Josephine gn

Author:   Kevin Sacco ,  Kevin Sacco
Publisher:   Slave Labor Books
ISBN:  

9781593622862


Pages:   132
Publication Date:   10 October 2017
Recommended Age:   From 13 to 16 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Josephine gn


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Overview

In his first work since The Plane Story, Kevin Sacco brings us a wordless Civil Rights-era tale of a young boy with a complicated family life who accompanies his family's domestic - Josephine - from his Upper West Side comforts to her neighborhood haunts in Harlem. This journey subtly imbues the boy with a world view as full of blacks, whites and grays as the story's art. At the heart of this narrative is the bond the boy shares with Josephine - until a sinister plot twist casts a dark shadow on their relationship. ""

Full Product Details

Author:   Kevin Sacco ,  Kevin Sacco
Publisher:   Slave Labor Books
Imprint:   Slave Labor Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.259kg
ISBN:  

9781593622862


ISBN 10:   1593622864
Pages:   132
Publication Date:   10 October 2017
Recommended Age:   From 13 to 16 years
Audience:   Young adult ,  Teenage / Young adult
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

If ever there was a time that needed a book like Josephine, that time is now. With this heartbreaking yet uplifting new saga, Kevin Sacco has outdone his previous superb graphic novel, The Plane Story. The level of observation and cultural detail in this book is staggering. In its specificity, Sacco's re-creation of a bygone (yet strangely contemporary and vitally pertinent) era yields an appeal that is utterly universal. If you are not deeply moved by the tenderness and humanity of this brilliantly told (autobiographical?) tale, I pity you, for you have a heart of the coldest stone. At last, a powerful adult graphic novel that is truly adult. Josephine gets my vote for Graphic Novel of the Year. --William Stout In Kevin Sacco's evocative book, a ramble through the 'new' Upper West Side, with its national chain stores and endless banks, dissolves into a protracted memory of an earlier era. Wordlessly, but with perfect clarity, the story takes the reader into Civil Rights-era New York, with all the racial complexity of the time. Sacco's protagonist, a 7-year-old boy, in the course of just a couple of days and against the backdrop of a complicated family, encounters bullies, pimps, veterans, children, and his family maid, and in the process, perhaps, develops a world view as full of blacks, whites, and greys as the story's art. ---Karen Green Curator of Comics and Cartoons, Columbia University Libraries.


If ever there was a time that needed a book like Josephine, that time is now. With this heartbreaking yet uplifting new saga, Kevin Sacco has outdone his previous superb graphic novel, The Plane Story. The level of observation and cultural detail in this book is staggering. In its specificity, Sacco's re-creation of a bygone (yet strangely contemporary and vitally pertinent) era yields an appeal that is utterly universal. If you are not deeply moved by the tenderness and humanity of this brilliantly told (autobiographical?) tale, I pity you, for you have a heart of the coldest stone. At last, a powerful adult graphic novel that is truly adult. Josephine gets my vote for Graphic Novel of the Year. --William Stout ""In Kevin Sacco's evocative book, a ramble through the 'new' Upper West Side, with its national chain stores and endless banks, dissolves into a protracted memory of an earlier era. Wordlessly, but with perfect clarity, the story takes the reader into Civil Rights-era New York, with all the racial complexity of the time. Sacco's protagonist, a 7-year-old boy, in the course of just a couple of days and against the backdrop of a complicated family, encounters bullies, pimps, veterans, children, and his family maid, and in the process, perhaps, develops a world view as full of blacks, whites, and greys as the story's art."" ---Karen Green Curator of Comics and Cartoons, Columbia University Libraries.


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