13 / 21
Aug 2015

I actually highly reccommend manga series. I particularly love fma and SnK, but whatever. Often times due to their large amount of volumes mangas have an incredible storylining ability and plan out very well

also, Amulet or Bone the graphic novel are good. although old, they have pretty good storylines and pace at which it progresses

I would highly suggest the Saga graphic novel published by image. It's pretty great. Watchmen is also a comic with good pacing.

I'm not very good detecting pace (unless it's super bad), but as far as length, series I like is Battle Angel Alita3.

Can't really recommend much else though, most of the comics I read are single volumes or only a few books long.

ahhh I've forgotten about Watchmen! I've heard high praise of it, and i know its in my library, i might just have to do that one. Thanks for the reminder smile

Kabuki by David Mack. (even if you don't choose it for your class, read it anyway. It's amazing!)

I'm chiming in to second Watchmen, especially if you've got easy access to it.

There is an amazing amount of thought put into its structure, in everything from its parallell storylines to the Fearful Symmetry-chapter, which has page-layouts that mirror each other; the first page and the last page have identical panel-shapes (though the content is different), the second page and the second-to-last page have identical panel-shapes, etc., etc., And so on through the entire chapter.

The Umbrella Academy. Written by the frontman of My Chemical Romance. It's a really engaging story. Have a looksee.

I second that! He is the king of pacing.

It's sort of a weird question, because what is "good pacing" it depends on the story. Sometimes a really slow pace is awesome for building tension, and the same pacing wouldn't work in another book. You should try to find a comic that has really, really awful pacing too, just for the heck of it (I recommend My Little Pony comics from the 80's).

Yeah, Watchmen is good. The pacing of some individual episodes is great; the iconic opening, the last episode, the prison episode...

For a study of pacing, I would very highly recommend looking at Hellboy. It has somewhat unusual pacing compared to most graphic novels I've read, but it works very well. I think my favourite has to be Strange Places.

When it comes to manga and pacing, "X" by CLAMP2 remains my favorite.

Not only do they perfectly know how to handle a huge cast (about 15 important character + smaller parts that matter), they also know exactly when action is needed, how to cool things out, how to use stress and sadness to build the tension... and it shows even in the way their pages are designed and illustrated!

You can really feel the fact that you're reading a war story in the end. And it's really well-done in the 1996 film adaptation as well btw!

I read Thomas Alsop recently that had a great pacing.
It very new but it has a very interesting story, characters and great plot points.
Got it on Comixology last year.

In comics, pacing is always well thought, since it's the most important part to get right for storytelling. Especially in professional ones. However, there are comics that do it way better than others. Action comedy often uses pacing very differently from romance comic for example. Manga is often paced to be easy and fast to read. So I find that the point yvettegustafsson made is vital. You have to know what you're looking for. sunny

On the Watchmen. What most people don't realise is that the cover for each issue is actually the first panel of the chapter. Pull out a copy and take a look, and what looks like iconic images at first, actually turns out to be part of the story.

Eagle
(That is the definition of a masterpiece of comic creation)