Articles

  • Jul 17, 2024 | razorcake.org | Nate Powell |Jessica Hopper

    Jul 17, 2024The Bangles first entered my life in junior high school, when the music video for their chart-topping single “Walk like an Egyptian” played incessantly on MTV and thoroughly captivated the girls in my class at a suburban Catholic school. Maybe because it was a successful rock band of four women who in the video played their instruments with a cool ferocity and looked glam while doing so.

  • Apr 15, 2024 | publishersweekly.com | Solomon Brager |Anna Härmälä |James Loewen |Nate Powell

    Chad Bilyeu. Scratch, $29.95 (176p) ISBN 978-94-93166-80-6Bilyeu’s eclectic debut graphic memoir proves full of thoughtful and introspective vignettes. Raised in Cleveland, Bilyeu came to Amsterdam in 2009 for the weed but stayed for the city’s “palpable” history. He touches on many subjects in Harvey Pekar–inspired asides, each of which is given its own look by a different artist.

  • Apr 15, 2024 | publishersweekly.com | Solomon Brager |Anna Härmälä |James Loewen |Nate Powell

    Boum, trans. from the French by Robin Lang and Helge Dascher. Pow Pow, $22.95 trade paper (228p) ISBN 978-2-925114-30-7“Miss, you have a jellyfish in your eye,” an optometrist tells 20-something Odette in the opening pages of this quietly courageous slice-of-life graphic novella from Boumeries cartoonist Boum.

  • Apr 15, 2024 | publishersweekly.com | Solomon Brager |Anna Härmälä |James Loewen |Nate Powell

    Atsushi Kaneko, trans. from the Japanese by Ben Applegate. Fantagraphics, $14.99 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-1-68396-932-7Kaneko (Bambi and Her Pink Gun) outdoes himself with this gonzo sci-fi reimagining of Osamu Tezuka’s classic manga series Dororo. In Kaneko’s hands, the feudal Japanese setting of Tezuka’s original becomes a futuristic dystopia with a Soviet brutalist aesthetic.

  • Apr 15, 2024 | publishersweekly.com | Solomon Brager |Anna Härmälä |James Loewen |Nate Powell

    Siobhán Gallagher. Andrews McMeel, $19.99 trade paper (336p) ISBN 978-1-5248-6768-3Part graphic memoir, part self-help manual, Gallagher’s accessible debut draws on examples from her own life to explore how women are taught to see themselves. “To be a girl is to go from being an observer to being observed,” she writes, recalling the negative body image she developed at a young age (“If I were a Pokémon, I bet I’d be one of the ugly ones...

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →