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Visually beautiful yet also artfully written in a way that entertains, this graphic work encourages readers to consider important questions related to their own communities and building a better tomorrow.
For any library looking to expand its graphic novels collection, this is a valuable addition, embodying the many strengths that make the format an exceptional medium for modern storytelling.
Hill and Matz deliver a compelling tale about loyalty and revenge, as well as a thought-provoking look at gender politics in our era. Supported by Jef's highly detailed, edgy artwork, this offering is ideal for mature readers seeking complex plotlines, moral ambiguity, and social commentary.
Moench's writing is stark and provides an extreme, almost supernatural version of Batman, while Jones's artwork is creepy and completes the vision of a twisted, phantasmic superhero with hunched posturing, stiletto ears, and clawlike hands. For the Batman fan who craves extremes, this volume delivers the Darkest of Knights.
Tank Girl was created in the late 1980s in the style of British punk art and music and through continuous publication has kept a firm hold on the feel of punk culture. Providing art for the series is Johnson-Cadwell, debuting in his first major publication with a whirlwind story of quick humor, action, and gratuitous violence and profanity that unapologetically fulfills a 25-year-old legacy of absurdist, alternative adventuring.
Barr and Bolland's new creation springs from a clear love and firm grasp of the original medieval text and reinterprets it beautifully into a new context, while maintaining the flavor of a bygone era. For any fan of comics or Arthurian lore, this essential read will capture the imagination.
Madrid presents the cream of a very ripe crop of empowered comic book heroines and introduces them quite eloquently, accentuating readers' enjoyment of the stories themselves but also making readers aware of why the stories matter so much regardless of the era in which they are read. A valuable reference book of comics history, recommended for graphic novels collections.
Nguyen and Fridolfs resurrect one of the lost gems of the DC Universe, tapping into the forsaken potential of a slew of innovative and well-scripted television series. Their attention to detail and passionate storytelling brings fans of the old DC animates series back to their first viewing.