Beautiful Darkness 
I dont know what I just read, but I liked it. The illustrations were lovely. The story itself was dark and tragic.Beautiful Darkness is about a group? Community? These little humanoid creatures not much bigger than ants live and gather in the forest. They have emerged from the corpse? Cadaver? A child dead in the forest. They use the things they find around them. Some from the girls backpack, some from the dead girl herself. They forms smaller groups. Our main character is named Aurora and she
At the midway point in this graphic novel I was still smiling. It sort of clipped me upside the head as I read, and though it drew blood, I still thought it might be a little cute. I didn't really like the story--it seemed a bit grim--but... I thought it was going to come around.The authors (it would have to be two, one couldn't bear that dark vision alone, for long) are making a comment on man's seemingly infinite capacity for evil--really banal, thoughtless evil. It hurts, this vision, because

I think this has to be my biggest bad bargain ever. From the description, it looked good though : "Kerascoët and Fabien Vehlmann's unsettling and gorgeous ant-fairy tale is a searing condemnation of our vast capacity for evil writ tiny. Join princess Aurora and her friends as they journey to civilization's heart of darkness in a bleak allegory about surviving the human experiece. The sweet faces and bright leaves of Kerascoët's delicate watercolors serve to highlight the evil that dwells beneath
I'm trying to figure out how I feel about Beautiful Darkness. It's like Lord of the Flies with illustrations that disarm you with charm and then blindside you with gruesome. The story features a cast of characters that make up the imaginary world inside a young girl's mind. Within the first couple pages, the characters are evicted, and are forced into the real world. At first, the naivety with which they explore their new world is cute, but soon their childlike exploration turns dark as the
Meh and stuff. If there had been an actual story here, I might have slightly enjoyed this graphic novel a little more better. But there wasn't (because no, a succession of supposedly horrific occurrences does not a story make), so I didn't. P.S. Don't trust my so-called friends' outrageously generous ratings for this book, they all read it very terribly wrong.
From The Brothers Grimm to Disney, fairy tales have been sanitised to appeal to all ages - family-friendly entertainment! - except, as most people know, they had very dark origins. Stories like Beauty and the Beast and Rapunzel featured grown up themes even though fairy tales, until the 19th century, were consumed mainly by adults. Beautiful Darkness is writer Fabien Vehlmann and artist Kerascoets subversive take on the well-defined genre as little people living inside a young girl escape when
Fabien Vehlmann
Hardcover | Pages: 94 pages Rating: 3.87 | 6881 Users | 1285 Reviews

Specify Appertaining To Books Beautiful Darkness
Title | : | Beautiful Darkness |
Author | : | Fabien Vehlmann |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 94 pages |
Published | : | February 25th 2014 by Drawn and Quarterly (first published March 6th 2009) |
Categories | : | Sequential Art. Graphic Novels. Comics. Fantasy. Horror. Fiction. Graphic Novels Comics |
Chronicle Concering Books Beautiful Darkness
Kerascoët’s and Fabien Vehlmann’s unsettling and gorgeous anti-fairy tale is a searing condemnation of our vast capacity for evil writ tiny. Join princess Aurora and her friends as they journey to civilization's heart of darkness in a bleak allegory about surviving the human experience. The sweet faces and bright leaves of Kerascoët’s delicate watercolors serve to highlight the evil that dwells beneath Vehlmann's story as pettiness, greed, and jealousy take over. Beautiful Darkness is a harrowing look behind the routine politeness and meaningless kindness of civilized society.List Books In Favor Of Beautiful Darkness
Original Title: | Jolies ténèbres |
ISBN: | 1770461299 (ISBN13: 9781770461291) |
Edition Language: | English |
Literary Awards: | Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards Nominee for Best U.S. Edition of International Material (2015) |
Rating Appertaining To Books Beautiful Darkness
Ratings: 3.87 From 6881 Users | 1285 ReviewsComment On Appertaining To Books Beautiful Darkness
I dont know what I just read, but I liked it. The illustrations were lovely. The story itself was dark and tragic.Beautiful Darkness is about a group? Community? These little humanoid creatures not much bigger than ants live and gather in the forest. They have emerged from the corpse? Cadaver? A child dead in the forest. They use the things they find around them. Some from the girls backpack, some from the dead girl herself. They forms smaller groups. Our main character is named Aurora and sheI dont know what I just read, but I liked it. The illustrations were lovely. The story itself was dark and tragic.Beautiful Darkness is about a group? Community? These little humanoid creatures not much bigger than ants live and gather in the forest. They have emerged from the corpse? Cadaver? A child dead in the forest. They use the things they find around them. Some from the girls backpack, some from the dead girl herself. They forms smaller groups. Our main character is named Aurora and she
At the midway point in this graphic novel I was still smiling. It sort of clipped me upside the head as I read, and though it drew blood, I still thought it might be a little cute. I didn't really like the story--it seemed a bit grim--but... I thought it was going to come around.The authors (it would have to be two, one couldn't bear that dark vision alone, for long) are making a comment on man's seemingly infinite capacity for evil--really banal, thoughtless evil. It hurts, this vision, because

I think this has to be my biggest bad bargain ever. From the description, it looked good though : "Kerascoët and Fabien Vehlmann's unsettling and gorgeous ant-fairy tale is a searing condemnation of our vast capacity for evil writ tiny. Join princess Aurora and her friends as they journey to civilization's heart of darkness in a bleak allegory about surviving the human experiece. The sweet faces and bright leaves of Kerascoët's delicate watercolors serve to highlight the evil that dwells beneath
I'm trying to figure out how I feel about Beautiful Darkness. It's like Lord of the Flies with illustrations that disarm you with charm and then blindside you with gruesome. The story features a cast of characters that make up the imaginary world inside a young girl's mind. Within the first couple pages, the characters are evicted, and are forced into the real world. At first, the naivety with which they explore their new world is cute, but soon their childlike exploration turns dark as the
Meh and stuff. If there had been an actual story here, I might have slightly enjoyed this graphic novel a little more better. But there wasn't (because no, a succession of supposedly horrific occurrences does not a story make), so I didn't. P.S. Don't trust my so-called friends' outrageously generous ratings for this book, they all read it very terribly wrong.
From The Brothers Grimm to Disney, fairy tales have been sanitised to appeal to all ages - family-friendly entertainment! - except, as most people know, they had very dark origins. Stories like Beauty and the Beast and Rapunzel featured grown up themes even though fairy tales, until the 19th century, were consumed mainly by adults. Beautiful Darkness is writer Fabien Vehlmann and artist Kerascoets subversive take on the well-defined genre as little people living inside a young girl escape when
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