Scott Pilgrim's Finest Hour, Volume 6

Paperback
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Author: Bryan Lee O'Malley

ISBN-10: 1934964387

ISBN-13: 9781934964385

Category: Alternative Comics

It's finally here! Six years and almost one-thousand pages have all led to this epic finale! With six of Ramona's seven evil exes dispatched, it should be time for Scott Pilgrim to face Gideon Graves, the biggest and baddest of her former beaus. But didn't Ramona take off at the end of Book 5? Shouldn't that let Scott off the hook? Maybe it should, maybe it shouldn't, but one thing is for certain - all of this has been building to Scott Pilgrim's Finest Hour!

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It's finally here! Six years and almost one-thousand pages have all led to this epic finale! With six of Ramona's seven evil exes dispatched, it should be time for Scott Pilgrim to face Gideon Graves, the biggest and baddest of her former beaus. But didn't Ramona take off at the end of Book 5? Shouldn't that let Scott off the hook? Maybe it should, maybe it shouldn't, but one thing is for certain - all of this has been building to Scott Pilgrim's Finest Hour!The New York Times - Charles YuThe comic, drawn in a manga-inflected style, calls to mind Rumiko Takahashi's exuberantly weird Ranma 1/2 series. Over time, O'Malley has refined his technique (pages and panels are less cluttered, and the characters, while simply drawn, have become more expressive), but the overall look has remained largely unchanged. Witty, self-aware dialogue and acute observational humor wink from the pages, and the result is an appealing, lighthearted account of a transitional period of life. O'Malley portrays a slice…of a generation attempting to grow up.

\ Charles YuThe comic, drawn in a manga-inflected style, calls to mind Rumiko Takahashi's exuberantly weird Ranma 1/2 series. Over time, O'Malley has refined his technique (pages and panels are less cluttered, and the characters, while simply drawn, have become more expressive), but the overall look has remained largely unchanged. Witty, self-aware dialogue and acute observational humor wink from the pages, and the result is an appealing, lighthearted account of a transitional period of life. O'Malley portrays a slice…of a generation attempting to grow up.\ —The New York Times\ \