Showing posts with label Darwyn Cooke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darwyn Cooke. Show all posts

Sunday, March 7, 2010

And In Between, The Empty El







Waiting on the CTA sucks of late because of budget cuts. So last Monday, the 383 Pace bus shows up first, and I ride down to Midway and catch the Orange Line. I'm headed to Clarke's on Lincoln, to have dinner with Darci, Mike, and Becky. To get to the Red Line, you hop off the Orange Line at Roosevelt, then take an escalator to street level, then another down to the bowels of the city. And then, there's a walk down this long, long hallway with paintings of trilobites and such on the walls, and past that the final escalator down to the next level of hell. At the entrance to the long tunnel, I met this fellow Bill, who only has one leg, and he played a wonderful rendition of "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" as the train rumbled beneath us.

On the way back home, the el car I was in was empty, so I took a random shot. Then, here's what goes on. I get off the train at 87th and State to wait for the bus, and with the new construction, there's a tunnel to walk under 87th and wait for the bus in this well-lit square, but it is cold because the walkway just leads to where the Dan Ryan Expressway is on either side, and the cold whooshes up from the trucks and the el trains. When I took the first photo, I thought the bags belonged to a homeless person that was standing outside, his or her swag in sight. It was a long wait on the bus, again, the budget cuts made it two buses an hour instead of four. So it wasn't long before I realized that there was a body in the midst of the bas and shopping cart, his or her head covered by a blanket. I held out a five dollar bill and told the person my intentions, a hand that looked like a broken branch took the bill, and I saw a slow nod from beneath the blanket with earth tone colors.

Soon after, the bus pulled up. I'm not ashamed to say that I stared at a woman in very tight jeans and knee-high boots. She was talking on a cell phone. I sat on the bus, the computerized, sexy female voice oozed out the intersections.100 West, Vincennes, Aberdeen, Holland, Honore, Ada. The girl on the cell got off at Ashland, where a huge Currency Exchange dominates the northwest corner of the intersection. There was a #9 Ashland bus waiting for her, headed back north. Sacramento, Utica, Beverly Country Club. Kedzie, Central Park and the railroad tracks. Pulaski, a block away from my old home, a place that sold flowers and tombstones right next to a Dunkin Donuts just past more train tracks. All the streets names until Cicero start with K, and then I have to walk home past streets starting with L. Strange way to grid the city. Northwest, it goes all the way to P. Pacific, Pittsburgh. Can't think of any more.

Anyhow. The whole ride home, instead of reading Beat The Reaper by Josh Brazell, or skimming through Selina's Big Score, written and drawn by Darwyn Cooke, I stared out the window. You know, like Richard Kimble, on his way to the death house. Thinking about how each and every one of us survive in this maddening city, in this fucked-up world.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Darwyn Cooke's Hunter











OK, here's the dilly-o. Donald Westlake, a fantastic crime writer who passed away in 2008, also wrote a series of books under the name Richard Stark. Each involved a character named Parker. The guy is a bastard with no morals. Darwyn Cooke took it upon himself to make the prose art, and the tone he chooses is pretty much my favorite color and breathes early 1960s. I've posted some pages out of order, the top panel I love the most. The two page spread of 1962 Manhattan is the best I could find. I tried taking a shot with my webcam and it sucked. This booki is just so damned beaiutiful. But to show that I'm intrigued (that is, I'm a pervert) by Cooke's other work, I've posted both Power Girl and Catwoman on the top of a toilet seat. The shot in yellow was stuick in there out of order, and frankly, I'm too tired to cut & paste it correctly. I spent a few hours working on "Only Twice Is She Named Cthulhu" for an upcoming anthology. I'd been circling the airport, and I'm linmed up with the runway now. I have two paragraphs left, and I want a smooth landing. So as it is, I feel wiped out in the sense that the story is not yet done even though in my head it is. And that is why I posted Cooke's work, for the colors and the era that I love so well. There's another Parker book by Cooke coming out in June, and I'm already saving my pennies.