

Review: Stunning artwork - Artwork in this is unbelievably good Review: Impressive art work - A fictional graphic diary employing the iconography of B-movie horror imagery and pulp monster magazines. Dark, sometimes tragic, and incredibly compelling. The art is really everything. I can't wait to get my hands on the second book (Publication date 22 Sep 2022).







| Best Sellers Rank | 274,115 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 742 in Crime & Mystery Graphic Novels |
| Customer reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (1,282) |
| Dimensions | 20.57 x 3.3 x 26.67 cm |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1606999591 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1606999592 |
| Item weight | 1.43 kg |
| Language | English |
| Part of Series | My Favorite Thing is Monsters |
| Print length | 386 pages |
| Publication date | 19 Jan. 2017 |
| Publisher | Fantagraphics Books |
| Reading age | 16 years and up |
N**5
Stunning artwork
Artwork in this is unbelievably good
S**1
Impressive art work
A fictional graphic diary employing the iconography of B-movie horror imagery and pulp monster magazines. Dark, sometimes tragic, and incredibly compelling. The art is really everything. I can't wait to get my hands on the second book (Publication date 22 Sep 2022).
P**E
Like a fusion of David Lynch, a pre-teen diary and a horror flick. Utterly mesmerising.
Imagine (if you can) someone taking David Lynch's "Blue Velvet", and gene-splicing it with the classic movie monsters of Universal Studios, the seedy underbelly of Chicago, and a pre-teen's gorgeous biro-pen-rendered journal. That's about the best summary I can come up with for "My Favourite Thing is Monsters" by Emil Ferris. Emil has constructed a story world like no other, written from the perspective of 10-year-old Karen Reyes, who is thrown into a deviously twisted mystery involving the murder of her upstairs neighbour. Karen's investigation leads her to the taped journals of Anka (her beautiful neighbour) and her harrowing past. This is one hugely thick and immensely satisfying book to get wrapped up in. Laid out against the backdrop of a foolscap-lined spiral bound journal, Emil's artwork will grab you by the throat and shake you. Exquisite ballpen drawings intermixed with garishly coloured (but again gorgeous) pulp horror comic book covers and scratchier pen drawings, if nothing else it's a visual feast (and I've become completely obsessed with drawing and mimicking this style myself in my own art). Beyond that though it's a gripping read as the story darts between Karen's observations of her dying mother, her louche brother and of course deeper digs into Anka's life. It took a bit of getting hold of this in the UK but you can find copies (I highly recommend Speedy Kitty as a reseller if you want a copy pronto in great condition btw). It's probably one of the best graphic novels I've ever read (and I've read a lot), and I'm overjoyed to hear a sequel is on the way. You need this in your life, simple as.
S**L
Oh. My. Goodness. What a book!
I am so in love with this book. I honestly feel as though the work that has gone into it deserves a higher price-tag. It's rare that I stare at the art work in a graphic novel, literally examining every pen-stroke. It's amazing. So the story is a bit clunky, the characters are a bit extreme, there is a 'Grave of the Fireflies' feel of, 'This can't get any worse, can it? Surely they're not going to make it worse? Can't I have a break for five minutes. Oh God, they're going to go there... Yep, they went there.' It's a bit much. And the book starts with one mystery, introduces at least two others, and only solves one of them. Or maybe solves it, because the solution is revealed in an art-infused vision. If that hasn't put you off, you will probably love this book as much as I did. Spiegelman, Bechdel, you have a new peer. Although appropriately (given the 60s setting), the graphic style made me think of Robert Crumb - ugly-beautiful. I could go on, and on, about the psychological depth, about the most shocking and beautiful image in the whole thing being a drawing of a girl's face in a mirror, about the intrusion of 60s politics in a little girl's tough, tough life, about the encroachment of the bad monsters, who hate the good monsters and how much a memoir about a distant childhood is now about America, TODAY. Just read it.
