Starve #6

Starve #6

$3.99
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
(W) Brian Wood
(A/CA) Danijel Zezelj, Dave Stewart
NEW STORY ARC Critically-acclaimed STARVE is back for a second season! Chef Gavin Cruikshank shifts his focus from the soundstage to the streets, addressing real world themes of food scarcity and class warfare. Smart, subversive, and darkly comic, STARVE is an instant cult classic.
Date Available: 02/17/2016
BONUS REVIEW by Kevin Healy


I'm a sucker for a comeback story. There's been one at the heart of Starve since it started. Often, it was buried under well placed snark and mis-directing judgement. One person, bad choices, vengeful ex-wife, and societal collapse. These elements are all aired on live television for the clamoring masses to eat like fast food. The first arc ends with chef Gavin Cruikshank being stabbed on camera by family. Yea! Happy ending.

Now we're in the second arc, and Gavin has a plan, some limitations, and some requirements. He plans to be a better person, he's limited by the fact that he's a bastard, and he's required to meet conditions placed on him by his daughter. Throwing common sense and all of his money to the wind, we get a chef who has moved on from everything that previously made him who he was. If you consider it a truth that there's a benefit to helping everyone, you'll want to be ordering chicken at a small joint in the slums of New York. This book will make you believe that good food can people better, improve their lives, one dish at a time. Good food may even be able to start a revolution. If you're feeling the Bern, this book is for you. If you're not, its still stellar work from Brian Wood and Daniel Zezelj.


I give it 9 out of 10 Grahams


VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
(W) Brian Wood
(A/CA) Danijel Zezelj, Dave Stewart
NEW STORY ARC Critically-acclaimed STARVE is back for a second season! Chef Gavin Cruikshank shifts his focus from the soundstage to the streets, addressing real world themes of food scarcity and class warfare. Smart, subversive, and darkly comic, STARVE is an instant cult classic.
Date Available: 02/17/2016
BONUS REVIEW by Kevin Healy


I'm a sucker for a comeback story. There's been one at the heart of Starve since it started. Often, it was buried under well placed snark and mis-directing judgement. One person, bad choices, vengeful ex-wife, and societal collapse. These elements are all aired on live television for the clamoring masses to eat like fast food. The first arc ends with chef Gavin Cruikshank being stabbed on camera by family. Yea! Happy ending.

Now we're in the second arc, and Gavin has a plan, some limitations, and some requirements. He plans to be a better person, he's limited by the fact that he's a bastard, and he's required to meet conditions placed on him by his daughter. Throwing common sense and all of his money to the wind, we get a chef who has moved on from everything that previously made him who he was. If you consider it a truth that there's a benefit to helping everyone, you'll want to be ordering chicken at a small joint in the slums of New York. This book will make you believe that good food can people better, improve their lives, one dish at a time. Good food may even be able to start a revolution. If you're feeling the Bern, this book is for you. If you're not, its still stellar work from Brian Wood and Daniel Zezelj.


I give it 9 out of 10 Grahams


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