Customer Reviews
Dreamstuff 'n' non-sense? - By: A. Grewcock, 03 Jul 2008 
With the second collected installlment somewhere in the comics version of development hell, don't wait too long to snatch this one up. Imagine the movie pitch: Scripted from the lucid dreams of an idiot savant. With the vocabulary of a five-year-old. Raised solely on the works of Robert Anton Wilson & 1950's Marvel comics. Cut up by William S. Burroughs. Special Effects by 'Industrial Drugs & Magick'. Directed by John Waters.
I'd buy that for a dollar!
How do they do it? - By: Mr. Phillip Robinson, 31 Mar 2008 
This is one of the most puzzling graphics novels I have ever read - it is incredibly emotionallly affective but the story makes no sense whatsoever. However the story is very rounded & complete, in no way a weird excursion, which is strange - that is exactly what it is! In the absence of any other theory I can only conclude that this is due to excellent writing combined with slyly subversive artwork. It carries itself completely on intuition, emotional response & feels a bit like a dream. On the artwork, generallly I prefer more technique but the illustration so completely complements the context of the story that I cannot imagine it being done any other way. A real masterpiece - maybe one day I'll figure out how it was done!
The Slaves of Mickey Eye! MORE! I DEMAND IT! - By: MrHyde, 19 Sep 2006 
Not unlike a Saturday morning cartoon in hell. As someone once said. There reallly isn't anything like this. Whilst there's no outright gore, some of the images leave one distinctly nauseous; something about the brightness, the taste of xoo, the talking fish...this is the comics world gone wrong, not unlike the way that Un Chien Andalou is the movie world gone wrong.
Or is that horribly pretentious? Ah, who cares. Buy it & DC might one day publish the sequel.