R**L
Very good first impression good quality
A**H
Blew my mind
When the first time I saw it I wasn’t to sure but I thought I’ll give it a try, I was blow away by the art style it reminded me of when I was at school and would draw random pictures in pen, It tells a interesting story, and the bond between Karen and her brother is refreshing would recommend, I’ve already preordered the second book
M**N
OMG - monstrously good!
A good decent story - it takes its time and it is not thrill a minute. You have to be patient. However you will be kept gripped by the artwork as it is outstanding. The layers and complexity is mind blowing and it is kept up throughout the entirety of this heavyweight book. I cannot wait for part two (which is on order)...!
L**S
brilliant...
A very competant illustrative artist creates a wonderful art work. The story line grabs and has interesting twists and turns down dark alleys. Very nicely done. The seller sent quicker than expected so five stars for them as well.
J**O
Weird, beautiful and wonderful!
D**O
This book has 'a must read' written all over it. Fantastic debut by Emil Ferris. Inventive, beautiful and sincere, the work presented as a diary entries of a 10-year-old Chicago girl Karen Reyes who lives in the world of monsters but that is only part of the story.
J**R
Just finished reading Emil Ferris's amazing graphic novel and I can say, as a grizzled comics fan with wide-ranging tastes, that I've honestly never seen anything quite like it. Spectacular illustrations cover almost every inch of this huge volume, all printed on lined three-hole paper emulating the illustrated diary of the ten-year-old protagonist, a tough and beleaguered tomboy on the rough streets of 1960's Chicago. Well-written and deeply immersive, this piece drew me into the world of Karen, a monster-obsessed kid struggling with sexuality, race, poverty, and the violence of her surroundings. It is as dark a work as I've read in comics yet has a jaunty sort of zest for life in it that constantly pulls the narrative along and saves the reader from being overwhelmed by some of the disturbing elements within. It's especially astonishing as the first work from a writer/artist, working in seclusion for over six years. It reminds me, in all the best ways, of the confessional work of Robert Crumb and Harvey Pekar, of the strange life-stories of Chris Ware and Daniel Clowes and Jeffrey Brown. It also reminds me of my own childhood, of how different a child can view the world, though my own early years were far less fearful. Ferris's illustrations also show an abiding love not just for horror movies (and particularly for our mutual Universal monster favorite, the Wolf Man) but for the great horror magazines of the 1960's from CREEPY and FAMOUS MONSTERS though the gory WEIRD and TERROR TALES varieties. Perhaps also some of the Spanish/Mexican horror mags, too, I'd guess. This is a great book. I can see it speaking to those that struggled with gender issues, but its scope is well beyond that, a love poem to lonely, different kids everywhere. I eagerly await the second part of the story, which will be published in early 2018. Go to Amazon and browse through a few pages, if you wish. It is not a story for children (and, honestly, I swore aloud when I hit the pages that will keep it out of most school libraries) but it speaks to the damaged child in each of us, I think.
S**E
Non ci sono parole per descrivere la bellezza di questo libro. Ogni pagina è meritevole di attenzione sin nei minimi dettagli. Imperdibile.
S**3
J'ai très rarement rencontré de livres aussi fort, et pourtant, j'en consomme en quantité industrielle. Chaque page m'agrippe et ce livre ne me lâche plus. Je suis entrée tout droit dans l'histoire, le personnage de Karen est atypique et ultra-attachant, chaque silhouette a un background, c'est riche de détails, le dessin est incroyable... Tout est tellement vrai dans ce livre, et en même temps fantasmagorique. Savoir qu'il y a un tome 2 est un plaisir rassurant. Et j'attends avec impatience la sortie de la version française chez Monsieur Toussaint Louverture, pour l'offrir et le conseiller à mes proches et amis francophones. I have very rarely encountered books this powerful, and yet I use consume them in huge quantities. Each page has a grip on me and never let go. I walked straight into the story, Karen's character is atypical and so endearing, each drawn extra you spot has an actual background, the book is amazingly rich in details, the art is incredible... Everything feels so true in this book, and yet phantasmagorical. Knowing that a second volume is coming reassures. And I look forward to the French version, soon to be released by Mr. Toussaint Louverture, so I'll be able to showcase this wonder to my french-speaking friends and family.