone's story is as full-orbed and ranging as its characters. What begins as light adventure soon turns to dark mystery. And then back to adventure. And then to epic journey and battle against cataclysmic evil. And all woven throughout with a sense of myth and spirit. There are forces at work in Fone Bone's world that are beyond the seeing eye and tap into energies outside the realm of the sciences. And I don't mean wizards and dragons. Even though those are there too. These things work to make Bone's world and mythos feel substantial, solid. And it helps that his story is exciting.

Which you already knew because why else would I describe the wait for new chapters as tortuous?

At the end of the day, if you haven't read Bone yet, you really ought to. If you like comics at all, you owe it to yourself. If you like adventure or fantasy, you owe it to yourself. If you want to read your kids something a little dangerous and a little exciting and a little funny and quite possibly the best thing your kids will have yet experienced, you owe it to yourself and to them. And if you've already read Bone but it's been a couple years, you owe it to yourself.

Bone by Jeff Smith
[Thorn's such a flirt.]

The Colour Edition
Several years ago, Smith worked with Scholastic to bring the book to a wider youth audience. Part of the marketing was to colour the book. (As originally published, Bone was a strictly black-and-white endeavor.) I'm not sure whether having the book in colour was one of Smith's abiding desires or if Scholastic believed they could better sell it to kids if it were in colour—but whatever the case, when you go onto Amazon or wherever to order your copy, you'll have a variety of formats to choose from. One of those is the colour edition.

Bone by Jeff Smith
[*sigh*]

I won't say that Bone in colour is an abomination, but only because I can't really justify that critique because I haven't read the entire thing in colour. Because what I did read was awful. Or maybe not awful. Maybe it was just uninspired. But when you lay uninspired on top of majesty, you've done something terrible. This colouring job is that. You may not think it's possible to suck the life out of a black-and-white comic by adding colour but you can. You really and truly can.

So please, for your sake and for your children's sake: buy and read Bone in black and white. It's beautiful and stunning and you won't feel embarrassed for the book while reading it.

The One Thing I Didn't Like Really at All
So this is weird and in a way pretty major, but I hated the ending. Now is the time for those who haven't read the book to stop reading. You already know I adore the book and think you should absolutely read this thing. It's canon and it deserves to be so. Everything hereafter is SPOILER.

Okay, so I was completely and entirely sold on Smith's world until the last chapter. The climax and even most of the denouement were stellar and right along with what Smith was doing with his story and characters. It all fit. Then, in the last pages, we see his principal characters make a decision that kind of goes wholly against who Smith developed them to be. I'm not sure why he chose that ending for his book.

In the story in my head, fifteen years earlier when Smith first thought of the story, he came up with an ending. Over the intervening years, his narrative grew and new ideas insinuated themselves. His characters grew in ways he hadn't originally charted out. They became something more than what he had proposed to himself in the beginning. And over the years he added plot points and dialogues and maybe even new arcs. So when he comes to his conclusion, it obviously needs to be different in at least nuance from what he had originally planned. And yet, for reasons foreign to my imagination, Smith decided to stick with his original ending, even though it clearly did not fit with the characters he'd created and the circumstance they find themselves in.

That's how it happened in my imaginary version of what went down to make this ending the ending that got published. I recall being disappointed when I first read that last chapter seven years ago. But whatever my reaction was, in my memory, I was merely annoyed. Reading it again now with my daughter, I was actually angry. I wasn't angry that these characters made the choices they did. I was angry that they did so inexplicably—that there was no justification for their final decision. It didn't fit with Fone Bone's character arc. It didn't fit with Phoney Bone's character motivations. It felt entirely foreign to everything Smith had done prior to that moment. And that just makes me sad for the project, that perfection could be so easily evaporated in a book's final pages.

And now I'm sad.

Bone by Jeff Smith
[Anger.]

_____________________

Foot Notes
1) My impatience for the final unveiling of a story is the primary reason I no longer buy single issues of any series and will even push off acquiring the collected volumes until a series wraps. If a series is good, I always regret reading it in fits and starts while it waits to complete. Bone, Y: The Last Man, Cross Game, 20th Century Boys, and Twin Spica.

