![]() ![]() New Orleans (1) Aaron McConnell (2) Aaron Renier (2) abolition (3) Abominable Mr. ![]() ġ000 Nights (1) 14th Dalai Lama (1) 1930s (4) 1940s (8) 1950s (5) 1960s (12) 1970s (6) 1980s (9) 1990s (6) 20-somethings (33) 2010s Favorites (1) 2019 Favorites (10) 2020 Favorites (13) 2021 Favorites (10) 20th Century Boys (2) 30-somethings (1) 3x4 (1) 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank (1) 45 (1) 50-somethings (1) 9/11 (3) A Christmas for Shacktown (1) A Contract with God (1) A Fiery Demise (1) A Fire Story (1) A House Divided (1) A Life of Discovery (1) A Matter of Life (1) A Matter of Life & Death (1) A Tale of Two Sloths (1) A Time to Be Brave (1) A User's Guide to Neglectful Parenting (1) A Wrinkle in Time (1) A. ![]() Strange Fruit: Uncelebrated Narratives from Black.The Hammer and the Anvil: Frederick Douglass, Abra.There are some language and sexual situations that might not play well with younger readers, but I think that this book would be appropriate for older adolescents.Ī review copy of this book was provided by the publisher. World, and readers will hope this isn't the only story to come from it." In a starred review from the School Library Journal Jordeana Kruse gave this verdict, "Fans of George Orwell’s 1984 and Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 will find much to ponder in this notable graphic novel." April Spisak wrote that even though it is not happy "the conclusion remains complex and poignant."ĭecelerate Blue was published by First Second, and they have a preview and much more available here. Kirkus Reviews summed up, "This is a strikingly illustrated book set in a potentially massive Cavallaro has worked in comics for a couple of decades now, with a number of graphic novels to his credit, including Foiled, Curses! Foiled Again, The Life and Times of Savior 28, and Parade (with fireworks).Īll of the reviews I have read for this book have been glowing. Rapp is a Renaissance man who has worked on movies, music, novels, and play writing, and he was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 2006. This book is a collaboration between writer Adam Rapp and artist Mike Cavallaro. I have to say that the combination of artwork and narrative is pitch perfect for this sort of tale, though I was largely dissatisfied with some of the character work. Still, it is a very affecting book, and that it stirred such emotions up in me is the hallmark of something done right. I am not going to spoil it, but the ending was pretty bleak and left me with small feelings of hope and large feelings of despair. Still, the establishment is very well organized and relentless, and things do not go well for the resistors in the end. Soon, she literally drops out of society, joins the resistance, and finds a potential romance in an unlikely place. Angela's actions lead to some attention, unwelcome from some (like her parents) and welcome from others (like the mysterious person who drops her a copy of Kick the Boot, a novel that becomes the manifesto for an underground movement). ![]()
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