Margins
Edgar A. Poe book cover
Edgar A. Poe
El gato negro y otras historias
1995
First Published
3.97
Average Rating
80
Number of Pages
Es ésta la tan esperada edición de las adaptaciones que hizo Alberto Breccia sobre cuentos de Edgar Allan Poe (versiones propias y bien personales, deberíamos decir...). Una edición cuidada, en buen papel y a todo color presenta por primera vez en el país los alucinantes trabajos del Viejo sobre: El Gato Negro, Mr. Valdemar, La Máscara de la Muerte Roja, William Wilson y la obvia edición del clásico absoluto El Corazón Delator... Todo ésto, debidamente prologado y acompañado con detalladas introducciones -historieta por historieta-, en una "cuasi tesis doctoral" sobre las obras de Poe y de Breccia que escribió el extraordinario Fernando Ariel García, además de contar para esta edición con el asesoramiento y la ayuda inestimable de Gustavo Ferrari.
Avg Rating
3.97
Number of Ratings
109
5 STARS
26%
4 STARS
52%
3 STARS
17%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
1%
goodreads

Authors

Alberto Breccia
Alberto Breccia
Author · 9 books

Born in Montevideo, Uruguay, Breccia moved with his parents to Buenos Aires, Argentina when he was three years old. After leaving school, Breccia worked in a tripe packing plant and in 1938 he got a job for the magazine El Resero, where he wrote articles and drew the covers. He began to work professionally in 1939, when he joined the publishing house Manuel Láinez. He worked on magazines such as Tit-Bits, Rataplán and El Gorrión where he created comic strips such as Mariquita Terremoto, Kid Río Grande, El Vengador (based on a popular novel), and other adaptations. During the 1950s he became an "honorary" member of the "Group of Venice" that consisted of expatriate Italian artists such as Hugo Pratt, Ido Pavone, Horacio Lalia, Faustinelli and Ongaro. Other honorary members were Francisco Solano López, Carlo Cruz and Arturo Perez del Castillo. With Hugo Pratt, he started the Pan-American School of Art in Buenos Aires. In 1957 he joined publisher Editorial Frontera, under the direction of Héctor Germán Oesterheld, where he created several Ernie Pike stories. In 1958 Breccia's series Sherlock Time ran in the comic magazine Hora Cero Extra, with scripts by Oesterheld. Breccia and Oesterheld collaborated to produce one of the most important comic strips in history, Mort Cinder, in 1962. The face of the immortal Cinder is modeled after Breccia's assistant, Horacio Lalia, and the appearance of his companion, the antique dealer Ezra Winston, is actually Breccia's own. Cinder and Winston's strip began on July 26, 1962, in issue Nº 714 of Misterix magazine, and ran until 1964 . In 1968 Breccia was joined by his son, Enrique, in a project to draw the comic biography of Che, the life of Che Guevara, again with a script provided by Oesterheld. This comic book is considered the chief cause behind Oesterheld's disappearance. In 1969 Oesterheld rewrote the script of El Eternauta, for the Argentinian magazine Gente. Breccia drew the story with a decidedly experimental style, resorting to diverse techniques. The resulting work was anything but conventional and moving away from the commercial. Breccia refused to modify its style, which added to the tone of the script, and was much different from Francisco Solano López original. During the seventies, Breccia makes major graphic innovations in black and white and color with series like Un tal Daneri and Chi ha paura delle fiabe?, written by Carlos Trillo. On the last one, a satire based on Brothers Grimm's tales, he plays with texture, mixing collage, acrylic and watercolor. Other stories include: Cthulhu Mythos, Buscavidas (text by Carlos Trillo), a Historia grafica del Chile and Perramus, inspired by the work of the poet Juan Sasturain a pamphlet against the dictatorship in Argentina. Breccia died in Buenos Aires in 1993.

548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2025 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved