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Buddy Does Seattle (The Complete Buddy Bradley Stories from Hate Comics, Vol. I, 1990-94)

Buddy Does Seattle (The Complete Buddy Bradley Stories from "Hate" Comics, Vol. I, 1990-94)

  • Paperback
  • Edition: 2nd Fantagraphics Books Ed
  • Author: Peter Bagge, Everett True
  • Publisher: Fantagraphics Books
  • Release Date: February 2005
  • ISBN-10: 1560976233
  • ISBN-13: 9781560976233
  • List Price: $14.95

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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon

Summary

The legendary Seattle stories from Hate comics that defined a generation.

The Harvey Award-winning cartoonist Peter Bagge remains one of the comics' industry's great crossover successes of the past decade, having sold more comics than any underground cartoonist through the 1990s to the present. After editing R. Crumb's Weirdo magazine in the mid-'80s and then creating the Bradley family within the pages his first comic book series, Neat Stuff, Bagge decided to take the Bradleys' alienated and pessimistic teenage son, Buddy, and move him to Seattle (where Bagge lived) to star in a new series called Hate. The rest is comic book history. Hate became the best-selling "alternative" comic book of the 1990s at the same time that Seattle found itself in the eye of a media hurricane. With its satirical depiction of twentysomething life in Seattle, Hate became one of the defining voices of not only the Seattle "grunge" scene, but all of Generation X nationwide (and has been spotted in many films through the years, from Larry Clark's Kids to John Waters' Pecker). In addition, critics hailed it for its brilliant characterization. The Seattle Weekly wrote, "20 years from now, when people wonder what it was like to be young in 1990's Seattle, the only record we'll have is Peter Bagge's Hate."

For 15 issues, the rock 'n' roll emanating from the damp garages of the Pacific Northwest came to life in glorious black-and-white in the pages of Hate. Bagge more or less cemented his association with the subculture in 1992 when he devoted two issues of Hate to a story where Buddy Bradley manages his best pal Stinky's grunge band, Leonard and the Love Gods, whose original lineup included three guys named Kurt.

Buddy Does Seattle collects the entire Seattle arc from the pages of Hate; this is the first time the entire saga has appeared under one cover. Bagge's characters are some of the most fully-realized in comics—Buddy, the slacker antihero, Valerie, Buddy's Prozac-normalized ex, Lisa, his masochistic, worm-eating latest flame, Stinky, his selfish, venereal-warted roommate, and George Cecil Hamilton III, the resident "intellectual," who sits in his room scribbling depressive arcana into his notebook—they display their emotions so openly, so helplessly, so graphically, and with such precision as they attempt to negotiate the ragged terrain of early adulthood that it would all be rather horrifying if it weren't such a riot. Bagge's cartooning aids the cause, with one of the most idiosyncratic and inspiredly elastic and cartoony drawing styles in comics history.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating: Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5 Score = 4.5

Ey Buddy!

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

This first volume of Peter Bagge's "Hate" comics (which were published between 1991-1994) exposes -literally- the lives of young Harold "Buddy" Bradley and his friends in 1990's Seattle. Buddy is an unpretentious, quiet guy with a low-end job, a troubled girlfriend, a gang of near-delirious friends and no clear perspectives on his future. "Buddy does Seattle" take us through everyday's struggles to survive, enjoy and ultimately make sense of things of Buddy and his friends. Although settled in specific coordinates (Seattle's 1990s) their tragedies, inquiries, virtues and miseries seem, directly or indirectly, all too common to many youth elsewhere (and retrospectively to many among us, the moderately elder). The plot is relentless, always funny and many times hilarious, and the drawings are little masterpieces on themselves. I work hard to try to delay my finishing this Vol. 1, and am delighted I still have Vol. 2, "Buddy does Jersey" coming up. Buddy Does Jersey: The Complete Buddy Bradley Stories from "Hate" Comics, Vol. II (1994-1998)

Young, Dumb and Ugly

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

There's very little "wit" in Peter's humor. Rather, the humor comes from the realization that you were once like Buddy. He's got a dead end job, a couple of wacked out girlfriends, and a bum of a friend that somehow succeeds.

The art is crude in a unique way. Everything is shaded to extremes and none of the characters are good looking. Half of them don't even have eyes as far as you know. The emotions and thoughts come through clearly in the dialog however.

There's a lot of drama and anger between them all but they stay friends somehow. That makes Buddy a winner in a book about losers.

Best Episodes EVER!!!

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

...i turned 21 in 1992...living through hardships and classically HORRIBLE relationships...i could really identify with Buddys own plights .....
....i have easily read this tpb over a dozen times...(along with it's companion BUDDY DOES JERSEY)...
.....i'm not even sure how i over looked such a brillant (and funny) comic in all of my years of collecting...
Peter Bagge you ARE a genius!!!!

The EARLY 90's

Rating: Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4

I was a angry teen during these times and Hate was really the only account I had of what 20 year olds were doing and how they were living. I had no idea about any of it until I read Hate.
Anyway, I got the Buddy does Jersey first. This one is pretty good but not as funny as Buddy does Jersey. This one does chronicle the music scene at that time and all the posers, freaks & neurotics that were around.

Truly the best of the best!

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

This collection includes the funniest issues from one of the all-time funniest comic books ever created. Peter Bagge is an absolute genius whose ear for dialogue and eye for details is unmatched. From the comic book fans arguing over Kelly vs. Kurtzmann to the garage rock band at rehearsal to the encounter with an old girlfriend, every detail rings hilariously true. If you've ever shared a cheap apartment with an assortment of weird roommates, you need to read this book, and as soon as possible. This is an all-time classic that will have you rolling on the floor with laughter.