Wii Entertain U
 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » Up to 40% off selected Comics, Graphic Novels & Manga » V for VendettaNovember 22, 2008  
Categories
All Nintendo Hardware
All Nintendo Games
Nintendo Wii
Nintendo Wii Games
Nintendo DS
Nintendo DS Games
Computer & Video Games
Electronics
Software
DVD
Music
Books
Related Categories
• Up to 40% off selected Comics, Graphic Novels & Manga
Regular Stores
Special Features
Books
• Paperback Deals
Regular Stores
Special Features
Books
• General AAS
Painting & Drawing
Art, Architecture & Photography
Subjects
Books
• Moore, Alan
Authors
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subjects
Books
• Watchmen & Other Classics
Cult Graphic Novels
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Genre
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subjects
Books
• Titan Books
Publishers
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Comics & Graphic Novels
Subjects
Books
• General
Fiction
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Fiction
Subjects
Books
• English
Language (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Paperback
Format (binding_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Regular Size
Font Size (format_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
V for Vendetta
V for Vendetta
enlarge
Authors: Alan Moore, David Lloyd
Creator: David Lloyd
Publisher: Titan Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £16.99
Buy New: £8.74
You Save: £8.25 (49%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from £8.34

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(48 reviews)
Sales Rank: 922

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown)
Media: Paperback
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 6.6 x 0.7

ISBN: 1852862912
Dewey Decimal Number: 741
EAN: 9781852862916
ASIN: 1852862912

Publication Date: April 14, 2000
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Watchmen
  • Batman: Dark Knight Returns (Batman)
  • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
  • Batman: The Killing Joke (Deluxe Edition)
  • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: v. 2

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
V for Vendetta is, like its author's later Watchmen, a landmark in comic-book writing. Alan Moore has led the field in intelligent, politically astute (if slightly paranoid), complex adult comic-book writing since the early 1980s. He began V back in 1981 and it constituted one of his first attempts (along with the criminally neglected but equally superb Miracleman) at writing an ongoing series. It is 1998 (which was the future back then!) and a Fascist government has taken over the UK. The only blot on its particular landscape is a lone terrorist who is systematically killing all the government personnel associated with a now destroyed secret concentration camp. Codename V is out for vengeance ... and an awful lot more. V feels slightly dated like all past premonitions do. The original series was black and white and that added to the grittiness of the feel while the colouring here in the graphic novel sometimes blurs David Lloyd's fine drawing. But these are small concerns. Skilfully plotted, V is an essential read for all those who love comics and the freedom, as a medium, they allow a writer as skilled as Moore. The graphic novel contains all the V series plus two additional stories concerning V that were originally considered "interludes". This edition also contains an essay from Moore dating from 1983 explaining the creation process. For any comic fan it's a must-have. --Mark Thwaite


Customer Reviews:   Read 43 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Fantastic read   November 21, 2008
I watched the film before reading the book and I loved it, I thought the entire thing was brilliant and loved V (Hugo Weaving was fantastic) and I was always intending to read the book. A work colleague told me that the book is a lot different from the film (as is usually the case) so not too long ago I brought the book and had finished it two days later.

Alan Moore has written an amazing piece. The entire idea of England becoming one of the only countries that survived a massive war and the political party that took over are fascist and its basically a Big Brother moment where they watching everything you do. Evey unlike in the film is just a sixteen year old girl who doest have enough money to live so she becomes a prostitute. Unlike in the film Evey is a lot less self reliant and is happy to live out her life in V's shadow gallery but it shows a great deal about her growing up from the scared little girl into what she becomes later.

The book was a great read and didn't disappoint giving you a disturbing outlook to a dark future and I love David Lloyd's little note dedicating the book to people who don't switch off the news and choose not to live in blissful ignorance.



4 out of 5 stars Infinitely preferable to the film   August 19, 2008
Great. This deserves the hype but not the butchering it received on film at the hands of the Wachowksi brothers. This is really about Thatcher's Britain and nuclear winters and the social control of 'deviant' minorities and the power of dissent. So it has something to say about today. But don't read it as a proxy for political critique. It is a joy for many a reason, of which its anarchist politics is one, but our present predicaments require something less wedded to Cold War models. V for Vendetta is of its time, by which I mean also that it is a classic.


3 out of 5 stars Good work, but totally spoiled...   August 14, 2008
A potentially excellent work of graphic fiction, but totally spoiled by the worst attempt at phonetically transcribing a Scottish accent I've ever read--when you read it out loud it sounds it a bit like Russ Abbott's "See You Jimmy" character. Embarrassing and unnecessary when there are so many great Scottish comic book writers who could have assisted.


5 out of 5 stars The V-effekt of V for Vendetta   July 27, 2008
Alan Moore and David Lloyd's aesthetic seems almost Brechtian. With a sci-fi motif it distances the reader from the universal political issues being addressed; amusingly, V for Vendetta could be said to use Brecht's V-effekt. There is a strong dialectic that runs throughout, a sense of determinism layered symbolism. All V's Larkhill targets personify aspects of the state. Science is embodied by Delia Surridge, military and media by Lewis Prothero and religion by Anthony Lilliman. Each takes an attitude of opposition; so Lilliman is the unrepentant leader of an institution of salvation, whilst Surridge seeks repentance from the opposed standpoint of a scientist. Prothero, by representing the military become media, is in himself a synthesis between the power of rhetoric and that of violence, which ultimately spawns a new antithesis resulting in V - anarchy personified.

The secret police are represented by Peter Creedy and the figurehead by Adam Susan; Creedy seeks power as an end in itself, whilst Susan is a deranged idealist who believes in his superiority to the extent that he becomes solipsistic, disconnected from humanity and infatuated with the super computer `fate'. With all of this madness Moore knows how to offer grounding and realism; investigator Eric Finch and orphan Evey Hammond take on the roles of the everyman and everywoman respectively. They offer the audience characters to follow, to empathize with. They are a thread of sanity weaved through this excellent narrative.

Moore's story is also full of intertextual allusion; from Shakespeare to Goethe and from Crowley to Fawkes, this is intelligent writing. The dialogue (replete with convincing phonetic spellings, character ticks and vernacular language) flows beautifully and the absence of thought bubbles or sound bubbles lends this book both a maturity and minimalism. Lloyd is given room by this minimalism to show of his artistic capabilities, which are not at all lacking; this is a gritty, dystopic kind of realism that takes you to the action. Each panel demands your attention.

Overall V for Vendetta is faultless; I love the film as well, but the original is on a different level. This is a comic book that shows you how far the medium can be pushed when it is backed by enough raw creative talent.



5 out of 5 stars Wicked   June 22, 2008
I love this graphic novel, I read it a long time before I saw the film, and I still think the novel is better! If you have never read a comic/ graphic novel before, I highly recommend this one.

Nintendo Games Consoles
Links
www.dribblez.com
www.search.ie
www.2bscene.ie