Note within a note: The tough thing about my newly acquired methodology is that it's inhibiting to smaller publishers. For instance, Twin Spica's publisher Vertical saw such poor sales on the series that even in the month the twelfth and final volume was released, older volumes were out of print with no plans to bring the series back. Beyond merely being a shame because it's such a good series, this makes it bad news for those who would wait until a series concludes to begin collecting.

_____________________

[Review courtesy of Good Ok Bad.]
Profile Image for Mohadese.
421 reviews1,133 followers
April 24, 2020
مجموعه کمیک بون، سری اول بیرون از استخوان‌کده، نشر باژ
رده‌سنی: ده‌سال به بالا
دوتا شماره‌شو داشتم با خواهر کوچیکم خوندم و هردو عاشقش شدیم.
بی‌نهایت جذاب، ماجراجویانه و خنده‌داره.
تصویرسازیا و ترجمه هم عالی بود.

به‌نظرم برای علاقه‌مند کردن بچه‌ها به کتاب و شروع مطالعه جذاب باشه. هر چند من هم به عنوان یک بزرگتر خیلی لذت بردم.

پ.ن۱: یکی بیاد کمیکامو از دست خواهرم نجات بده :(
پ.ن۲: فکر کنم تا الان ۵ یا ۶ شماره از این سری چاپ شده، حتما بقیه‌شو تهیه میکنم.
Profile Image for Sesana.
6,268 reviews329 followers
August 21, 2015
I first tried out Bone several years ago, and I just couldn't get into it. I decided to give it a second chance, because I've heard so much good about the series as a whole. The second time through, I liked it quite a bit more, but I still didn't love it. The Bones are cute and cartoony and I did enjoy that. Not really invested in whatever the bigger story is, though. At least not yet. I think this time I'm going to try to read the whole series and see what I think of it as a whole.
Profile Image for Sarah (menace mode).
606 reviews36 followers
December 21, 2023
Finished this and bought the entire compendium because I can already tell shits going to SLAP 🫡
Profile Image for Raquel Estebaran.
299 reviews290 followers
October 19, 2021
Muy interesante. La trama está bien, con buenas ilustraciones y buen sentido del humor. Seguiré con más volúmenes de la serie.
Profile Image for Çimen.
83 reviews2 followers
March 11, 2022
Well, first of all we have the charming cousins,


sense of humour,


love,


and a dragon.


But there are mysterious events going on,


and there are monsters,


and something very sinister lurking in the dark.


This is just the beginning of the story...

I'd bought an original black&white version of this one a few years ago and that was quite lovely too. The way the story progressed rather quietly, with the panels just speaking for themselves...Now I'm reading the colored versions, I can't wait to read it all.
Profile Image for Amin.
Author 15 books216 followers
May 14, 2020
درباره‌ی مجموعه:
این مجموعه اولین سری از مجموعه کمیک‌های بونه. داستان از جایی شروع می‌شه که سه استخوان (بون) به نام‌های فون بون، فونی بون و اسمایلی بون که پسر عمو هستند به خاطر کلاهبرداری‌های افشاشده‌ی فونی بون از شهرشون (استخوان‌کده) اخراج می‌شن، توی صحرا سرگردان می‌شن و در نهایت از هم جدا می‌افتن و هرکدوم‌شون در بخشی از دره‌ای سرسبز و با موجودات عجیب سر در می‌آرن. شخصیت اصلی داستان فون بونه و این سری بیشتر حول تلاش فون بون برای پیدا کردن دوباره‌ی پسرعموهاش می‌گذره. البته داستان این‌قدر هم ساده نیست و به مرور شخصیت‌های دیگه‌ای به داستان اضافه می‌شن، با موجودات عجیبی مواجه می‌شین و البته دسیسه‌ای شکل می‌گیره و...
اگه بخوام در مجموع نظر بدم، مجموعه بون مجموعه‌ی خوبیه. تصویرگری‌هاش جذابه، طنز جالبی داره، شخصیت‌پردازی‌هاش بامزه است و می‌تونه سرگرم‌تون کنه. چیزی که آزارم می‌داد ضعف خط داستانی اصلی بود که البته هرچی به شماره‌های پایانی این سری نزدیک‌تر می‌شدم داستان قوی‌تر می‌شد و با توجه به اینکه این تازه آغاز مجموعه‌ای طولانیه می‌شه از این موضوع چشم‌پوشی کرد. در مجموع اگر به کمیک‌ علاقه‌مندین یا دوست دارین برای فرزند یا فرزند دوستان و آشنایانتون هدیه‌ای بخرین به نظرم مجموعه بون انتخاب بدی نباشه.
امتیازم در مجموع 3.5 است که به پایین گردش می‌کنم.

