Xabier Cid's Reviews > Arzak: L'arpenteur
Arzak: L'arpenteur
by
by

This was my first encounter with Moebius, even if that sounds odd; I've read Schuiten & Peeters well before, so it's like knowing the father after meeting his children. And even if the lines of Moebius may seem more appealing than those ortodox of Schuiten&Peeters (and they certainly are), I felt something missing. And that is probably the text.
The text rather than the story. Because even if this is just an episode, and the glimpses of the story that we see here presume a more solid, more diverse (in a way happier) world, the final touches of the characters are more imperfect. Perhaps it is too much to be said, or perhaps there are too many characters that remain unexplored. The complicated lettering doesn't help, and speech bubbles are packed with words.
I should read more of Moebius, but rather because of its pivotal relevance than because of I liked it.
The text rather than the story. Because even if this is just an episode, and the glimpses of the story that we see here presume a more solid, more diverse (in a way happier) world, the final touches of the characters are more imperfect. Perhaps it is too much to be said, or perhaps there are too many characters that remain unexplored. The complicated lettering doesn't help, and speech bubbles are packed with words.
I should read more of Moebius, but rather because of its pivotal relevance than because of I liked it.
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Arzak.
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Reading Progress
July 12, 2023
– Shelved
Started Reading
July 15, 2023
–
Finished Reading