Passports: HOME | EUROPE | AMERICAS, AUSTRALIA and OCEANIA | ASIA | AFRICA | OTHER DOCUMENTS
National Anthems:[ www.national-anthems.net ] ++
Travel:[ Europe ] [ Asia ] [ USA-Canada ] [ Latin-America ] [ Africa ] [ Australia ] [ more ]
[ Australia legal ] [ U.K. legal ] [ U.S. visa ] [ Immigration ] [ Marriage based U.S visa ]



Subject: Re: These make great sporting gifts for Easter Posted on: Thu, 20 Mar 2008 17:00:02 +0000 (UTC)

In article ,
Amethyst Deceiver writes:
> In article <31v9b5-lqc.ln1@nntp.stir.ac.uk>, sam@ssrl.org.uk says...
> > In article ,
> > Amethyst Deceiver writes:
> > > Possibly because Judge Dredd and 2000AD were comics, not graphic novels.
> >
> > Having once spent almost an entire year listening to someone try to explain
> > what a `literary work' is and how it's entirely different to a `book' I can
> > hardly wait for the definition of the difference between a `graphic novel'
> > and a `comic book'.
>
> I didn't say it was a comic book, I said it was a comic. 'Comic' is the
> one with lots of different stories that last for weeks and weeks. Like
> Beano and Dandy - or would you call them comic books too?

Weeelll... V for Vendetta first appeared in Warrior, in instalments. A
Close Relative collected it obsessively. When Warrior collapsed, he joined
the letter-writing campaign to persuade DC to take it on. V4V was a story
in a comic before it was anything else. But if I extract the instalments
from a _comic_ and publish them all together in one single item as a
continuous story, that's a `comic book'. Isn't it?
--
SAm.