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THE LAST MERMAID by Derek Kirk Kim comics review (#1-5)

Volume 1 collects Issues 1-6.

Here is a comic book that is a treat to introduce to new readers, share with fans, and genuinely marvel over its beauty. There is nothing calculated about it. What I get from this comic is a feeling that Derek Kirk Kim is simply compelled to share his vision and it’s that feeling that drives this quirky cosmic sci-fi adventure. We’ll take a look here at the first five issues of this series which is slated to run for about 30 issues total. Take note that the first collected trade (#1-6) will be out this October.

I recall Derek from back in the day, ten or more years ago, when he did autobio comics, notably Same Difference, published by First Second. And so it was great to see this amazing new project. I appreciate that Derek became successful in animation and that this process has influenced his new comics: lush approach; 16:9 storyboard panels. Having read the first five issues, I totally get the general response from readers about it being very immersive. And then there’s the whimsical touches, especially Lottie, a cute little salamander sidekick. On top of that, many more layers. This is a post-apocalyptic story. There’s a number of influences in anime and manga. And it’s a story that begins with touches of levity but promises to get more gritty, maybe a little grim. So much to unpack and yet the end result is a very smooth entertaining ride.

How about that silver trident?

The big takeaway is that this comic is really for everyone, although it will get darker as it progresses so that will lean it more firmly into teen and up. It’s a comic for new readers, non-readers and all of us who sometimes think we’ve seen it all. The mysterious mermaid is definitely a big draw. It’s five issues in and we still don’t know her name. We do know that she wears this enormous body of armor to get around, more like a rover with arms and legs. It’s called a hybrid aquatic vehicular chamber. She’s always on the run, looking for fresh water in a world with very little of it, and she’s on a quest. For someone who is short on words, she delivers what has got to be the best line in comics this year: “Have you ever come across a giant silver trident impaling the sun?” Now, that’s a question to keep you up at night.

Issue 6 wraps up the first story arc and comes out August 28th. Visit Image Comics.

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PeePee PooPoo #1 comics review

PeePee PooPoo #1. Caroline Cash. Silver Sprocket. 36 pp. $9.99.

Caroline Cash is back! Her fourth comic book has just released and it looks terrific. The PeePee PooPoo series recently won the Eisner Award for Best Limited Series, has won the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Minicomic in 2023, and the Broken Frontier Award for Best Periodical. Of great interest to comic strip fans, Cash took over the Nancy comic strip during Olivia Jaimes’s hiatus. Cash started PeePee PooPoo with issue #69, then #420, and followed by #80085. And now we have #1, a “first issue,” an opportunity to re-introduce herself to new readers.

I am ramping up my own new comic book series, Pop Culture Super-Sleuth, and I can tell you from that experience that it’s a ton of work, a labor of love but work all the same. A key thing I want to make note of is that Cash is a very well organized phenomena: just like a political campaign, Cash has a well-oiled machine, thanks to Silver Sprocket, keeping things flowing with production as well as promotion. Pee Pee Poo Poo is a comic book series with the ambition of placing itself among the best ground-breaking indie comics. Well, the stars have indeed aligned as each new issue has been celebrated within social media and grass roots word-of-mouth. Momentum has built over a period of time. The style, content and approach all add up. Unabashed autobio comics are a staple of indie comics and go through up and down cycles, but, when done with gusto, like Cash’s work, they can be a hit. If done right, they can even be considered a voice of a generation. Once the momentum is in place, the machine is running at full steam.

What do I like about this new issue? Well, what I’ve loved all along. Cash is showing us once again that she is in it for the long haul. She’s a born storyteller spinning yarns with a seemingly effortless abandon about travel, relationships, sexuality and just being a human being. It doesn’t matter, in the big picture, really, if you’re gay, bi, or whatever. What really matters is that you have something to say and you express it, which is what Cash does so well. This issue is playfully numbered as #1 but that’s significant. I think it’s safe to say that this is a nice pause, a chance to say hello again, while at the same time continuing to celebrate her wonderfully uninhibited comics. There will be nods to the giants from time to time. Yes, Cash is walking down the same path of such greats as R. Crumb, Julie Doucet and Daniel Clowes and she can rest assured that she is leaving behind her own distinctive footprints. I love the scene, by the way, in one of her comics where she’s walking barefoot through TSA. I’ve done that and, well, it’s definitely a unique experience.

