Deadbomb Bingo Ray by Jeff Johnson. Turner, 2017. 9781683367246. 277pp.
Deadbomb Bingo Ray is part of Philadelphia’s criminal underworld, a man with a reputation for creative problem solving and getting revenge on those who try to cross him. And yet someone is trying to take him out. There are folks on his tail, a woman who says she’s trying to hire him (he knows she has other motives), and a hit squad or two. Ray is clearly going to survive the adventure — he over prepares and over thinks every aspect of his safety as if it’s his superpower — but the question is will everyone else in his life make it through unscathed? Specifically the physicist he unexpectedly finds himself falling in love with, and his sweet little dog? Ray also has a hilarious secretary, and his buddy / partner Skuggy, a sometimes dapper dude who demands his favorite meal before he’ll get to work with Ray.
This is dark, violent entertainment with a bit of a love story. It’s worth reading for the moment Ray kills someone with a sharpened bicycle spoke. And yes, you do find out how he got the nickname.

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Book Review: Deadbomb Bingo Ray by Jeff Johnson
Deadbomb Bingo Ray by Jeff Johnson. Turner, 2017. 9781683367246. 277pp.
Deadbomb Bingo Ray is part of Philadelphia’s criminal underworld, a man with a reputation for creative problem solving and getting revenge on those who try to cross him. And yet someone is trying to take him out. There are folks on his tail, a woman who says she’s trying to hire him (he knows she has other motives), and a hit squad or two. Ray is clearly going to survive the adventure — he over prepares and over thinks every aspect of his safety as if it’s his superpower — but the question is will everyone else in his life make it through unscathed? Specifically the physicist he unexpectedly finds himself falling in love with, and his sweet little dog? Ray also has a hilarious secretary, and his buddy / partner Skuggy, a sometimes dapper dude who demands his favorite meal before he’ll get to work with Ray.
This is dark, violent entertainment with a bit of a love story. It’s worth reading for the moment Ray kills someone with a sharpened bicycle spoke. And yes, you do find out how he got the nickname. Graphic Novel Review: Aspara Engine by Bishakh Som
Aspara Engine by Bishakh Som. The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2020. 9781936932818. 250pp. Oversized, full color.
The eight stories in Bishakh Som’s oversized graphic novel have such subtle colors that, in some case, I wondered if I was imagining the tint of the ink wash. It’s a marvelous effect, and it goes hand in hand with conversations that feel both real and unreal, and with story elements both fantastic and futuristic. I can’t recommend this book enough, but it’s hard to talk about without spoiling things. Issues of gender, identity and queerness are addressed in many of the stories. There’s a mermaid, a “pet” that freaked me out, a humiliated “stalker” who I somehow felt a little bad for, and an unexpected, elegant bit of time travel
It’s worth noting that I started reading Aspara Engine a few times before my brain clicked with its pace, and then I couldn’t put it down. I’m currently enjoying Som’s graphic memoir, Spellbound, and I plan to read her graphic history of prefab bathrooms at some point soon, too.
Graphic Novel Reviews: Batman: Overdrive and Wonder Woman: Tempest Tossed.

Batman: Overdrive by Shea Fontana, illustrated by Marcelo Di Chiara. DC Comics, 2020. 9781401283568. 336pp. Part of the DC Graphic Novels for Kids line.
Fifteen-year-old Bruce Wayne is learning martial arts, sneaking out of his house to try his hand as a hoodied vigilante, and trying to solve his parents’ murder. Out to find parts to restore a muscle car that belonged to his father, he meets Mateo Diaz, and the pair end up chasing a familiar cat burglar stealing from Diaz’s uncle’s scrapyard. It’s not too long before Diaz and Selena Kyle are helping Bruce work on the car, and then helping him go up against Gotham City’s Falcone crime family. There’s a bit of romance, and a lot more teen angst than I’ve seen in most books “for kids” but this is enjoyable. (Maybe DC needs a branded line of tween graphic novels?)
