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Library Comic is published two days a week, Monday and Wednesday. Book reviews Tuesday and Thursday.

We recommend you also read The Haunted Skull by Willow Payne and Gene’s friend’s Tim Allen Stories .

 

Graphic Novel Review: One Beautiful Spring Day by Jim Woodring

One Beautiful Spring Day by Jim Woodring. Fantagraphics, 2022. 9781683965558. 402pp. If you’ve never read a Frank book by Woodring this is the one to pick up. It’s a combination of material originally published as three books — Congress of Animals, Fran, and Poochytown — with an extra hundred pages around those stories, connecting and completing them. It is epic, plus it’s completely wordless, insanely weird, and somewhat gory and horrible in a way that I never quite recall. Frank and his friends remind me of classic cartoons, which are also often filled with suffering and awfulness in a way that’s both amusing and unreal and that I don’t really remember. Bonus: I can almost guarantee that the art will make you stop reading to admire individual lines in the a drawing at some point.  

Book Review: Trees: An Illustrated Celebration by Kelsey Oseid

Trees: An Illustrated Celebration by Kelsey Oseid. Ten Speed Press, 2023. 9781984859419. 160pp. I love seeing the world through Oseid’s paintings — she notices little details and then points them out via her paintings in a way that looks exactly correct and which makes me realize I need to pay more attention to everything. There is science in this book but it’s overwhelmed by the drawings: note just the anthropomorphized trees but also detailed images of leaves, flowers, fruit, bark, and cones. I love the unexpected paintings best: the Brazilian grapefruit with its bark covered in berries, the one showing crown shyness (this is when some trees maintain a distance from each other at the canopy), underground trees, the Ogham tree alphabet. Before reading this I had no idea monkey puzzle tree seeds were edible, nor the collective term for the acorns that fall in a season (mast). And I was surprised to learn that no one quite agrees on what a tree is, taxonomically speaking anyway. Includes an index. Trees is a great gift for readers young and old, and it’s the kind of book I wish I’d gotten instead of those classic National Geographic books for kids my grandparents gave me every Christmas. This deserves a spot in school libraries at all grade levels.

Graphic Novel Review: Guardian of Fukushima by Fabien Grolleau, illustrated by Ewen Blain

Guardian of Fukushima by Fabien Grolleau, illustrated by Ewen Blain. Foreward by Roland Kelts. Translated by Jenna Martin. Tokyopop, 2023. 9781427871367. Includes an interview with Grolleau and Blain plus information about and photos of Naoto Matsumura and the March 11, 2011, tsunami and its aftermath. When I saw Grolleau’s name on this book, I knew I had to read it — I loved his graphic novels on Audobon and Darwin, and the cover of this looked fantastic, with its sea dragon in the tsunami. This is artist Ewen Blain’s first book, and after seeing his bright, beautiful illustrations I’m reading any book he draws. This is the story of Naoto Matsumura, who refused to evacuate the area near the Fukushima nuclear plant so that he could care for the animals left behind. It contains a lot that clearly is true — details about Matsumura, his parents, and his nephew remaining in their home for days after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami until they were finally evacuated, and the problems that they faced thereafter, including that some family members didn’t want to take them in for fear of radioactive contamination. After the others are safe Matsumura returns to his home to care for his family’s animals, and others that he finds in the area as well. Japanese mythology is woven throughout the narrative; my favorite parts involve the origin of earthquakes and the heartbreaking moment when supernatural creatures appear to Matsumura to ask for his help, too. The book ends with Matsumura speaking out and demonstrating against nuclear power, along with a touching moment about an unexpected, personal result of what he’s been up to.

Graphic Novel Review: The Wolf Suit by Sid Sharp

The Wolf Suit by Sid Sharp. Annick Press, 2022. 9781773217208. 126pp. with gorgeous endpapers. Bellwether Riggwelter (a sheep) seems perfectly happy being alone in his house until he hears a noise in the forest — a howling — and it scares him. Then he runs out of blackberries and goes off to pick more despite his fear. This does not go well. So he decides to use his crafting skills to make himself a wolf suit to wear when he’s in the forest. On his next foray into the woods, he meets some wolves, but then his disguise starts to unravel. Sharp’s fully painted graphic novel could be read to kids starting chapter books, and I think older kids would find it a quick, satisfying read, too. They took a lot of care with each illustration, small panels and two-page spreads alike, and the book is delightful. Its surprise ending is great, as is its message about pretending to be someone (or something) you’re not.

Graphic Novel Review: Alcatoe and the Turnip Child by Isaac Lenkiewicz

Alcatoe and the Turnip Child by Isaac Lenkiewicz. Flying Eye Books, 2022. 9781838740146. 61pp. Alcatoe (a witch) is the most reclusive inhabitant of Plum Woods, which is also home to ghosts, goblins, ghouls, and more. Stovetop, her kettle dog, keeps her company, and even makes tea when asked. One night during a full moon Alcatoe takes fresh jam buns to the Witches Social Club, where she and others will discuss the Annual Feast. The event is meant to smooth things over between the witches and non-witches after Alcatoe helped three kids beat an unpleasant local gardener, Mr. Pokeweed, in a vegetable pageant. Most of the book is the story of what happened after the kids sought Alcatoe’s help, of them finding the necessary ingredients for and dealing with the consequences of Alcatoe’s enchanted vegetable spell. This lovely book is a Halloween-ish tale without much of a sense of danger. I love Lenkiewicz’s illustrations, and the colors are a real standout, too. I think most kids who are starting to make their way through chapter books would enjoy it, as would older kids and parents.

