Gilbert Hernandez, Peter Bagge - Yeah! (2011, TPB)
- Type:
- Other > Comics
- Files:
- 1
- Size:
- 130.84 MiB (137194889 Bytes)
- Tag(s):
- Yeah Comic Book Fantagraphics Gilbert Hernandez Peter Bagge Love and Rockets Love Rockets Hate Love & Rockets Jaime Hernandez
- Uploaded:
- 2013-07-24 09:26 GMT
- By:
- LeonardTSpock
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- 0
- Leechers:
- 4
- Info Hash: 1D10268C96F33027CBAC4F96D2B1F99F7AE14F5B
The previous 'Yeah!' upload contained the original nine issue color mini-series published in 1999 and 2000. This upload contains the 2011 b&w single volume TPB. This edition looks much more like a 'Love & Rockets' book, which really isn't a bad thing. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 'Yeah!' Fantagraphics Books, 2011, 208 pages Written by Peter Bagge Illustrated by Gilbert Hernandez The creators of Hate and Love and Rockets team up for an all-ages rock n' roll extravaganza! Move over, Josie & the Pussycats! At last, a girl-centered comic book that actually appeals to girls (and even their parents)! Co-created by comics living legends Peter Bagge (Hate) and Gilbert Hernandez (Love & Rockets), Yeah! is a unique masterpiece of all-ages fun. Originally published as a nine-issue comic book series from 1999-2000 by DC's Wildstorm imprint, this all-ages gem (approved by the Comics Code Authority, no less!) is collected here for the very first time. Krazy (vocals and guitars), Honey (drums) and WooWoo (keyboards) are the members of the pop band Yeah! They’ve achieved intergalactic superstardom on every planet but their own (Earth), where they live in anonymity and suffer indignities in their home of suburban New Jersey. The girls struggle with bad gigs (struggling to win $200 amateur-night contests despite playing to packed crowds of adoring fans on Uranus), aliens who have crushes on them, and rival boy band The Snobs. Separately, writer Peter Bagge and artist Gilbert Hernandez have well-deserved reputations as creators of some of comics' most complex female characters, and in Yeah!, they have collaborated to produce a pop-culture, sci-fi, mainstream comic that finally offers a riotous alternative to the leaden, out-of-touch humor of Archie Comics.