![]() ![]() ![]() I particularly like when they take the form of solid nightmares, such as the day where Nemo is loaned stilts, pursued by long-legged birds, falls, and is thoroughly speared.įor me, Little Nemo is the apex of nearly every sort of media. And as to the plots, they're fantastically imaginative. Sometimes the dialogue is simply exclamations or descriptions of what's happening in the art, but if you pay attention you'll see that each character has an individual personality and speaking style if they are recurring, they become more well-rounded along the way (Nemo, for example, is shown to be impatient, kindhearted, agreeable but sometimes stubborn, curious, etc.). ![]() I love the animated yet stilted dialogue, and McCay is sometimes delightfully witty in a dry way. This volume is not the best, but it's still very very good.Ī lot of people, including Bill Watterson (Calvin & Hobbes you can also see a LOT of Nemo influence when you compare the two) and all sorts of scholars, consider the dialogue to be the weakest point of Little Nemo, an incidental addition that isn't even hardly worth reading. ![]() He begins with the narrative text squeezed into the bottom of each panel, then tries putting it all at the beginning, then, thankfully, abandons it entirely. You can watch McCay experimenting and developing Little Nemo in this book. ![]()
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