Book Log – Human Anatomy Made Amazingly Easy & Expressive Anatomy

Human Anatomy Made Amazingly Easy by Christopher Hart
Expressive Anatomy for Comics and Narrative: Principles and Practices from the Legendary Cartoonist (Will Eisner Instructional Books) by Will Eisner

So here we have two books on drawing… one by a relatively young guy, and another by a giant in the field, published posthumously from his notes.

It surprises even me that, while I liked both books, I found the young guy’s more educational.

It’s obvious that Will Eisner is the better artist.  There are many drawings from Christopher Hart’s book that I find… less than publishable-quality.  But Christopher Hart is the first person to really make me pay attention to skeletal and muscular structure.  I don’t know why; Almost all the figure drawing books I have go over this.  But there’s something in the way Hart breaks it down that made it easy for me to digest.  Amazingly Easy, I guess.

Granted, the books don’t have the same aim.  Eisner is addressing expressiveness and storytelling.  Hart is trying to communicate the basics.  It’s entirely possible I’m just not ready for the Eisner.

I can accept that.  I’ve got it in my library for later.

Book Log – Un Lun Dun

Un Lun Dun by China Mieville

Curt Holman loaned me this book, a favorite of his daughter’s.

My only experience with China Mieville thus far has been Perdido Street Station, which is a quirky but engrossing book. Mieville seems like the writer that the term “speculative fiction” was coined for, as one hesitates to call it fantasy or science fiction.

Un Lun Dun is a surprising and creative book intended for kids, but entertaining for adults.

Jumping between what I’ll call an Un-World and this world, it has a down the rabbit hole feel, but more grounded than the Alice surrealism. The world of unLondon thrives on the cast-offs of the real London, where animated garbage and eccentric creatures abound. A crisis that threatens unLondon and London alike can seemingly only be thwarted by a prophesied young girl, but Mieville is not so pedestrian to allow that to play out as you would expect.

The vivid description of the action and oddball characters is crying out for a movie adaptation.

Dreams of My President

I dreamed last night that I participated in two unrelated press conferences with President Obama.

The majority of the dream was me trying to figure out how to compress the description of the experience into 140 characters.

This is my brain trying to tell me something.