
For the longest time I kept hearing the term 'graphic novel' and I thought it was just a



After falling in love with these first two graphic novels, I went on to read Ethel and Ernest, the story of a family living in England during WWII. This was written by Ethel and Ernest's son, Raymond Briggs, and is a heartwarming story with wonderfully expressive drawings.
Next up was Persepolis, a graphic memoir by Marjane Satrapi who was born in Iran and lived in Tehran during the civil war and the Iran/Iraq war. Part Two is about her time in Austria attending school and then returning to Iran. Powerful stuff.
Two recent graphic novel/memoir reads were Blankets by Craig Thompson - a beautifully written coming of age story - and The Shiniest Jewel, Marian Henley's story of adopting a child from Russia.

The drawings in this book are beautiful; much can be understood by a facial expression, a gesture, body language. And the bizarre creatures and objects and buildings that represent the strangeness of this new country are evocative - fear, curiosity, alienation.

I'm going to read this book again today; it's one of those books that you can read multiple times and see something new with each reading.
I can't write a post about graphic novels without mentioning Edward Gorey. Though his works aren't novels, there are collections of short stories and single panel pieces that tell a story. You'll recognize his art from the PBS series, Mystery!

It's good to see this genre becoming so popular; I think it's a wonderful medium for story telling, as so much can be expressed by a good drawing (a picture worth a thousand words and all). Of course, like most things in our culture, it's gone too far when Pride and Prejudice and Moby Dick show up as new graphic novels. I think a graphic novel needs to be written as such and not an adaptation from an existing book. I haven't seen any of these new adaptations, but my hunch is they lose something in the translation . (OK, how many cliches can I write in a paragraph?)
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5 comments:
I love Edward Gorey! I own all four of the Amphigorey books. I haven't read through all of them yet, but I've read quite a bit scattered throughout.
Thanks for a fascinating post - I've added The Arrival and The Invention of Hugo Cabret to my wish list :)
Ok - a quick question? WHERE are you getting these? Is the library your source? I can't find any of these at Borders and I'm confused where everyone is getting these books (maybe I just asked the wrong Borders employee?)
care: I got almost all of these from the library except Fun Home and Hugo Cabret. I would think by now most big bookstores would have a graphic novel section. Find them online at Amazon or Powells and jot down the ISBN number, and take that with you to Borders.
Excellent post. I love graphic novels and got some good recommendations here :)
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