Candorville by Darrin Bell
- January 13, 2009
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Darrin Bell’s Candorville is an insightful look at family, community and race through the eyes of Lemont Brown, a young black writer. Bell pulls no punches and delves into even the most controversial of issues. The wit and humor of the strip will draw you in.
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Comments (4) Jump to Comments Form
SamFP said, 10 months ago
..and you haven’t seen nothing yet….
SherlockWatson said, 10 months ago
Okay, this is getting sloppy; yesterday Frederick Douglass was depicted as an artistic rendering of the man, and now he’s a lost kid who looks like he escaped from The Boondocks. What will we see tomorrow – a Frederick Douglass from Mars who’s curious about all the light-skinned people on this planet? And will all the different FDs have a meeting at the end of the week?
BrendanR said, 10 months ago
Uh… You DO realize Huey was drawn to look like Frederick Douglass, don’t you? So it’s actually the other way around.
This explains yesterday’s strip, where Douglass said he somehow knew Clyde was the man he needed to see, and where he said something like “I haven’t dreamed of this since I was a boy.”
deadheadzan
said,
10 months ago
The comic line is not sloppy but it is complex. Can’t wait to see what next few days will bring.