I got a great present this year: Jim Woodring's
Frank in the 3rd Dimension !

I've read all of Woodring's Frank comics in the last year and become a big fan. Besides this new book (which is a collection of unrelated scenes, and not a narrative comic book like every other Frank work) there's a big treasury of all the Frank comics published in various issues and anthologies throughout the '90s (The Frank Book) and three hardcover graphic novels produced in the last couple of years (Wrathercraft, Congress of the Animals, and Fran). They deal with Frank, an anthropomorphic character straight out of a '30s cartoon, who lives in a surrealistic world called The Unifactor along with a few other reoccurring characters. It's almost impossible to describe these comics with words, they just have to be experienced; iIn fact, there are no words in a Frank comic: it's all images, and while the storytelling is clear to one reading it's hard to summarize afterwards. I can only say that they deal with strange Cronenbergian transformations, spiritual visions, horrible violence, and occasional acts of kindness.
This new book, Frank in the 3rd Dimension, features 27 3D drawings (plus ones on the front and back cover) that show some scenes taken or inspired by events in the comics and others that are totally original and
it's amazing. 3D artist Charles Bernard took Woodring's drawings and created 3D images that not only have an incredible variety of depth (extreme and subtle), but the objects often have
volume. I've never seen anything like that in 3D before. I've kept coming back to this book in the last few days and my appreciation for it only grows.