Tina, Gene, and Louise are always daydreaming of a life far from the family restaurant, whether they become boy-crazy martial artists, mutated chinchillas, or the knights of King Arthur's court. Satisfy your trade paperback cravings with this latest collection by the fine folks at the Emmy Award-winning studio Bento Box Entertainment.
This final volume wasn't quite as good as the others to me. For one thing, instead of each issue having 3 stories, they combined each part into one full issue. So you had a full issue of Tina, Louise and Gene. Normally I would think I would like that better, but for some reason I prefer this comic in the multiple story per issue format.
Overall, this was a cool series. I still don't think the comic was quite up to the standards of the TV show, but it wasn't bad either. Fans of the show should still check out this series.
I like how the stories in this volume are more experimental in length, with the first half consisting of three separate longer stories and the second half as one big tale told through each of the kids' perspectives accompanied by different artwork. It's a smart way to liven up the format that started to feel a little stale during the preceding collections.
My Recommendation: This one was a meh for me. It's not as good as the others, but if you wan't to finish off all of them read it. If you don't really care go grab one of the middle three instead (Well Done, Medium Rare, or Pan Fried).
My Response: Bringing the Bob's Burgers comic adaptation to a close with issues 13-16, Bob's Burgers: Char-broiled was kind of disappointing. I think there were other continuations through the free comic book day issues, but this was the last trade paperback anthology.
Got this out of the library by accident when I meant to take out the cookbook. It was fun enough but the stories weren’t quite as good as you see on the show.