Showing posts with label graphic novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graphic novels. Show all posts

Monday, 4 April 2016

Graphic Novels of Feb and March: In Real Life, Skim, Embroideries, Fun Home, Chicken With Plums










This year I'm counting graphic novels in my reading challenge because they totally count and as I read 5 over February and March I thought I'd round em up here in this very post. It turns out my local library has a pretty good collection so I've been working my way through that!

In Real Life
I picked up this beautiful graphic novel by Cory Doctorow and Jen Wang on my birthday. As usual I was drawn in by its beautiful illustrations but the story was worth staying for. Anda is a high school student who loves online gaming, specifically the massively-multiplayer role-playing game Coarsegold Online. Anda is REALLY GOOD at this game, and is part of a all-girl guild. Real life and online life collide as Anda makes friends within the game with another kid in playing in China. I loved the art, I loved the story. I feel like it has a really strong moral heart within it. Also the physical copy is a beauty. The colours are wow!




Skim
I found Skim in the library, and was drawn in by the authors Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki who also wrote This One Summer, which I read last year. I also remember reading excerpts of this in my Sequential Narrative class in Toronto. So I was happy to finally read this story of Kimberly Keiko Cameron, nicknamed 'Skim', a wannabe Wiccan at high school in the early 90s. There's a suicide storyline, when a classmates' boyfriend kills himself, and the school becomes obsessed with spotting depression in its students. Skim is secretly meeting her English teacher Ms. Archer during all this, while also figuring out her friendship with her best friend, finding dates for the formal, and generally navigating teenage life. A really nice coming of age story, encompassing all the complications of high school. Has the same kind of thoughtful nostalgia as This One Summer .

Embroideries
The beginning of my Marjane Satrapi season. I had recently rewatched the Persepolis film (of which I now have a book copy and will read soon!), and spotted Embroideries in the library. This is such a funny and truthful little book. It's only a hundred or so pages, but there is so much good stuff packed in there! Over an afternoon of tea drinking, we learn of the love stories and sex lives of several generations of Iranian women in Majane's family. Her grandmother, mother, aunts, neighbours, cousins, all have stories from their various marriages and romances. I absolutely love Marjane Satrapi's humorous narrative style and her artwork is just great, capturing the personalities of each character in simple ink. 10/10 definitely read this! If anything. it's super enlightening!


Fun Home
I listened to Fun Home being discussed on the SRSLY podcast and then, once again, spotted it in the library. I'd been looking out for Alison Bechdel work, so I was very pleased to find it. This is a longun, with Bechdel looking back over her childhood at her relationship with her father, who died when she was in college. His death came just a few weeks after she came out as a lesbian to her parents, at which time her dad also came out as gay. Bechdel looks back over events in her childhood to unravel the mysteries of her father and their relationship and come to terms with his death I guess. This was a really interesting graphic memoir, mostly set in the family's funeral home business. Thoughtful, unapologetic storytelling and detailed artwork. Definitely wroth reading.


Chicken With Plums
Continuing Marjane Satrapi season, the library also had Chicken With Plums! Set in November 1955, Nasser Ali Khan is a celebrated tar player, and Marjane Satrapi's great-uncle. The story takes place over the eight days leading to his death, after he has given up on life due to the breaking of his beloved tar. Satrapi tells stories of his past and of his childrens' futures too, again with the same humour and wit she is known for. Offering glimpses into Iranian culture pre-1950s, and handling issues of death, love, life, and music with humour and grace. Also now I want to eat chicken with plums mmmm.





Any graphic novel recommendations are most welcome! Lemme know!



Tuesday, 2 February 2016

2015 Reading Roundup and 2016 Reading Goals


In 2015 I managed to read 52 books, yippee! This count includes novels, I didn't include any graphic novels, of which I think I read about 7, but for 2016 I reckon I will include them in the count because they're a kind of novel after all! Same goes for audio books, and non-fiction: all book based reading counts in 2016.

I read a whole lotta YA and a whole lotta 2015 releases, so without further ado, here are some lists of my favourites reads of the year, followed by some reading goals for 2016:

Top 5 Releases of 2015:


1- A Portable Shelter- Kirsty Logan
2- The Wolf Wilder- Katherine Rundell
3- The Big Lie- Julie Mayhew
4- Am I Normal Yet?- Holly Bourne
5- The Sin Eater's Daughter- Melinda Salisbury







My Top 10 of Reads of 2015:


1- Life After Life- Kate Atkinson
2- The Country of Ice Cream Star- Sandra Newman
3- A Darker Shade of Magic- V.E. Schwab
4- Vivian Versus the Apocalypse- Katie Coyle
5- Wild Song- Janis Mackay
6- The Gracekeepers- Kirsty Logan
7- The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks- E. Lockhart
8- Asking For It- Louise O'Neill
9- One- Sarah Crossan
10- The Wolf Wilder- Katherine Rundell
















Graphic Novels I read in 2015:

1- Nimona- Noelle Stevenson
2- The Never Weres- Fiona Smyth
3- Lumberjanes- Noelle Stevenaon, Grace Ellis, Brooke A. Allen
4- This One Summer- Mariko Tamaki
5- Anya's Ghost- Vera Brosgol
6- Dungeon Fun- Colin Bell and Neil Slorence
7- Bitter Sweets: Adventure Time- Kate Leth, Zack Sterling, Meredith McClaren






Reading Goals for 2016:

-Read more graphic novels: The seven I read in 2015 listed above were excellent, so in 2016 I'm going to try to read a few more, maybe even once a month. Plus book buying excuse!!

-Read some feminist lit: There are a few feminist books that have been on my wish list for ages and ages and I really should get round to reading them. Roxane Gay's Bad Feminist, Men Expain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit, The Beauty Myth by Naomi Wolf, and Laura Bates' Everyday Sexism are all on the list to conquer this year.

-Read more adult fiction: As in not exclusively young adult fiction, not 'adult' in that way you dirty sods. Now I think there are very exciting things happening in young adult fiction, which is why I read so much of it, but a few big fiction books managed to pass me by last year. I'm a 'proper adult' so I reckon I could manage some proper adult fiction.

-Read some classics: I tried to do this last year, I may have failed. But I want to tackle some classics this year, cos you know, some of them are meant to be good and you know, self improvement.