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Amber Atoms by Kelly Yates comics review

Amber Atoms. (c,w,a) Kelly Yates. Vol. 1. 2023.

Amber Atoms is a refreshing take on an ole Sci-Fi tradition. I love the character’s overall style, in the same way that I love, say, Liberty Meadows or Power Girl or any number of “Girl Power” characters. Kelly Yates, the creator, writer and artist of this comic book, is best known for illustrating multiple comics and covers for Doctor Who (IDW/Titan). I really like the look and feel of what Yates is doing with his foray into what can be very familiar territory (from Buck Rogers to Star Wars). Another way of looking at it, no kid ever lost sleep considering the finer details of an Indiana Jones adventure. It’s Jones who is the big draw.

Okay, so you had me at Amber Atoms. She has moxie. Like a young Luke Skywalker, Amber Atoms is stuck in a rut, arguing with her parents, restless to cut loose, in a world she never asked for. It’s a multi-world, in fact, a sort of unstable coalition, a federation on the brink. Anything could set it off and Amber knows it.

Shades of Luke Skywalker. Girls just wanna have fun!

After a human-sized ant baddie is thwarted from attacking Amber, it looks like her protector, Ace Armstrong, might just stick around. A lot is happening very fast. But we get a pause to consider if they’re a match. The alliteration alone is priceless. Amber Atoms, all-around cute daredevil, and Ace Armstrong, super detective for the mighty Galactic Guard. And then they run off and hop aboard this dazzling retro-futuristic ship. Blast off! So, yeah, it’s a bit tongue-in-cheek stuff without ever outright admitting to it, sort of like what Star Wars is all about, right?

You had me at Amber Atoms.

Everything turns on the theft of a museum artifact with a secret message. Now, it’s up to Ace and Amber to navigate all the machinations of a fractured empire. As for me, I just go right back to Amber Atoms. You had me at Amber Atoms. I think Kelly Yates is on the right track. This is a collection of an earlier run and it really seems to me that the timing is just right to take stock and see where Amber goes next. She really could go anywhere she pleases.

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SELF HELP #1 comics review

Self Help #1 w. Owen King & Jesse Kellerman. a. Marianna Ignazzi. Image Comics – Syzygy Publishing. Pub date: June 19, 2024. $3.99.

During a recent conversation, the topic of what comics are most interesting came up. I usually begin by saying I love offbeat material and I go from there, often looking for a current example. Well, this is it. This comic has that X-factor I find most satisfying, something I find in the best stuff that Image Comics has to offer. So, in this case, we have a classic doppelganger story, straight out of a classic Twilight Zone episode and yet with a distinctive vibe all its own carried forward by a perfect mix (in script and art) of the new and the retro. And that’s significant since it’s not just a pale imitation but firmly part of a dark fantasy tradition.

If a first issue has only one purpose, it is to hook the reader in a big way. That happens here, with that special brand of uncanny contemporary flavor in Image Comics. This comic feels like it’s now and the characters are simple and accessible examples of our current situation: a nice big and scary California noir tale. You have Jerry Hauser, a driver for a ride-share company. You have Darren Hart, an A-list life coach, the kind who can fill up arenas with fawning followers. One guy a loser. One guy a winner. And they both look exactly alike, and then they have a fateful meeting. With this crisp premise, the rest of the story takes on a life of its own and it looks like this one will keep that promise.

The look and feel of this comic, thanks to artist Marianna Ignazzi, coupled with the intelligent script by Owen King and Jesse Kellerman, all adds up best-of-year material. Take note that this comic is part of the new Image Comics imprint, Syzygy Publishing, with an impressive lineup all its own. That may help provide that last nudge to seek this title out. Also, by all means, keep in mind the all-star talent behind this work: two heavyweight writers and one killer artist. Yes, this one is a winner with a full tank.

Rating: 10 out of 10

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The Death of Comics Bookcase, Vol. 1 review

The Death of Comics Bookcase, Vol 1. w. Zack Quaintance. Art by Nick Cagnetti, PJ Holden, Luke Horsman, Ryan Lee, Anna Readman, & Pat Skott. 48 pp. Funded via Kickstarter. Original Comics Bookcase.

