Strangers in Paradise Pocket Book 5

by Terry Moore

Paperback, 2005

Call number

741.5973

Collection

Publication

Abstract Studio (2005), Paperback, 392 pages

Pages

392

Description

While David finds solace with Katchoo, Francine can think of nothing but her past relationship with her former best friend and brings home a tattoo to prove it. It seems that Katchoo is destined to move on without Francine into the world of glitz, glamour, and art showings with her stunning display of 100 nudes. As Katchoo becomes the toast of the town, Francine finds herself looking for peace in the Caribbean. Our unlikely friends seem to be drifting apart until they are set on a collision course back to Houston!

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

392 p.; 8.1 inches

ISBN

1892597381 / 9781892597380

User reviews

LibraryThing member subbobmail
Yet another Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book...the fifth, and last for now (the final volume has yet to be issued). This is the long swath of the story in which Katchoo and Francine do not meet or speak at all. It's a tribute to Terry Moore's gift for characters that even without leaning on the
Show More
central relationship of the series, he holds my attention.

Frnacine has married Brad the doctor. Katchoo is doing her best to go on without her, mostly by focusing on her art career. David and Katchoo almost get married, then decide it would never work (Katchoo is entirely gay) and just settle into sharing a house and loving each other. Casey in working as a Las Vegas showgirl. Freddie Femur is still a right-wing sexist blowhard, but he's still impossible to hate, somehow. The usual Parker Girl crime plot rears its head in this volume, but it's quickly resolved...in these pages, Terry Moore takes time to meander and experiment. There's a lot of prose here, a few different art styles, and a detour into the mind of a husband-killer named Molly who has only a tenuous connection to the established cast. The Molly tale is interesting, but very out of place here (especially since it ends the volume)...

Long-running comics (like long-running TV series) struggle to remain compelling as they go on...the sprawling canvas is hard to manage. SiP 5 is full of meandering and reflection; I wouldn't recommend it as a first taste of the series, but for a SiP junkie like me, it's candy.
Show Less
Page: 0.3514 seconds