SUGGESTED READING FOR GREGG EASTERBROOK
Phillip Pullman ("His Dark Materials" aka Harry Potter for grownups) writes about Art Spiegelman's Maus I and Maus II, released together for the first time.
The stark black-and-white drawings, the lines so thick in places as almost to seem as if they belong in a woodcut, hark back to the wordless novels of Frans Masereel, with their expressionist woodcut prints; and those in turn take their place in an even older northern European tradi tion of printmaking that goes back to Holbein and Dürer. In telling a story about Germany, Spiegelman uses a very German technique.
UPDATE: The Antic Muse continues to earn my undying admiration, providing sober, thoughtful coverage of L'Affaire d'Easterbrook, versus the sort of puerile name-calling I tend to favor.
SECOND UPDATE: Easterbrook has been relieved of his ESPN assignment. I'm amazed at the indignant tears shed for a privileged white boy losing a plum gig. Frankly, it's TNR that needs to disencumber themselves of his services. (Proceed at your own risk to the site - it loads painfully slowly, if at all.)

Comments