A comics bookcase host.

A werewolf. A teen-aged superhero. Dueling wizards. An old man. Super-powered gorillas and sharks. These are characters with nothing in common in the real world. However, in Zack Quaintance’s imagination, they come to life and share their fears and misgivings about their own realities. There’s even a talking bookcase going through its own existential crisis, something of an alter ego for the author. This comics bookcase acts as a Rod Serling-like host both introducing each story in this comics anthology while also confronting its own peculiar mortality. You see, the possessed bookcase plays many roles, including that of a former comics blog. In fact, the author was once the host of his own comics blog, Comics Bookcase. If that sounds weird and intriguing, then you’re in luck, since there’s more I can tell with you.

Life is made up of much that is ineffable: the stuff that is beyond our meager grasp and simple discernment, be it grand or mundane, to fully understand and articulate our own existence. We miss a lot. We take in what we can. One thing we humans do well, it seems, is to come up with ways to pass the time, like the creation of comic books. It is with this lofty preamble, that I offer to you the comics world of Zack Quaintance. This writer has been up to quite a bit in the last few years, all in the service of storytelling, leading up to his comics anthology, The Death of Comics Bookcase. This 48-page comic (with a deluxe version well worth seeking out too) is the first volume in a proposed series. This comic book is loosely based upon Zack’s Comics Bookcase blog (2018-2022), its demise and the stories it has inspired.

That’s one freaky werewolf!

What happens within the pages of this comic book is something of a love letter to comic books as well as an impressive showcase of comics talent. Yes, we have stories, much in the spirit of some of the most celebrated anthology formats, from The Twilight Zone to Tales from the Crypt. The idea here is what it’s always been: to provide some thrills and chills along with offbeat humor. What really stands out for me is the variety of stories, mixing different genres and viewpoints, all held together by a certain dark fantasy sensibility. Some might call it, “a touch of strange,” because that’s really what’s going on here. It’s a particular strain of spinning yarns that has been brewing for at least a couple of hundred years, reaching new heights with the advent of pulp fiction and fully blossoming into what we have come to know and love as modern horror or dark fantasy.

Art by Nick Cagnetti.

Let’s dive deep into this comic book and consider one of its stories, “Responsibili-Teen.” This is a homage to Steve Ditko and proposes not only an off-kilter Ditkoesque comic book superhero for the age of social media but a clever analysis of where we seem to be heading with ever-expanding Big Tech, particularly, AI. Because, well, AI seems to be both the great boon and the great threat to humanity that we can’t seem to get enough of talking about on . . . er, social media.

The new-and-improved does battle with the ineffable.

In this story we meet a character as familiar as our own childhood and as up-to-date as our latest post. Meet Maxwell, a dorky high schooler, with no parents, being raised by his Aunt Jen and Aunt June. This would-be Spider-Man is even more repressed than the original. No radioactive spiders for this guy. Instead, Maxwell stumbles into the high school computer lab and confronts Tacky, an experimental AI word processor who promptly bites him and sets him on his pre-programmed new life. This is all, of course, hilarious. Nick Cagnetti’s artwork not only leans into the humor but taps into the spooky quality as well since nothing is quite right in this story. That touch of strange is milked for all it’s worth.

Art by Nick Cagnetti.

Nothing is as it should be, as if reality as been processed and regurgitated. Nothing makes sense, as if all real meaning has been drained out and simply repackaged as new. The big clue is at the start when Maxwell must contend with his new marching orders in life: “With great responsibility comes great power.” This inversion of an all-time classic superhero call to action is what Maxwell must work with, turn into something new, until he begins to question everything: himself, his purpose, his whole reality. And it all began with Tacky taking a bite out of him. Wow. This is a great mix of offbeat humor and social commentary that ultimately just goes to show that we humans, believe it or not, can do reality better than any machine. As Quaintance so eloquently states, there is no “new” AI content that can match the authentic and ineffable human hand.

Art by Nick Cagnetti.