Wonder Woman: Tempest Tossed by Laurie Halse Anderson, Illustrated by Leila Del Duca. DC Comics, 2020. 9781401286453. 186pp. Part of the DC Graphic Novels for Young Adults line.
Diana is the only teen on Themyscira where the Amazons wait behind a barrier, invisible until they’re needed to defeat the Great Evil when it returns. She longs to be a powerful, good Amazon and a great warrior, but her body is strange and she’s given to bouts of weakness. When there are signs of trouble in the outside world, she tries and fails to convince her mother that the Amazons should help. Then refugees start to wash up on Themyscira’s shore, and only Diana rushes into the water to save them, after which she finds herself stuck in our world and unable to return home.
For a time she lives a refugee camp in Greece. After her abilities as a translator become apparent, she gets out of the camp with the help of Steve Chang and his husband, Trevor, who eventually bring her to the US. The fact that she’s new to our world leads to both humor and alarm, and allows her to question confusing examples of inequality and racism that she encounters. The book is super obvious in its social justice focus, and Diana even goes up against child traffickers, but it’s a good read — the story of a teenage Wonder Woman far from home, standing up for what’s right will doubtless appeal to older kids and younger teens, and it’s the kind of book we want them to find on library shelves.
Both books leave me confused as to the difference between the labeling of DC’s Young Adults and Kids lines, respectively. But kids will ignore that, so perhaps we librarians all should, too?
Graphic Novel Review: Water Memory by Valérie Vernay and Mathieu Reynès
Water Memory by Valérie Vernay (artist and colorist) and Mathieu Reynès (writer). Roar, 2017. 9781941302439. 96pp. plus some drawings and reference photos in a graphic journal at the end.
Marion and her mom, Caroline, move to Caroline’s childhood house in a small seaside town. Her marriage recently ended, her mother has just passed away, and no one has lived in the house for thirty years. It has a great view that includes a lighthouse, kind neighbors, and a bit of mystery — what’s the meaning of the strange rocks around town, and the carvings on them? Do they have anything to do with the cranky old loner who lives in the lighthouse?
Marion is not a brilliant teen detective, but she’s just enough of a snoop to keep the plot rolling along. She asks her mom’s new boss about her grandfather, who went out in his boat one day and didn’t come back. Gradually she finds out more and more about a town legend involving sea deities and those lost at sea.
The story has a slightly creepy edge and, in a genre defying way, little action. The illustrations are wonderful, the people seem real, and this little seaside town feels like it could be just about anywhere. I wish I’d read this book on vacation, looking at an ocean, but reading it at home while badly in need of a vacation was the next best thing.
Book Review: IQ by Joe Ide
IQ by Joe Ide. Mulholland Books, 2016. 9780316267731. 321pp. plus an excerpt from the next book in the series.
IQ is the nickname of Isaiah Quintabe, a brilliant young man from a poor Los Angeles suburb who was raised by his elder brother. Isaiah helps people out, solving small mysteries, often for free, and generally trying to do the right thing. But now he needs cash, and his former roommate, Dodson, has brought him a plum job: someone tried to kill rapper Black the Knife, aka Calvin Wright. If they can solve the crime (Dodson insists they’re partners), they’ll share a $50,000 bonus.
Chapters alternate past with present, showing the story of IQ’s relationship with the irritating and amusing Dodson as he tries to solve the crime. IQ once used his intellect to help them commit amazing robberies, back when he was first trying to figure out how to survive without his brother, and that has had a huge impact on his priorities.
Ide’s magic is that, by the end, you get that in some way IQ and Dodson need each other. Plus you’ll root for IQ more and more as you learn of IQ’s past and how he’s trying to make up for it. And at one point Ide short circuits what would usually be a long, twisting and turning part of the mystery in favor of characterization. Great writing.