درباره‌ی ترجمه:
ترجمه واقعا عالی بود. دیالوگ‌ها خیلی خوب به فارسی برگردونده شدن و کار خانم عبادی خیلی‌خیلی خوب بود.

درباره‌ی سانسور:
کتابی توی ایران نیست که بدون سانسور چاپ بشه، اما گاهی اوقات حماقت‌ سانسورچی بدجوری روی مخم می‌ره. یه سری سانسورهای تصویری توی این کتاب اعمال شده که به نظرم فقط به ذهن مریض اون ممیز محترم برمی‌گرده. البته نگران نباشین، چیزی نیست که به داستان ضربه بزنه یا حتی متوجهش نشین! فقط اعصاب آدم رو به هم می‌ریزه.

درباره‌ی طرح جلد:
متأسفانه توی انتخاب طرح جلدهای نسخه‌ی فارسی دقت عمل صورت نگرفته. غیر از جلد شماره‌ی اول، تمام طرح جلدهای دیگه بی‌ارتباط با محتوای اون شماره است. مثلا جلد شماره‌ی 2 مربوط به فونی بون و در واقع مربوط به محتوای شماره‌ی 3 است، جلدی که برای شماره‌ی 3 به کار رفته به صحنه‌ای از شماره‌ی 4 اشاره داره، جلد شماره‌ی 4 به صحنه‌ای از شماره‌ی 5 و جلد شماره‌ی 5 به صحنه‌ای از شماره‌ی 6. احتمالا این به‌هم‌ریختگی هم بابت جلد اصلی شماره‌ی 2 است که تصویر تورن روی جلد بوده و شاید اجازه داده نشده که این تصویر روی جلد باشه، اما توجیه نمی‌کنه که طرح جلد شماره‌ها یکی به عقب شیفت کنه و طرح جلد هر شماره مال داستان شماره‌ی بعد باشه. امیدوارم زودتر بقیه‌ی مجموعه هم بیاد و این ایراد هم توش نباشه. چون یکی دوتا از شماره‌های سری بعد هم مشکل (احتمالا) غیرقابل‌چاپ بودن (که البته به نظر من مضحکه چون واقعا چیز خاصی نداره) رو داشته باشه و امیدوارم فکری براش برداشته بشه. شاید هم اصلا مشکل ممیزی جلد مطرح نبوده باشه و فقط یک ایراد برای انتخاب جلد بوده باشه که بازم امیدوارم در ادامه‌ی مجموعه برطرف بشه.
Profile Image for Shannon.
3,111 reviews2,565 followers
December 3, 2012
Quick thoughts:

This was alright, though after reading the Amulet series I know there's better middle grade graphic novels out there. There was surprisingly a lot of smoking in this too, which was weird. And Bone, the main character pictured on the cover, falls in love with a pretty human girl, which was also a little strange. Some of the humor fell flat but some of it made me chuckle. Bone's cousin, Phoney Bone, is a huge jerk though and I was glad when he wasn't in the story and disappointed when he showed up again.

I'll continue with this one but if it starts to decline I'll probably drop it since it is a little long and I wasn't hugely impressed.
Profile Image for Shannon .
1,219 reviews2,582 followers
September 13, 2009
Fone Bone's wealthy and arrogant cousin, Phoney Bone, has been run out of Boneville by the angry residents and Fone Bone agrees to help him, along with their other cousin, Smiley Bone. But they get lost in the desert and have used up all their water and tempers are running high. When a swarm of locusts sweeps through the valley they run for their lives - and suddenly Fone Bone is falling. Separated from the others and lost, he has only an old map that Smiley found that leads him through the mountains and into a paradise land wherein lurk some monstrous creatures.