Zack Quaintance aspires to join the ranks of the great writers of the spooky and the macabre and he has plenty to show for his ambition in the pages of this comic book. We both have a keen interest in writing which has carried over to writing about comics and actual comics writing. We’ve gotten a chance to chat and to exchange each other’s work and, in a natural fashion, we’ve connected some dots. I believe in serendipity. Zack has followed his intuition and ended up writing a terrific review of my graphic novel, George’s Run, which is greatly invested in exploring the elusive and mysterious storytelling process. And I, in turn, after reading his Death of Comics Bookcase, can’t help but be equally inspired. Whether Zach is pursuing a crime procedural involving werewolves or a mystical and whimsical homage to the great comics of yesteryear, he is consistently expressing spirited creative energy.

As I go back and re-read passages from the advance review PDF, I find myself briskly scrolling back and forth and marveling over the art, color and overall design. If you enjoy behind-the-scenes stuff, I highly recommend the deluxe version which provides a generous sampling of pages from the script along with a break down on the comics process. The first set focuses on a page from “The Werewolf Priest.” The clear and thoughtful notes evoke a cluttered, stifling and antiquated newsroom, a most unlikely place to prepare to do battle with a supernatural beast. The script notes are written out in such a way that it makes clear why the resulting work came out as well, and as spooky, as it ultimately did.

This is an impressive anthology with a team of first-rate creatives. No doubt, this was a colossal undertaking: a full-on mainstream comic book production with separate artists, colorists, and letterers. Just a quick shout out to the key artists: Ryan Lee. Anna Readman. Nick Cagnetti. Luke Horsman. Pat Skott. PJ Holden. In fact, each story here is like a whole universe to itself while adding up to a tidy and seamless whole. All in all, I think that this anthology has set the bar high with a confident promise of more fun and weird comics to come. And, with all this said, it’s important to emphasize that this is basically an advance review and the comic book is still in the process of becoming available to the public. Stay tuned via the Kickstarter campaign and the original Comics Bookcase blog which this comic pays tribute to. This comic book is what the ideal comics experience is all about: weird and intriguing and always, always, about that ineffable human spirit! Thank goodness we have comics and this particular comic book is a prime example of comics at its best.

Death of Comics Bookcase, Vol. 1 Deluxe Edition.

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POWER KNIGHTS: BLADES OF LIBERTY #1 comics review

POWER KNIGHTS: BLADES OF LIBERTY #1. KID Comics. 2022. (Writer/Creator) Keithan Jones, (W) Noble Ward (Color) Salif Thompson. 28pp. $8 USD (Includes 11×17 Poster).

Imagine a precocious 10-year-old who pulls a Jack Kirby move and creates his own world of superheroes. And then life happens, time passes, and that kid is now an adult who has held onto that dream. That’s what this comic book is all about. In fact, Keithan Jones decided to carve out a little space for himself in the comics world and launch KID Comics, a place for comics packed with youthful energy and harkening back to the golden age spirit of comics meant for kids to enjoy.

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CRASHDOWN (#1-2) comics review

Otherworldly indeed!

CRASHDOWN. Massive. 2024. (W) Tom Garcia, Ryan Sargeant (A/CA) Ben Templesmith. $3.99 USD.

This comic book owes much to the great Ben Templesmith, the series artist and cover artist, known for his work with IDW, Image, Oni Press, Dark Horse, and, well, I could go on: Star Wars, Doctor Who, GI Joe, Army of Darkness, Silent Hill, Buffy: The Vampire Slayer and much more (30 Days of Night!), so I’ve made my point. Then you add the writing from a couple of comic book experts, Tom Garcia and Ryan Sargeant, the hosts of the Comic Tom 101 YouTube Channel (over 12 million views) and, having checked out their show from time to time, that got my curiosity. The promotional material promises an apocalyptic tale with a healthy dose of Lovecraft and the right touches of Lost and Alien. I’m going all in here with a look at the first couple of issues to a mini-series that only goes up to four issues.

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Eventually Everything Connects by Sarah Firth book review

Eventually Everything Connects: Eight Essays on Uncertainty. Sarah Firth. Allen & Unwin, 2023. 288pp. AUD $34.99 (Graphic Mundi, June 2024 U.S. release.)