J.B. at Seattle’s BLMF books put this into my hands saying it was the perfect hip hop novel, and it really was. Both the language and the story have great flow. The whole thing is worth reading for the opening chapter alone, though you won’t be able to put it down at that point. I’m heading out right now to buy the second book in the series, Righteous. The 5th book, Smoke, comes out in early 2021. Graphic Novel Review: Katie the Catsitter written by Colleen AF Venable, illustrated by Stephanie Yu, colors by Braden Lamb
Katie the Catsitter written by Colleen AF Venable, illustrated by Stephanie Yu, colors by Braden Lamb. Random House Children’s Books, 2021. 9781984895639. 206pp of story plus amazing introductions to Venable and Yu at the end of the book.
Katie is looking for ways to earn money so that she can attend an expensive summer camp with her friends. She advertises that she’s available to do jobs in her building, but nothing works out until her neighbor, Ms. Lang, asks her to start cat sitting. It’s a great gig, but there are 217 super smart cats with amazing skills (hacker, seamstress, artist, etc.) in her apartment, and cats aren’t allowed in the building. (On the upside none of them uses a litter box, and though they’re messy they do take care of their messes.) Katie begins to suspect that Ms. Lang is secretly the masked villain (or is she a hero?) known as The Mousetress, who seems to be targeting people and businesses that are mistreating animals. There’s a bit of mystery as Katie looks into that, and a bit of sadness as she and her friend Bethany, who is away at camp, grow apart. The whole adventure ends in a daring rescue. At the heart of the book: friendship, animal welfare, and a lot of humor.
Worth noting: Venable’s and Yu’s biographies at the end of the book are the best ever! Real life pets! Adventure photos! And there are illustrations from the top secret files about the cats.
Graphic Novel Review: Poems To See By: A Comic Artist Interprets Great Poetry by Julian Peters
Poems To See By: A Comic Artist Interprets Great Poetry by Julian Peters. Plough Publishing House, 2020. 9780874863185. 168pp. (24 poems)
I was an English major. I slogged through most of the poetry I had to read, and it’s always hard to find poems that I love (though I do love a few). I recognized most of the poets in Peters’ book, and even a few of the individual poems (though I hadn’t read most of them). An image of the table of contents is included with the review if you want to see what’s in the book.
I tell you all of that because I wasn’t super excited about this book before reading it, but it absolutely wowed me. The images Peters uses vary from abstract and colorful to realistic and black and white. One poem is drawn in manga style, while others looks like they belong in an American newspaper or the best of indie graphic novels that have come out in the past decades. There seem to be a variety of media used as well, and all of the illustrations are amazing. But at the core of what makes the book work is the way Peters uses panels, images, and text placement to create a rhythm. These poetry comics are works of art themselves, and I’ve never read anything quite like them. (Each poem is also present, as text, after the poetry comic of the poem.)
This book will find a home in any high school library and, I’m sure, in some college courses. I wish a professor had assigned it when I was in school, which is something I’ve never said about a poetry anthology before.
Graphic Novel Review: Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams by Naoki Urasawa
Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams by Naoki Urasawa. Viz, 2020. 9781974715237. 264pp. MUJIRUSHI © 2018 Naoki URASAWA/N WOOD STUDIO
Kasumi’s dad is broke and in trouble with the Japanese tax authorities. His only assets: a bunch of masks of the face of a ridiculous American President that he made in his factory. Hopeless, he finds a message that falls from a crow’s foot and follows it to the France Enlightenment Institute. There he meets its buck-toothed, pretentious director who tells him stories and makes him an offer: in the Louvre, if he can “borrow” Vermeer’s The Lacemaker, his financial troubles will be over. Thus begins an unlikely “heist” that, by its end, involves a French firefighter and his singing granny.
This was a book originally published by Futuropolis in French as one of its Louvre Editions. (All feature the museum in some way.) I’ve read most of them that have been translated into English (I believe all of the rest were published by NBM), and though I really liked a few of the others, this is by far my favorite.
