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#49 - As The Crow Flies by Melanie Gillman. "A story about Charlie — a queer, Black 13 year old girl who finds herself stranded in a dangerous place: an all-white Christian youth backpacking camp." A slow, engrossing read with beautiful colored pencil art.
#40 - Why are so many of my favorite graphic novels so hard to describe? American Born Chinese is a deceptively simple puzzle box, with separate stories (an Asian kid trying to fit in at a mostly-white school, a fairy tale about the Monkey King) which maybe aren't so separate.
#37 - Richard McGuire’s "Here" is a totally unique book. Every panel shows the same place, from the same angle - but with the time changing forward and backward by years from panel to panel (sometimes thousands of years).
#34 - How To Be Happy, by Eleanor Davis. A book of beautiful and sometimes creepy short stories, and the pure cartooning going on is a joy to behold. I especially like The Seven Sacks.
#16: Ganges. Funny mind-bending short stories told with perfect cartooning.
Phoenix volume 4: Karma, by Osamu Tezuka. This one just stunned me when I first read it (cough cough) years ago: The storytelling, the scope of the story, the sheer ambition of it all. My favorite of all the Tezukas I've ever read.
I love this comic! 320 pages of stunning black and white art, no dialog, just showing everything that happens to and around a single park bench.
I repost this cartoon a lot, but that's because it keeps coming up!
90% of the time, when people say "Democrats need to [say x] or [not say x] in order to win elections, this is what they're really doing.
Transcript of #PoliCartoon: https://t.co/GdBg9KR1jg
#PoliCartoon: If Taxation WERE Just Like Theft
Transcript: https://t.co/qW6mC9mhQ8
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Corporate Diversity Seminars
Transcript of #PoliCartoon: https://t.co/Eu1mXmZ5Cf
More cartoons to read! https://t.co/qHPAVz3n0L