Imagine someone in the most uninhibited, vivid and precise way sharing with you what is going on in their mind. We are all capable of such things, given enough trust, and we welcome such primal and articulate sharing. Well, that is what you get in this highly engaging tour de force, a book about everything by an artist at the top of her field. Sarah Firth is an accomplished artist who is known for her work as a graphic recorder. That’s someone who is hired to do a live drawing of any given event or meeting and dissect what is going on, bringing out the essence of ideas and strategies discussed, which results in an info-graphic type of mural. Firth has taken this skill and elevated it to an extended narrative in her new book where she walks and talks the reader through not only her life but what it means to be alive in the first place. Quite an ambitious task that totally delivers on its promise.

Firth’s book was originally published by Allen & Unwin, under the Joan imprint, in Australia and will be published by Graphic Mundi in June of this year in the United States. It’s wonderful to see that Graphic Mundi picked it up in the States as it’s an imprint of Penn State University with a growing reputation for books on health and well being. The book is a collection of eight observational visual essays, each piece is an extended narrative in comics format. In this way, Firth organizes her lines of thoughts by separately covering topics in manageable chunks: the joy of life; sexuality in general; what gets our attention; what makes up a person; and so on. I think each segment is a gem to itself and it all adds up to a satisfying whole that invites rereading.

First and foremost, this book is for everyone and all ages, starting around age 14 but your mileage may vary. While it is not the primary subject, there is nudity and honest discussion of sex, which is in a tasteful and educational manner. On the whole, this book will be of prime interest to young adults, college students and discerning adult readers. Alright, with that said, Firth does a great job with sustaining the concept of the author engaged in a personal essay with the reader. Firth, at times, is literally a symbolic stock character, naked with nothing to hide. She could be you or me. I think it’s a healthy way to address oneself and your audience. In fact, when it makes sense for me, I am happy to include myself naked in my own work. In the end, it’s really the only way to get to the root of the matter: we are all beings, sharing so much in common.

Firth, by profession as a graphic recorder and by nature as an inquisitive person, is a consummate explainer. She knows how to explain. She loves to explain. She will explain anything to you. It is that kind of energy and passion that is like rocket fuel for this marvelous book. I will say that this is just the sort of book that many creatives imagine themselves doing but maybe are daunted as to where to begin. Well, it takes persistence and it definitely takes planning. A careful reading will show you that this is a work built upon a steady amassing of elements.

Take, for instance, the metaphor of the moth that visits Firth at the beginning of her journey and comes back to recap and reconcile at the end. You can imagine that little moth, can’t you? In Australia, it’s the bogongs that are the prominent breed. In fact, the First Nations people of Australia perfected the preparation of this moth as a delicacy. Firth masterfully weaves these moths into her narrative as she does with various other compelling items, some familiar and some uncanny, the very stuff of life. At the end of the book, it is a massive hive of moths, trapped by their unrelenting attraction to bright lights, that provide the satisfying existential grace note.

One of the prime characteristics of an excellent graphic recording is managing to collect as many of the key kernels of wisdom that bubble up during an event. It’s not necessary to capture every insight but the ones that resonate the most in the moment. In the right hands, a capable and confident graphic recorder, the big picture emerges buoyed up by the sum of its parts. And so it is with this book, which is an ideal example of a graphic narrative that adds up to a treasure trove of ideas and thoughts. With just the right sense of storytelling, Sarah Firth assembles and reassembles. Whether it’s a moth, a slug, the perfect quote or a case made for the best way to carve up an orange, eventually everything connects.

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1/6: The Graphic Novel (#1-2) comics review

1/6: The Graphic Novel. Script by Alan Jenkins, Gan Golan. Illustrated by William Rosado & others. One Six Comics. Issue 2 published January 3, 2024.

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SOPHIE’S WORLD: Volume II comics review

Sophie’s World: a Graphic Novel about the History of Philosophy, Volume II: From Descartes to the Present Day. SelfMadeHero, London, 2023. 260pp. $29.95. Scripted by Vincent Zabus, based on the novel by Jostein Gaarder, drawing by Nicoby, color by Philippe Ory, translation by Edward Gauvin.

Guest Review by Paul Buhle

The publishing of novels is, of course, centuries old, in thousands of languages, and even after the competition of radio, television and the Internet, a hugely successful commercial business. By notable contrast, the Graphic Novel owes its prominence to the 1990s, in the US at least, and despite the awards handed out by various institutions, perhaps it came too late to find a secure footing.

