GRAPHIC NOVEL REVIEW: Factory Summers by Guy Delisle
This week’s graphic novel review is Factory Summers by Guy Delisle, a minimalistic at the summers the cartoonist spent as a teenager working in a paper factory in his hometown of Quebec.
Read MoreThis week’s graphic novel review is Factory Summers by Guy Delisle, a minimalistic at the summers the cartoonist spent as a teenager working in a paper factory in his hometown of Quebec.
Read MoreThis Is How I Disappear presents an ouroboros of exhaustion in the day-to-day lives of the younger generation. How we are more down-trodden, but we hold each other up…
Read MoreFictional Father by Joe Ollmann is a new graphic novel — published in May by Drawn & Quarterly — that explores father-son relationships, newspaper cartooning, and doing your best. Check out our review now…
Read MoreMoney might make the world go round, but Darryl Cunningham’s new book Billionaires provides a peek beneath the surface of the idiom, illustrating how if we aren’t careful, it might spin out of control.
Read MoreBy Zack Quaintance — All of us living right now are undergoing something extraordinary. It’s easy to miss in the moment, but technology has begun to accelerate at an unprecedented, exponential rate. It’s unlike anything we’ve seen in human history, and you can tether it to whatever theory you like, with Moore’s Law perhaps being the easiest touchpoint for wrapping your head around this. Another easy touchpoint is to consider that the iPhone was a new product as recently as 2007, and now we walk around tethered to it, our abilities to navigate the world influenced by the debut of new apps, processing systems, and even small tweaks. This, in its simplest form, is what writer/artist Michael Deforge’s Familiar Face HC (published in March by Drawn & Quarterly) is about.
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