Fone needs to find his cousins, but there are rat creatures after him and a little bug called Ted thinks someone called Thorn can help him - only Ted has disappeared and Bone doesn't know where this Thorn is. Then he encounters her unexpectedly - a beautiful human girl - and falls in love! Together they make plans for finding Phoney and Smiley - before the rat creatures get them first.

Beautifully drawn and presented, Out From Boneville is a delightful, imaginative, funny trip through a vivid landscape of chain-smoking dragons, talking possums, cow-racing grannies and scary monsters. Bone is an endearing hero, good-hearted and resourceful, vulnerable and sympathetic.

It has something of a "to be continued" ending, with an unsolved mystery behind the scenes that really gets you curious. Aside from that, Out From Boneville is self-contained and a wonderful introduction to the series - and witty too. The panels are cleverly drawn to show what cannot be included in dialogue, and it makes full use of the medium (graphic novel) in which it's presented. As an adult, this was fun to read - better than watching a cartoon on telly, that's for sure.
Profile Image for Amanda.
52 reviews
November 15, 2009
Out from Boneville is the first installment in the Bone series featuring Phoney Bone, Fone Bone, and Smiley Bone. When the three cousins are run out of Boneville because of Phoney Bone's latest scheme, they get lost and separated in the desert. Fone Bone (our hero) finds a secret valley where he encounters weird weather, strange friends (a cow racing grandmother and a tiny green bug), frightening foes (homicidal rat creatures), and a strangely protective dragon that no one else can see.

I really enjoyed my first Bone book. I've been meaning to read some of this series for about a year, and I was not disappointed. The characters are engaging, and the world is interesting. Many reviewers have compared Smith to Tolkien in his world-building, and although I wouldn't go that far at this point, I can see why they say that. The original strip was in black and white, but the use of color is really exceptional in this book, so I'm glad Scholastic decided to add it. It's funny, it's original, and I can't wait to find out what happens next!

I would recommend it to kids in 4th grade and up. It's got a few frames that would upset the most sensitive parents, but the content really is fine for older kids.
Profile Image for হাঁটুপানির জলদস্যু.
299 reviews228 followers
April 8, 2019
আঁকায় আর লেখায় বোন দারুণ সরস। জেফ স্মিথের গল্পকথনে চমকজাগানো নতুনত্ব আছে, চরিত্রচিত্রণেও তিনি কুশলী। তুলির অল্প কয়েকটা আঁচড় আর কয়েকটা সংলাপেই তিনি ফোন বোন, ফোনি বোন আর স্মাইলি বোনকে আমার কাছে প্রিয় করে তুলতে পেরেছেন। ফোন বোনের সাথে দ্য গডস মাস্ট বি ক্রেজির ছোটো বাচ্চাটার সাদৃশ্য কোথায় যেন আছে, এমন অনসূয় প্রাণশক্তিতে ভরা চরিত্র অনেকদিন পাইনি। টেরি প্র্যাচেটের অনুপস্থিতি আমাকে পীড়া দেয় প্রায়ই, রোজ বেনের মধ্যে তাই গ্র্যানি ওয়েদারওয়্যাক্সের ছায়া দেখতে পাই। ফোন্সিব্‌ল পি বোন ওরফে কোটিপতি ফোনি বোন একাধারে লোভী, চতুর, পরকল্যাণে বীতস্পৃহ, অদূরদর্শী, অনাস্থাকাতর, কিন্তু তারপরও স্মিথের তুলি-কলমের গুণে তাকে ভালো লেগে যায়। স্মাইলি বোনকে এক স্বীকারোক্তিতেই যেন আপন আর বহুদিনের চেনা মনে হয়, বাস্তব আর অদ্ভুতের মাঝে ফারাক করার কাজে সে তেমন পাকা নয়। তিন Bone আর ব্যারেলহাভন গ্রাম, বন আর বুনো পথ, উপত্যকার পাহাড়-খাদ-ঝর্ণা, এগুলো আঁকায় স্মিথের ওপর উদেরজোর প্রভাব আছে বলে আমার মনে হয়েছে। কিন্তু সংলাপ আর ছবির চমকে স্মিথ প্রবলভাবে স্বতন্ত্র।

খুব ভালো লেগেছে পড়ে। প্রিয় চরিত্রের তালিকায় ফোন বোন পাকা জায়গা করে নিয়েছে। মোবি ডিক থেকে অনেকেই অনেক কিছু নিয়েছেন, ভবিষ্যতেও নেবেন, কিন্তু স্মিথ যেভাবে সেখান থেকে রং নিয়ে ফোন বোনকে রাঙিয়েছেন, তা অতুলনীয়।
Profile Image for Corey Allen.
217 reviews14 followers
July 24, 2022
I've been hearing great things about bone forever. So I thought, I would finally check it out. And, it was pretty good.

