Reviews

Love Me Please : Une histoire de Janis Joplin by Nicolas Finet

alexlcriddle's review against another edition

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3.0

This was an enlightening graphic novel about a truly unique artist. I think most people have at least heard of Janis Joplin, and have probably heard one or two of her songs. I would definitely say this book is for adults because it deals with adult content and themes. It was fascinating to learn about Janis Joplin’s life and career. The illustrations were great and I was surprised and impressed with the artistic depiction of her addiction. The song lyrics jumped off the page and I felt like I could hear them. The writing was stiff and awkward at times and I wish it could have flowed better. I was confused about the narrator because we never found out who was commenting on what was going on. Based on context, my guess is that it was her father, but again, there was never a clear answer. Overall, I liked this graphic novel and was inspired to seek out Janis Joplin’s music after reading it.

Again, I would caution that this is for adults and would not recommend it to younger readers.

Content warnings: profanity, nudity, sex, drugs, alcohol, and death from overdose

carleesi's review against another edition

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1.0

This book felt quite detached from Janis, especially towards the end. She clearly didn’t have much agency in her life and it was disappointing to see this reflected in the story without critique.

Also using racial slurs to indicate the “irony” of characters perspective is not it. As an aside: authors need to do a very quick Google search to find terms for First Nation people from places like Australia that aren’t slurs. It’s not hard.

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adoptalibros's review against another edition

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3.0

Versión cómic de la biografía de Janis Joplin. Desde luego, a diferencia de una biografía al uso, este formato se hace mucho más dinámico y ágil de leer si no estamos muy acostumbrados a leer biografías de un único personaje histórico, ya que no es lo mismo que leer narrativa.

Sin embargo, si por el contrario esperábamos encontrar efectivamente una biografía bastante completa, esta se queda desde luego muy justa.

Al principio me pareció, precisamente por ello, el formato ideal para acercarme a la vida de una artista que me encanta, que siempre me había atraído, y de la que sin embargo no conocía gran cosa más allá de su música. Pero por desgracia este libro amplía poco más de los cuatro datos que ya tenía de ella. Y la sensación que me da es que no es por falta de acción en la vida de Janis, si no por como se ha planteado el libro.

Mi sensación, sin tener ni idea porque desconozco sus motivos reales, es de que el autor ha querido hacer su particular homenaje a Janis Joplin sin romperse mucho la cabeza en documentación o en seleccionar los momentos más representativos de su vida, si no que ha seguido totalmente la línea cronológica resumiendo en 160 páginas la vida de la artista sin hacer aparentemente incapié más en unos aspectos que en otros, ni destacando unos acontecimientos más que otros. Y para mí ese enfoque ha hecho que quede totalmente plano un libro que trata de una mujer que era explosiva en el escenario.

Además, no me ha gustado que el interior del libro no siga (en la medida de lo posible y coherente) el color de la cubierta. Las ilustraciones de la portada son una explosión de color y de flower power que inmediatamente identificamos o atribuimos a la imagen que nos viene a todos a la cabeza se Janis Joplin. Desde luego es de esos libros que dan ganas de comprarlo solo por la cubierta. Sin embargo, en el interior, la historia no sigue esa línea de colores. La gran mayoría de la historia resulta ser un cómic totalmente neutro en cuanto a color, que podría contarnos la historia de Janis o de cualquier otro artista, porque pierde la esencia de la cubierta que habría hecho que casi con cualquier viñeta supieses que esto va de Janis Joplin. Aunque intencionadamente intenta ir de menos a más en lo que al color se refiere, finalmente son muy muy pocas páginas justo al final las que tienen ese colorido y aún así no es exactamente el mismo estilo. La última cuarta parte del libro es la mejor en cualquier caso.

La traducción del francés tampoco me ha convencido en algunos momentos. Tiene algunas expresiones calcadas literalmente cuando en castellano no se ordena así la frase, resulta incorrecto y en un caso en concreto directamente no tiene sentido, no se entiende, no existe decir eso en castellano. En fin. Hay varias expresiones que no están bien adaptadas.

Por último, destacar el envío impecable de la editorial Aloha. Muy cuidado. Y la edición de buen tamaño, en tapa dura y con papel bien grueso. Así da gusto.

annelisegordon's review against another edition

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dark emotional inspiring sad fast-paced

4.0

jackelz's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a very fast-paced story that suited Janis Joplin’s very fast-paced life. Her life was heartbreakingly too short.

The story and art didn’t shy away from showing her drug and alcohol consumption, which is obviously a huge part of her story. I think it’s important to see all the external pressures put on her (and others, too). She was constantly swarmed with drug dealers, record labels wouldn’t sign her because of her addiction, but also help was really hard to come by.

The story also included her many musical influences, which I thought was really rad.

Overall, the art style was my favorite because I felt like I was living in the 60’s right along side her.

pseudoliterature's review against another edition

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2.0

In terms of biographical quality I can't speak much about for I'm not an expert in the private life of Janis Joplin, and there's a conversation to be had about the treatment and ownership of her life by the public and fans, the ever so present parasocial relationships that have been created throughout her life, and now with her "legacy" and public life on record. That is to say, the interactions and dialogues felt fabricated to give the ideal narrative, there was no authenticity, it read as someone who thinks they know about the life of a celebrity because they know the public record. Her life was full of things we don't know, and filling some gaps with mediocre and simplistic  dialogue does nobody a favour. 
The overall illustrations felt rushed, messy, sometimes hard to read, hard to follow. There are some full page illustrations that are beautiful, you can tell the dedication of the artists there, their line quality and colour palette, but having these examples only amplifies the neglect in the rest of the work, there were pages mostly with a white background and the figures over imposed, no sense of depth, some illustrations incomplete, not much care. 
Overall it was a mediocre job that might find its audience in people who are not familiar with the star's life story, it is a good first glance, but not a great biographical work in terms of writing, tone, and production. It was good enough, but I expected more.

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