Hardly had the virtual ink dried on a distribution deal for Fantagraphics in the late 1990s, when video games had begun to eat at the lower-age edge. According to some close observers, the age average of the adult reader has meanwhile continued to rise, as gainfully employed adults, 30 or over, take to GNs as a newer version of the “art book” seen for generations on the coffee tables of sophisticates. Perhaps these two trends might balance out, or perhaps not. Parents and grandparents may need, in the years ahead, to force educational comics on their pre-adolescents, an experiment rarely altogether successful. Art Spiegelman insisted, long ago, that with the demise of the daily funny pages, comics as a form of expressive entertainment had lost its practical basis, and would be forced into the world of art and even the museum.

Still, the market for self-improvement or “encouraged self-improvement” is likely to be large for some time to come.  A French original translated into English for SelfMadeHero in the UK, Sophie’s World: A Graphic Novel about the History of Philosophy, saw its first volume covering the Ancient World to Descartes.  According to this volume’s final page,  the literary original was a world-wide best seller, prompting the Norwegian author, Josein Gaarder, to donate a large chunk of the royalties to sustainable environmental development. His heart is in the right place.

Scriptwriter Vincent Zabus, adapting a novel by Jostein Gaarder, is obviously adept and Nicoby, as the artist calls herself,  more than talented. And yet, color (in the volume, “Colours”) by Philppe Ory, may be the best feature or at least the most striking one, a splash of primaries with plenty of black. Harvey Kurtzman used to say that only the old German-American craftsmen could get color signature right, the coloring work itself done by top craftsmen (sometimes craftswomen) in the artists’ section of the comics trade.  Presumably, technology has made all this easier.

Our protagonist is an adolescent of perhaps fifteen, interacting with someone who could be her granddad. She is constantly in motion, climbing, jumping or running rings around him, while the two come across philosophers who say their own piece. After a while, actually on p.123, she realizes that she is herself a created character and her creator happens to be the father of her bestie or presumed bestie, the adolescent who happens to be  very “real.”

This volume takes up the story from the famous (was he typically French?) chap looking inward to his mental cogitations, up to the present. Decartes thus yields to Locke, Hume,  Spinoza and Hobbes, who should scare our teenager rather more than he does, and then onward to Rousseau, obviously a favorite of the author in his quest for freedom. Going onward to Voltaire, we even see the French Revolution (not its counterpart in Haiti: Black history is absent), then on to Romanticism and Appolinaire,  seemingly another French choice.

It’s a convention familiar to better comics going all the way back to Little Nemo that allows our fictive adolescent to jump through panels as she moves across history. Perhaps the test of this comic’s intellectual acuity happens when we meet Hegel,  who explains the dialectic without calling it dialectical. Instead, he points to a stream as the steam of historical change, with history itself “the slow awakening of thought.” (p.143).  Let us say that this touches the main point of dialectics but leaves a lot to be desired. Hegel himself described his predecessor, the mystic  Silesian cobbler Jakob Böhme, as the “complete German philosopher,” and others would say that Böhme, a child of the Radical Reformation (which also escapes mention), was also the godfather of German Romanticism. Perhaps too complicated a story to be told here. Never mind.

The stormier landscape of Kierkegaard offers a more dramatic informant (for all of three pages) and a real sense of the “subjective truth.” But with Marx comes the artist’s boldest and, if not perhaps the best, at least the most heartfelt effort. She goes “through the looking glass” like Alice, but actually plunges through a poster of Marx dawn roughly on a wall, following him as he describes structure and superstructure, the division of labor, class struggle and the estrangement of the proletariat from its own creation. Her mentor explains that the Russian version went “dreadfully astray” but that the prospects for a good use of Marxism remain—if they also remain vague. We grasp at some point the ecological catastrophe facing her own generation, but not the source in the crimes of capital, in all its varied forms.

This is, nevertheless, bold for a kid’s book or as bold as we can reasonably expect. Darwin, Freud and Sartre eventually yield to Simone De Beauvoir (the first woman in the list of giants), who has a lot to say. Compared to her, Camus is a cigarette-puffing introvert who thankfully does not offer his dim view of Algerians and their right for independence from the French empire.

Given the inevitable limits, Sophie’s World is engaging and useful, certainly a model of sorts for handling many large ideas in a fairly brief space.

Paul Buhle is an editor of more than twenty non-fiction, historical comics.

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