Reviews

The Less Than Epic Adventures of TJ and Amal (Webcomic) by E.K. Weaver

lainy122's review

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5.0

Lord almighty, my FEELINGS. The ending was completely perfect and yet at the same time I WANT MORE I WANT IT TO LAST FOREVER.

Adelaide Ladies Comic Book Club: April 2019

mixxroxy's review

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4.0

I started to read this when it came out but I lost patience. I recently rediscovered this comic and couldn't put it down. It's wonderfully sweet and put a smile on my face on just about every page. The only reason I'm giving it a 4 instead of 5 is because the ending felt very abrupt. Like I was missing a page or two. Other than that I look forward to the author's next series!

chaitanyasethi's review

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5.0

This was such a touching story. I read it all in one go. The artwork is beyond belief. You can feel the emotion in every hue, every texture. The sketches are gorgeous. It is excellent and beyond superlatives.

The story is actually surprisingly sweet. It's a new take on the road-trip romance trope, between two people who come from entirely different worlds. It is well-written, feels surprisingly realistic and it structured really well. It is warm, tender, touching and funny in equal measures. You can feel the bond between Amal and TJ growing with every passing page. It is very obvious and palpable. The entire depiction is very heart-warming.

This one has ample scope to be made into a movie, if not a mini-series.

emirandres's review

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4.0

Esta novela gráfica se puede leer gratis online, y la traducción en español está en curso. Solo Googleen el nombre del libro y les saldrá la página. Si quieren, luego pueden comprar la versión en físico.
Es una historia sencilla, sobre dos muchachos que se conocen de forma accidental y terminan organizando un viaje en auto, en donde les pasarán cosas divertidas, se conocerán, aprenderán el uno del otro, resolverán problemas y hasta puede que surja algo más que una amistad.
Está muy bonita, me encantó.
La recomiendo para cuando quieran algo tranqui y rápido.

kyatic's review

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5.0

My actual rating of this is 4.5 stars. I'm knocking off half a star for the ending, which was too abrupt for me and not conclusive enough - I'm not averse to ambiguous endings, but this one just sort of petered out. It wasn't even merely anticlimactic. It just sort of... wasn't. Things were happening, things were going to happen, and then they just sort of happened but really quickly and vaguely. It was a real shame because I could tell what the author was trying to achieve and it just didn't quite work, and after being so enthralled with the rest of the comic, it felt incredibly disappointing to be let down by just the last 10 or so pages.

However, that said, the rest of the comic was such an enjoyable experience that I'm not going to knock down the rating too much. It's important to note that, generally speaking, I'm not particularly enamoured of graphic novels, being one of those awfully pretentious folk who considers a novel to be an entity consisting solely of words. My experience with the genre extends as far as Maus and Persepolis, both of which are rather a far cry from this webcomic. I only picked up this comic (initially in book form) on the recommendation of a friend, who knew my reservations about graphic novels but somehow managed to convince me to overcome my snobbery and read it anyway. And really, thank God she did. The characterisation is some of the best I've ever seen in dialogue-only work. TJ is one of the most interesting characters I've come across, and I kept wishing he were real so that we could become best friends for life and braid each other's hair. I found Amal slightly less interesting, but not because he's any less rendered; he's just less my kind of person. The rapport between the two of them was so well crafted, too. To borrow one of those horrible buzzwords, it seemed very organic - the relationship between them grew very naturally, and nothing was forced at all. This is probably due to the length of time that the work took to create; the author had rather a long time to consider how she was going to develop everything. If only all authors were constrained as such.

The highpoint for me was the dialogue. It's incredibly authentic, and manages to be both poignant and hilarious at various points. The creator of this comic is both a highly skilled artist and writer, and it really does show. Considering the number of years that this took to complete, the artistic style is incredibly consistent. If you hold up the first page and compare it to the last page, there are some obvious improvements in style and finesse, but no real change. This is far from a bad thing as it makes the whole thing flow very well. If I hadn't been one of those people who read it as it went along, I would probably have been convinced that it had only taken a year or so (an impossible feat, I'm sure!).

I should add here that I read the first part of the text in book form, borrowing volume 1 from a friend, then read the entirety of part 2 and some of part 3 online in one evening, then read the next quarter of part 3 in real time updates, then got impatient and stopped reading (save for a few times when I thought to myself 'oh, I wonder how my old pals TJ and Amal are doing' and then read the odd few pages that had been released since I last looked) and then finally read all the rest of it in one evening after it was finished. So my experience with this particular text really took place over the course of about 2 years, whereas I know that others invested 6 years from beginning to end. Crazy stuff. I've picked up a few other webcomics since and tried to be one of those people who checks back every week for an update, but that way of life just isn't for me, man. I was built for different things. I may have overcome my distaste for the unwritten word, but I'll never be the kind of person who manages to successfully follow a webcomic. Thank God this one was released in print form, that's all I'm saying.

The only other problem I had with it is that I am not a huge fan of graphically depicted sex. I'm the kind of person who skips those sections in novels (and then inevitably misses a huge plot point when the murderer's name is revealed mid-coitus) and watches films with my hands over my eyes at salient points (har). I think it's just a second-hand embarrassment thing. Maybe I should talk to someone about it. Anyway, that meant that there were whole pages of this graphic novel that I just didn't read because they weren't to my taste. However, that's entirely my own problem, and I'm remiss to knock the rating down because of it. If you like to look at people doin' the do - and hey, I'm not judging - then you'll probably get a lot out of those pages that I skipped. So, no complaints about it here, just a warning to those who feel the same way as I do that you might end up turning a few pages in quick succession.

This book is the kind of text that makes me wish there were a film adaptation, because come on - a road trip movie with this level of subtext / subplot would make for an interesting watch indeed. Sure, I'd have to watch a few scenes from between my fingers, but the soundtrack would be awesome. If anyone is reading this and happens to own a film production company, you know what to do.

korey_reads's review

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5.0

This graphic novel is the perfect example of not much needs to happen in order to make a good story. More or less we just follow along their road trip as they learn a little bit more about each other. TJ and Amal couldn’t be more different but they find hope in each other along the way. I didn’t know it would be as explicit as it was going into it, but those moments were brief and added to the story. (Although I would still very much rate it an 18+)

Apart from the story, the artwork was absolutely stunning. The pages in color made you take a pause and just genuinely appreciate what you were looking at and it was all a really beautiful message. I wish I was able to get the book in print still as I’d buy it in a heartbeat, but I figure if those images can blow me away on a kindle, it’d be fantastic on paper. If you are a fan of graphic novels, and honestly, even if you’re not, this one is absolutely worth the spend.

zorab's review

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4.0

4 stars
It made me rekindle my love for the 'road trip'/going on a journey trope in bot contemporary and fantasy.
The art was also beautiful. This book was a quick read, good tropes done well (with just the perfect spin on that).

Spoiler I mean this book did the omigod you lied to me romance trope (which I hate) well, that sounds really vague but you know what I'm talking about.

kasss's review

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4.0

This was a good ride (pun not intended but I'm gonna own it).

galiaba's review

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3.0

3.5 stars

anthroxagorus's review

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5.0

The art was a little rough for my taste, but the story was engaging. Yo. Please read this if angsty boys roadtrip vibes with you.