[REVIEW] HOW DOES A GRAPHIC NOVELIST MAKE MARCEL PROUST RELEVANT AGAIN?
Stéphane Heuet manages to nudge more readers towards the ever-daunting classic by French writer Marcel Proust: In Search of Lost Time.
Stéphane Heuet manages to nudge more readers towards the ever-daunting classic by French writer Marcel Proust: In Search of Lost Time.
Ultimately, Aquaman #56 is a wonderful story. It’s a necessary story about two superpowered people dealing with a very normal dilemma.
Star Wars #1 is not a bad book in any way. It does what it’s supposed to do in the way it’s supposed to do it. And that’s the tragedy of it.
Skulldigger and Skeleton Boy #1 is a worthwhile addition to the Black Hammer mythos and one that explores a darker and more sinister corner of Spiral City.
Killadelphia #1 has a distinct mix of horror and noir (horroir? hornoir?) that both draws you in and makes you scared to go any further.
The legendary Lynda Barry is set to inspire a new generation of artists with her latest informative, witty teaching tool, Making Comics.
The life and times of David Bowie are brought vividly to life by an illustrator who takes his iconic alter egos and makes them her own.
Here’s how Gareth Hinds makes classics like The Iliad, The Odyssey, and the work of Shakespeare accessible to new generations of readers.
Kevin Huizenga takes the meditative state of an insomniac and turns it into a treatise on love, life, and the human condition.