Worth noting: Viz also just published Sneeze, a collection of eight short stories by Urasawa, who is one of Japan’s most famous manga creators. If you’ve never read anything by him, these two books are great places to start. (For my money, the best story in Sneeze is the slapstick-filled tale of two mice trying to steal a piece of cake from a kitchen counter.)
Graphic Novel Review: Drawn & Quarterly: Twenty-five Years of Contemporary Cartooning, Comics, and Graphic Novels
Drawn & Quarterly: Twenty-five Years of Contemporary Cartooning, Comics, and Graphic Novels edited by Tom Devlin with Chris Oliveros, Peggy Burns, Tracy Hurren, and Julia Pohl-Miranda. Translations by Helge Dascher. Drawn & Quarterly, 2015. 9781770461994. 776pp.
If you’re looking for a comics anthology to brighten your involuntary days at home or a book to introduce you to a wide range of independent creators with bodies of work you can start reading NOW, look no further. In fact, you’ll probably love the front cover and spine (plus front endpapers) by Tom Gauld. He and Pascal Girard, whose work can also be found inside, draw the best bookstores and libraries.
The book opens with a section on the history of Drawn & Quarterly that includes old photos featuring questionable haircuts of famed comics creators that will make you laugh, particularly if you frequent the better sections of comic conventions. Then it’s comics, lots of excellent comics! Alongside and among are reminiscences, tributes, and appreciations of the publishing personalities and the talent, my favorites being the one of Seth by Lemony Snicket and Aaron Cometbus’ essay about John Porcellino. You don’t have to read everything, you don’t even have to read it in any order, and it’s so diverse in tone and style you probably won’t love it all, but there’s so much great work inside that it won’t matter. Depending on how widely you read, it’s full of amazing comics by everyone you’ve heard of (if you already have great taste) or amazing comics from all of the indy creators you’re about to discover (GET YOUR HANDS ON A COPY NOW!). D&Q has introduced me to so many artists whose work I love: Doug Wright, Adriane Tomine, Michel Rabagliati, Lynda Barry, John Porcellino, Guy Delisle, Tove Jansson, Brecht Evens, Jillian Tamaki, and more. And there were a few folks I’d never heard of; how is it I’d never seen a comic by Diane Obomsawin (aka Obom)? I loved the deadpan Greek mythology by her so much (it starts with Zeus seducing Callisto) that I ordered everything by her that’s available.
And because I’ve heard that kettle bells are sold out all over the US, I want to point out that at 776 pages you can probably use this anthology as a weight for a variety of exercises.
Graphic Novel Review: Crows: Genius Birds (Science Comics) by Kyla Vandreklugt
Crows: Genius Birds (Science Comics) by Kyla Vandreklugt. First Second, 2020. 9781626728028. 122pp. including a glossary, a short comic on living with crows, and a list of books and articles on crows.
This graphic novel in First Second’s Science Comics series grabbed my interest from the beginning — six crows team up to get Buddy, a very happy and gullible dog, out of his yard, and then use tools to open his dog door to get access to his food. As Buddy and his American crow “friend” head out into the world together, the crow explains the family Corvidae and how relatively big and neuron-dense crows’ brains are. As they continue to explore, it explains the superiority of crows with both scientific and real-world examples. It’s nicely done and the illustrations (which include some cartoonish medical diagrams and the like) really seem to be part of the conversation.
I have to admit that part of the reason I loved this book so much is personal. Every year, the crows in my neighborhood dive-bomb my wife but not me. (Years ago and miles away, this problem started when she got too close to a fledgling crow in our yard. I already knew that crows can remember individuals and communicate with one another about them, but that’s covered nicely in this book, too.) Plus this is a great readalike for Kira Jane Buxton’s Hollow Kingdom, a funny, apocalyptic novel set partially in my neighborhood in Seattle, narrated by a very smart-assed crow who is trying to save a very dumb dog from being eaten.