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    Overview:
     
    Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and illustrator Art Spiegelman joins forces with designer Chip Kidd to pay homage to the comic book hero Plastic Man and his creator, Jack Cole. Plastic Man is more than just a putty face--with his bad-boy past, he literally embodies the comic book form: the exuberant energy, flexibility, boyishness, and subtle hints of sexuality. And as cartoonists "become" each character they create, it can be said that Jack Cole himself resembles Plastic Man. Cole revealed the true magnitude and intensity of his imagination and inner thoughts as Plastic Man slithered from panel to panel--shifting forms and dashing from male to female, or freely morphing from a stiff upright figure to a being as soft as a Dali clock. With a compelling history, a V-necked red rubber leotard, a black-and-yellow striped belt, and very cool tinted goggles, Plastic Man is truly a cult classic, and this art-packed book will delight any fan.
     

    Notable content:

    • Selected Plastic Man reprints
    • Great research and historical depth of the relation of the work to the time it was released.
    • Murder, Morphine and Me
    • Playboy pin-ups
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    Creators

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    4.5 stars

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    Bending minds while there is a Seduction of the innocent 0

    If you like History books this book is important to the history of Comics, it is a well research historical account to the impact of Jack Cole to comics, not just Plastic Man.  Art Spiegelman presents Plas however as somewhat of Jack Cole's id, the childish side of him he can let loose on comics.  We get that sense the most when it is presented to us that even if Jack Cole is drawing women for Playboy he was more obsessed with death.  Plas was like a life-support system to him and when Jack Cole...

    5 out of 5 found this review helpful.
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