Picture Books!

The Honeybee by Kirsten Hall and Isabelle Arsenault. Little Simon, 2023. 9781665904841 (board book). 44pp. Hall’s mostly rhyming verse and Arsenault’s beautiful, charming drawings work together to create this compelling pageturner about bees! And as in excellent comics and picture books, the turning of pages is used to great effect. And the honey glows! (I gave this to my adult daughter as soon as I finished it.) 100 Mighty Dragons All Named Broccoli by David Larochelle and Lian Cho. Dial Books, 2023. 9780525555445. 40pp. Dragons play, surf, take trains, get turned into things by a wizard, move to different states, fly off (sometimes in rockets), and more in this story that is a fun excuse to do a little addition and subtraction. Brilliant!   Bookstore Bunnies (Read To Read Pre-Level One) by Eric Seltzer, illustrated by Tom Disbury. Simon Spotlight, 2022. 9781665927932. 32pp. The bookstore bunnies are on the job, helping their animal customers get the books they want. There’s even a storytime! It’s a perfect read-aloud.  

Bookstabber Episode 34: The Sailor on the Seas of Fate by Michael Moorcock

Within the maelstrom of parallel planes there is a constant: two eternal readers, sometimes allied, at other times opposed. Willow, with her black rune sword, and Gene, heir to the Library Throne, meet again on the field of podcast to delve into classic sword and sorcery. Available at bookstabber.podbean.com and in your favorite podcast app, probably.

Graphic Novel Review: Welcome to Feral: Little Town. Big Scares! by Mark Fearing

Welcome to Feral: Little Town. Big Scares! by Mark Fearing. Holiday House, 2022. 9780823448654. Freya uses an abandoned storm cellar to get to the bottom of all of the weird stories in Feral. At the beginning of the book she’s adding a new incident to her map, the story of two kids who go into the city playground to ride the Spaghetti Death Twist slide even though it’s unsafe. As Freya tells us after the story, ” If you stand next to the slide at sunset and listen carefully…you can still hear them screaming.” The four other stories in the book involve an ice cream truck deep in the woods, a girl sent to detention for not completing her book report, a rocket-obsessed boy who restores an old bike, and a group of scouts whose adult leader is probably a vampire. Ghosts, tentacled monsters, and werewolves all make an appearance or two. I would have loved reading this graphic novel to my daughter when she was still young enough to be a little freaked out by it. There’s nothing too graphic, even in the one story where kids are clearly being consumed, and it will have a lot of shelf appeal for young horror readers. The simple layouts are used expertly, and the balance of text to images works to make the weirdness stand out.

Graphic Novel Review: The Moth Keeper by K. O’Neil

The Moth Keeper by K. O’Neil. Random House Graphic, 2023. 9780593182260. 272pp. O’Neil’s new graphic novel centers around Anya, who has chosen to become a Moth Keeper for her nocturnal village. Her duty is to make sure the moths, which pollinate the magical Night Flower tree once a year, don’t become lost. (Their magic helps the village survive.) It’s a cold, lonely life spending so much time outside the village, but Anya has lots of support, including her friend Estell, who is training to be a healer, and her mentor, Yeolen. I loved every character in the book, especially in how they reacted when Anya messed up. But my favorite character by far was the bird lady (the village leader) who tells stories from her library, which is written on her wings. This is a lovely, quiet, inclusive fantasy graphic novel about finding oneself and responsibility. And it’s full of anthropomorphic animal characters, love, and stories. Note: This book “was created on an iPad Pro with Procreate.” Plus there are preliminary sketches in the back. The art is as gorgeous as the story is kind. (You may know some of O’Neil’s previous work which includes The Tea Dragon Society series, Princes Princess Ever After, and the picture book in comics format, Dewdrop.)

Graphic Novel Review: Men I Trust by Tommi Parrish

Men I Trust by Tommi Parrish. Fantagraphics, 2022. 9781683966500. 208pp. Eliza is doing pretty well — she’s sober, dealing with the trauma of her abusive mother, and raising her son, Justin, alone. Talking about her problems at meetings helps. Her day job is okay but she shines at night when she performs her poetry. It’s after one of these performances that Sasha introduces herself. She’s young, intense, and very attracted to Eliza. Eliza keeps her at arm’s length, but maybe she should let her get closer. Or maybe that would be a huge mistake. (I’m still meditating on the title, but the men in the book include Eliza’s ex, who seems to be avoiding responsibility, her son Justin, who she’s doing her best to take care of, and an awful TV show host who Sasha sometimes dates for money.) This graphic novel is fully painted, as is Parish’s The Lie And How We Told It (2018), and it’s also full of realistic dialogue that really drew me in. Sasha and Eliza both have issues that had me rooting for both of them even as it felt like maybe they shouldn’t be hanging out together.