That Yellow Bastard (Sin City, Book 4: Second Edition) | Frank Miller | If you like it Raw, this is the book for you
books:
That Yellow Bastar...
That Yellow Bastard (Sin City, Book 4: Second Edition)
Frank Miller
Dark Horse
, 2005 - 240 pages
average customer review:
based on 32 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
Just one hour to go. Hartigan's polishing his badge and working himself up to kissing it goodbye, it and the thirty-odd years of protecting and serving, tears, blood, and triumph
that
it represents. He's thinking about his wife's smile, about the thick, fat steaks she's picked up at the butcher's, about the bottle of champagne she's got packed in ice, about sleeping in 'til ten in the morning and spending sunny afternoons flat on his back. But with one hour left to go, he gets word about that one loose end he hasn't tied up: a young girl who's helpless in the hands of a drooling lunatic. Just one hour to go ... and Hartigan's gonna go out with a bang.
for more information click here
The Best.
Frank Miller's Sin
City
is paradise for noir fans, nothing can't happen in these graphic novels. "Walk down the right back alley in Sin City, and you can find anything."
Book
4 of 7,
That
Yellow
Bastard
is a tale of bravery and sacrifice. It's my absolute favorite of all the Sin City books, Frank Miller's dark and extremely stylized way of telling this masterpiece is electrifying. The artwork is tip top, the writing is crisp and smooth, and the characterization is excellent. I hope you enjoy this amazing book!
If you like it Raw, this is the book for you
Frank Miller doesn't pull many punches when he writes. I use the word raw to describe his writing because honestly, there is no more appropriate word if you ask me. His characters exist and breathe unapologizingly in the world of Basin
City
and
That
Yellow
Bastard
is way at the top of the best Sin City
book
s for a reason. You have a hero that doesn't have an ounce of quit in him and who's pushed beyond what's even amorally admisible. Hardigan is the type of hero everyone says they would be in a situation such as that but quite frankly, I don't think there exists someone who is as unbreakable as Hardigan. Moral dilemmas don't exist when it comes to saving a kid from a rapist but it all gets way complicated when push comes to shove comes to murder. The beauty of Sin City is that even though it's noir fiction, you can't help but believe these characters, feel their pain, feel their anger and silently nod as some questionable decisions regarding what's right in this world are taken by a hero that shows that being a hero sometimes means not giving a damn and taking your hatred for one Yellow Bastard to the brink of sanity.
for more information click here
Perhaps the best
Certainly my favorite of the Sin
City
"episodes". The selective use of color creates a wonderful tension.
A Very Good Cop in a Very Bad Town
A fan favorite due to the movie, John Hartigan is probably the most unusual character in the Sin
City
roster - an honest and honorable cop in a very corrupt and dishonest city. Not surprisingly, things do not go well for him. Betrayed by his partner and set up as the patsy for a heinous crime, he represent the epitome of honor as he quietly and passively accepts his fate in order to protect the innocent.
On the other side is Hartigan's polar opposite. The title character is probably the single most despicable character in the series who tortures little kids before killing them, uses family connections to get himself off while framing an innocent man. The great thing about this
book
is
that
it really presents the two extremes of humanity and puts them at crossing paths to each other.
The story has more sticking power than many of the others by Frank Miller. No doubt this is due to the ending, far more poignant than that of others. It is too bad that Miller did not continue with this story line in other volumes as there are enough loose ends here for a number of good stories. Perhaps, though, the ambiguity is part of the charm.
for more information click here
Graphic SF Reader
A mostly honest cop close to retirement saves a young girl, foiling the plots of some crooked colleagues and other powerful men. He takes the torture, deprivation and long prison sentence to protect her, revelling in the letters she writes him.
They stop, he is let out. Finding the girl, he realises he has been played, and knows there is only one way to stop the little
yellow
bastard
and company.
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
products you might be interested in
recommendations
Comic books, fun tales, and an intertwining of the two.
Great Frank Miller graphic novels!
My Favorite Graphic Novels
My Favorite Graphic Novels
American Comics
edition
New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)
The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Standard Edition
Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)
A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, Third Edition ...
The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Collector's Edition (Offered ...
search for books
that yellow
,
bastard
,
city
,
edition
,
second
,
yellow
toavi.com
web
randomly chosen
VHS:
Thumbelina