Phoney Bone, gets in to trouble with the townsfolk, which ends up getting him run out of town! HIs cousins Smiley Bone and Fone Bone, go with him which leads to lots of adventures.

This is a great beginning to this series. It doesn't give away too much, but just enough to keep you entertained and intrigued. I loved all of the characters. They all have very different personalities, and its fun seeing all of them together. Phoney Bone is the spoiled brat of the group, he has a short temper and is always scheming for money. We see the most of Fone bone, in this volume. He is defintly the leader of the group. Nice, helpful, basically a good person all around. Smiley bone is the comic relief of the group. He is kinda dumb and always making you laugh. Actually, this whole book is quite funny at times. There are some more characters that you get introduced to later and they are all fun.

I'm interested to see where the rest of the story goes, but anyways I recommend!
Profile Image for Kelly Furniss.
1,030 reviews
December 29, 2015
After reading a run of dark graphic novels this was a fabulous refreshing change.
The characters are so cute and loveable in this fairy tale like story set in an imaginary land.
We follow Fone Bone, Phoney Bone and Smiley Bone as they try to escape the uncharted desert but as they do this they get split up and each separately come in to a mysterious valley filled with scary creatures. The tale is simple and the imagery almost childlike but I could not help being drawn in to their world. A great entertaining funny comic book/ graphic novel, it had me right from the beginning and what makes it great is it is an accessible book for children right through to adults. You can't help but adore these little characters!.
Profile Image for Donovan.
734 reviews106 followers
July 29, 2021
I think Bone may be overhyped, at least in Vol. 1. I found the dialog fairly basic and cartoon trope. The world-building has potential, with nuances such as the nary heard of Boneville, rat creatures, the dragon only the Bones can see, and cow-racing Grandma Ben. But the story's pacing dragged a bit for me.
Profile Image for Lashaan Balasingam.
1,475 reviews4,623 followers
March 23, 2020


You can find my review on my blog by clicking here.

It can be quite shocking when you realize that you’ve been tossed into the middle of a magnificent epic war against evil while you’re just out there trying to eat a delicious breakfast and figuring out where you could find the love of your life. Granted that everything has its place and time, there are certain issues that demand to be addressed much sooner than later. Such as lost cousins, giant sharp-toothed rats, guardian dragons, and a mean-looking granny. Originally self-published in black white from 1991 to 2004 and winner of multiple Eisner and Harvey Awards, it is only in 2005 that publisher Scholastic obtained the rights to publish the comic book series with Steve Hamaker’s colours in nine volumes which later spawned a prequel and sequel.

What is Bone: Out from Boneville about? Kicked out of Boneville, the three Bone cousins find themselves on a wild adventure as they are separated and lost in an uncharted desert. As they wander the odd and mysterious lands, they encounter strange rat creatures who are on the hunt for the one with the starred chest (Phoney Bone, the greedy and selfish one of the three cousins). Meanwhile, Fone Bone runs into Gran’ma Ben and her beautiful granddaughter as he tries to win the latter’s heart and find a way to get in touch with his two other cousins. After all, Smiley Bone is nowhere to be found. Unfortunately, there are far graver dangers on the horizon that are right on their tails and it’s nothing to be excited about.

Heavily focused on slapstick comedy and wrapped within an epic fantasy tale which only the reader could acknowledge as the characters remains oblivious to the universe in which they get lost in, the story doesn’t necessarily take any form until much later into the narrative. It is only upon the introduction of Thorn, Gran’ma Ben, and the other mystical creatures that a certain overarching narrative is observable. What creator Jeff Smith accomplishes with this first volume is establishing the tone and direction of his comic book series, assuring the reader that they are in for an adventure filled with whimsical and humourous elements. While the comedy might not always hit the mark, the best parts of this series, however, remains the banter, especially those involving the nonsensical cousins.

