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jaifman's review against another edition
3.0
Partiendo de la base de que el libro proporciona mucha informaciĆ³n sobre el tema del que trata, lo cual al final entiendo que es lo importante, lo cierto es que como ensayo no es especialmente apasionante y no te atrapa mucho.
Por otro lado se agradece que se publiquen en EspaƱa obras tan de "nicho" dentro de la historia de la cultura popular y de forma tan cuidada, en ese aspecto un 10 a Es Pop por todo su repertorio, del que me voy a leer unas cuantas.
Por otro lado se agradece que se publiquen en EspaƱa obras tan de "nicho" dentro de la historia de la cultura popular y de forma tan cuidada, en ese aspecto un 10 a Es Pop por todo su repertorio, del que me voy a leer unas cuantas.
hectaizani's review
4.0
A history of the rise and fall of comics in the United States in the 1940's and 1950's.
spitzig's review
3.0
Interesting depiction of the the comic book scare. The book did a good job of depicting the progression of the demonization of comics. Nothing really revolutionary to me, though. Also, I think more could have been said about the aftermath of the scare.
stevenyenzer's review
3.0
This book is more like a history of comic books in America up through the formation of the Comics Code, with a special focus on that period. There are a lot of biographical sketches of folks who seemed of somewhat incidental importance; I had trouble tracking all of the names.
bhurlbut's review
3.0
A solid piece of history and interesting up to a point. Hajdu never really spells out how the Great Comic Book Scare changed America. It clearly places it within the realm of postwar paranoiacs and fretting over "evil" influences in the life and culture of the country, but the book never quite gets off the ground. Still, it is an interesting subject and well covered.
scheu's review
4.0
I enjoyed The Ten-Cent Plague, but I have a significant gripe. If you're going to force the reader through the origins of comic books (the beginning of the story, and information I've been over multiple times), you ought to give them the end of the story as well. Horror comics didn't go away. Marvel, DC, and Warren were publishing many of them in the 1970s, and the ones I read as a kid were pretty gruesome. The Comics Code that was created to police the industry became a joke that was either ignored or completely abandoned. The masses and their hysteria moved elsewhere as we all realised that our problems weren't really rooted in comics.
Best of all, comics are still here.
Best of all, comics are still here.