Books

Fearless Fantastic Featured

Preview: DK’s Fearless and Fantastic! offers profiles in courage for Marvel female superheroes

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DK Publishing is set on making sure readers know their female superheroes just as 2018 fires its last shots with the release of Fearless and Fantastic! Females Superheroes Save the World. The book continues the DK...

Review: Broken souls, bloody noses, and activism in ‘Flem’

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Brussels-based and Montreal-born cartoonist R. Rosen makes her graphic novel debut with Flem, a tale of psychological distress, self-destruction, and political activism that casts a sympathetic view towards all three, but not without a...
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Review: ‘Pyongyang’ shows North Korea is the same as it ever was

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I feel like over the last decade, the travel graphic novel has become crowded with pedestrian work. The form has taken on the role of rite of passage for young cartoonists who are interested...

Review: Sid Vicious is back in ‘Punk’s Not Dead’ and this time he’s doing...

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If you had asked me a week ago what I thought of the idea of a comic about the ghost of Sid Vicious palling around with a modern-day kid, I’m not sure what my...
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Review: ‘Mort Cinder’ is a pioneer of the macabre

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Mort Cinder — the character, not the book — offers more questions than answers, but that’s how it should be. Mort Cinder, the book, written by Argentinean journalist Hector Oesterheld and drawn by Uruguay-born...

GET A GRIP!: Ellen Forney reveals the healing power of ‘SMEDMERTS’ & talks ROCK...

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"Feeling like you have a grip is feeling like you have the means to be flexible and figure our new things."
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Review: The dark and charming topsy-turvy Paris of ‘Alas’

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Anytime I encounter a story with animals dominating the world in an aggressive stance against primitive humans, I can’t help but compare it to the two gold standards of my childhood, Planet of the...
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Review: The thrilling darkness of Rachael Ball’s ‘Wolf’

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Everyone knows about the wider mythologies that creep their way into childhood, everything from Bigfoot to Slender Man that infects young brains in a way that the most fantastic fictions mingle with the drudgery...
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Review: Mortality from all sides in ‘In The Future, We Are Dead’

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Death is a multi-faceted subject and German cartoonist Eva Müller’s In The Future We Are Dead gives it the treatment it deserves. Müller comes at the subject from a number of vantage points that range...
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Review: Different sides of empowerment in ‘Terrible Means’ and ‘A City Inside’

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Terrible Means is a prequel to B. Mure’s Ismyre book from a couple years ago, but you don’t need to have read the previous book to understand it. As the book begins, there is...

Review: Brotherhood as artistic evolution in ‘Piero’

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Edmond Baudoin is a relatively obscure figure in America, looming under whatever radar we have that detects French cartoonists. As explained in Matt Madden’s excellent introduction to Piero — Madden also did the translation...
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Review: Technology as the agent of change, good or bad, in ‘I Feel Machine’

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In some ways aiming to be the Black Mirror of graphic anthologies, I Feel Machine features six cartoonists each exploring the intersection between humanity and technology, and how humans change because of their encounters...

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