The artwork is incredibly clean and every character is clearly distinguishable in each panel. This can easily be explained by the original black and white artwork which didn’t look into playing with gradients but strived to illustrate scenes as vividly as possible. The black contouring and the prominence of certain elements (e.g. characters) in each panel also make it easy to follow the development of events without a single hint of confusion. Following a much more traditional panel structure, with giant squares that rarely ever overlap, creator Jeff Smith was able to deliver his story efficiently while giving the overall volume an enchanted and mythical layer that is bound to grow stronger and much more important over the course of the following volumes.

Bone: Out from Boneville is an enjoyable and droll fantasy adventure featuring three silly Bone cousins lost in a magical world.

Yours truly,

Lashaan | Blogger and Book Reviewer
Official blog: https://bookidote.com/
Profile Image for Tamora Pierce.
Author 99 books85.2k followers
August 10, 2009
Bone and his two cousins are kicked out of Boneville, or rather, Fone Bone was kicked out for a picnic with bad prunes and a huge balloon that destroyed a local landmark, and the other two Bones are sharing his exile. The three are split up, and Bone finds his way to a forest realm, where he is menaced by big furry hungry things with red eyes, and where he is befriended by the lovely Thorn and her take-no-prisoners Granny. He's also protected by the enigmatic Big Red Dragon for reasons that are unexplained. At last he is reunited in disaster with his cousins with promises of adventure to come.

This wasn't my kind of thing, though I know the series is very popular. I could have done without the greedy, nasty Fone Bone entirely, since he's completely off-putting. I wish someone had the courtesy to give the Big Red Dragon a name, since he is so important. And nobody seems to think, particularly. I would rather you read it yourself than took my word for it!
Profile Image for Ellis.
1,216 reviews167 followers
July 28, 2020
I'm reading this to my four year old, so like a responsible mother I read ahead to try to gauge whether there's anything in this that he'd find troubling. So far so good! My kid has been a super graphic novel freak (but no he may not read Ex Machina no matter how hard he pleads his case) since he saw the cover of Saga Vol 1 and called it Monster and Love Had a Baby, so I'll call that so far so good as well.
Profile Image for Steve.
962 reviews112 followers
February 14, 2015
This brought back memories! I used to read this as a weekly comic strip in the Ohio State University newspaper in the early 80s. Of course, back then, it was a black and white strip. The coloring is an improvement.

The story is outstanding, and I'll be diving right into the next volume: Bone, Vol. 2: The Great Cow Race. :D
Profile Image for Murphy C.
878 reviews5 followers
April 17, 2023
Bone is an indie fantasy comic first published, in black and white, in 1991. I remember seeing issues as a kid, but somehow never read one until now. Too bad for me!! While I turned the last page with far more questions than answers about the Cousins Bone and their wonky, anachronistic world, each page along was turned with anticipation and delight. I can't wait to find out what happens next!
Profile Image for Vedran Karlić.
250 reviews41 followers
March 21, 2017
Na preporuku (i posudbu) došao sam do Bone stripa. Uopće nisam znao što mogu ili trebam očekivati. Zbilja nisam znao ništa o stripu. Dobio sam jedan prilično zabavan i pustolovni početak, uz prilično simplificirani stil, sve nacrtano crno bijelo, no istovremeno na takav način da svaka slika bez ikakvih problema odražava stanje likova, pogotovo njihove emocije.

Sva sreća pa sam dobio knjigu u kojoj se nalaze sve pojedinačno izašle knjige tako da ću odmah nastaviti dalje, vidjeti kuda pustolovina vodi Bone društvo, njihove prijatelje (najbolji je crveni zmaj) te za sada prilično misteriozne neprijatelje.
Profile Image for Sylwia.
1,320 reviews26 followers
March 27, 2017


Why I Recommend Bumping This Down On Your TBR: Thorn (female side character/Bone's love interest and friend) is sexually objectified every time she is in a panel. She is introduced to the reader, through the male gaze, by taking her pants off and getting into a hot spring. When she runs and attacks, her clothing gets ripped to appease the male gaze again. Worst of all, there is a random moment where she detracts from the story by having Bone bathe with her in a body of water. She deserved better.
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