Condition: New. Denigris, Griffin (illustrator).
Language: English
Published by Independently published, 2020
ISBN 10: 1660205271 ISBN 13: 9781660205271
Seller: California Books, Miami, FL, U.S.A.
Condition: New. Print on Demand.
Seller: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: new. Denigris, Griffin (illustrator). Paperback. Winston Fisher, Jr. is broke, unemployed, and coming off his third divorce. High on cocaine, he wanders through his rented McMansion in a bathrobe, taking little notice of the piles of takeout containers or unopened mail, or even his firearms scattered throughout-a collection vast enough to be called an arsenal. His mother calls constantly. His newly engaged daughter texts updates about the wedding. They still think of him as the man he once was. The only people who know better are his coke dealer and his closest friend, an escort.What begins as a side hustle-tweaking AR-15s in his garage-becomes something more lucrative, more dangerous, and yet somehow more boring than Winston imagined. The tedium breaks when he stumbles upon a cartel-run stash house hidden in a south Texas junkyard. Fantasizing about robbing it, he begins to wonder if he's desperate enough to follow through.Part character study, part slow-motion implosion, Drew Nellins Smith's Wince is an unsettling satire about American masculinity, depression, gun culture, and what happens when rock-bottom is mistaken for a return to stability. A broke, cocaine-fueled divorced man slides from backyard gunsmithing into cartel territory-a darkly comic autopsy of American masculinity at its most delusional. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Published by WarnerBrothers 2008-02-12 00:00:00, 2008
Seller: R Bookmark, Youngtown, AZ, U.S.A.
dvd. Condition: Used - Good.
Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. Denigris, Griffin (illustrator). Neuware - Winston Fisher, Jr. is broke, unemployed, and coming off his third divorce. High on cocaine, he wanders through his rented McMansion in a bathrobe, taking little notice of the piles of takeout containers or unopened mail, or even his firearms scattered throughout-a collection vast enough to be called an arsenal. His mother calls constantly. His newly engaged daughter texts updates about the wedding. They still think of him as the man he once was. The only people who know better are his coke dealer and his closest friend, an escort.What begins as a side hustle-tweaking AR-15s in his garage-becomes something more lucrative, more dangerous, and yet somehow more boring than Winston imagined. The tedium breaks when he stumbles upon a cartel-run stash house hidden in a south Texas junkyard. Fantasizing about robbing it, he begins to wonder if he's desperate enough to follow through.Part character study, part slow-motion implosion, Drew Nellins Smith's Wince is an unsettling satire about American masculinity, depression, gun culture, and what happens when rock-bottom is mistaken for a return to stability.
Published by Raw Books New York, NY, 1980
Seller: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
2 vol. : 1 vol. 34 pp. ; 1 vol. [12] pp.; 36 x 26.5 cm.; staple bound; other special feature[s]; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; Inaugural issue of Raw Magazine. Edited by Francoise Mouly and Art Spiegelman. Contents include: "Can't It Be Done?," by Ray Gross and Winter; "Hommages Posthumes," by Alfred Jarry, illustrated by Bruno Richard; "Corpus Delecti," by Geoff Robison; "Vamp Dance," by Kaz; "Manhattan," by Jacques Tardi; "I'll Play the Blues for You," by Joost Swarte; "Jack Survives," by Jerry Moriarty; "Mutton Geoff," by Mark Newgarden; "Fifi Gaga Magazine," by Bazooka; "Centerfold: Two-Fisted Painters," by Art Spiegelman; "He Turned, Saw Me, Waved His Arm, Continued," by Patricia Caire, from a text by James Barth; "Not Dreams," by Lynne Tillman; "Dead Things," by Mark Beyer; "The Andy Griffith Show," by Josh Alan Friedman and Drew Friedman; "One Panel from The Basis of Make-Up," by Heinz Emigholz; "Drawn Over Two Weeks While on the Phone," by Art Spiegelman; "Four Supermarkets in Iowa," by David Marc, illustrated by Gary Hallgren; "Piquer, Lucas, & Fermin," by Mariscal; "Industry News and Review No. 6," by Francoise Mouly; "Dream of the Rarebit Fiend," by Winsor McCay; "Canal Street," by Gerry Capelle "Cartoon Movies," by George Griffin. Front cover: Art Spiegelman. Back cover: "Los Garriris," by Mariscal. In black-and-white with the exception of Art Spiegelman's cover and his smaller-scale stand-alone comic "Two-Fisted Painters." Good / Very Good. 3.3 cm. dog ear to bottom right corner of recto with bumping and resultant creasing along bottom and top edges of recto. 1 cm. yellow stain to recto with additional light yellow soiling along spine edge and a 23 cm. area of yellowing across top portion of recto. Light yellow soiling across 25 cm. area of verso. Bumping of bottom right corner of pages and yellow staining along bottom edges of pages. Contents otherwise clean and unmarked. Includes stapled-in second volume. Due to size additional shipping charges will be required for international orders.