Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Set to Sea by Drew Weing


Set to Sea


Drew Weing - author. Set to sea. Seattle, Washington: Fantagraphics, 2010. ISBN: 978-1-60699-368-2
Author website: http://www.drewweing.com/
Media: pen and ink
Genre: graphic novel, adventure, comic

Annotation: A portly potbellied landlubbing poet, who finds himself in a slump while writing about life at sea, gets shanghaied aboard a ship and gets an inside view on the trials and tribulations of sailor life.

My thoughts:
This is Drew Weing’s debut 2010 graphic novel, though the crosshatched full-page black and white panels could have been published in bygone eras. Sailors, pirates, and the high seas set this comic adventure book. The style and characters are very reminiscent of the classic Popeye comic strip. Only these characters definitely cast in Popeye-like story. These are characters that do not get lots of spinach. They don’t swim with mermaids (unless tossed to sea by pirates). And, these sailors don’t have time to tan on their backs. (Popeye song) These sailors toast “long hours, short rations, and not even a stone to mark your grave!” Though the giant hero is able to steal away brief moments for his poetry and is able to find wordlessly communicate the solace he finds as the sunrises in the artic.

There is very little dialogue throughout the book. So, the images provide the narrative. And, they do so very effectively. The transition of our fat hero poet starts from when he is depicted more as a vagrant poet wandering local pubs (and getting the boot) to an honorable sailor who protects his mates and publishes legitimate stories about life at sea. In the end, the patched up barely held together coat is replaced and his is adorned in the garb of a fine gentlemen. He even has a nice eye patch to cover his eyeball-less eye that was shot out by a pirate. He can sit in the “Angry Kitten” (the same bar where he was given the boot) write leisurely while snoozing and is waited upon by said owner/ boot possessor.

It’s nice to see a protagonist grow not only materially but also in maturity. This is also depicted through the tribulations at sea when the whalelike character befriends his fellow crewmen, fights pirates, muscles the steer during a storm, has a moby dick moment, gives his mates advice, works the directional cross, saves a mate during a storm, etc. He no longer sulks around making up stories. He lived it.

The visual storytelling really stands out for me. This is not the common current style. It is unique. Every page holds a carefully crafted illustration that probably can be discussed in terms of historical cartoon/ illustration devices.


Literary devices:
Use of onomatopoeia: tok, whuf, oooaaa,urk,whok, krak, urrgh, zzz

Use of rhyme:
“If I even survive the trip
I set to sea on a clipper ship
But work and woe is what I found
A thousand leagues till I touch ground
I survive this –something- trip / endless? trackless?”

“All hands on deck’ and ‘mainsail-haul’
The timbers groan, the sailors curse
The only fate that would be worse…”

Reading level/ Interest Age
Grades 8-12 (Warning: The poet graphically gets his eye shot out and encounters with pirates include violence, retaliation, and lots of black and white blood. This makes the recommended age group understandable.)

Reviews and Awards
Booklist starred review

“With hints of The Odyssey, Moby Dick, Popeye and Treasure Island, Weing has created a modern classic in the pirate genre.” (School Library Journal )

“Set to Sea's one-panel-per-page layout lets Weing's visual storytelling shine, but only if you resist the urge to tear through the pages quickly. Go too fast, and you'll miss the touching, wordless way Weing communicates the death of a supporting character. Or, worse, you'll skim over a gorgeous arctic sunset clearly inspired by the Gustave Dore engravings for Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” Glen Weldon, NPR

Thursday, June 28, 2012

½ 王子 Èrfēnzhīyī Wángzǐ (½ Prince) by Yu Wo

1/2 Prince Volume 1

Yu Wo - author. ½ 王子 Èrfēnzhīyī Wángzǐ (½ Prince). (2004) Choi Hong Chong - illustrator. Tong Li Publishing, Taiwan. ISBN: 97889867391209.
Author website: http://www.wretch.cc/blog/kim1984429
Ilustrator website:
Media: pen and ink
Genre: manga, fiction, fantasy, comics

Annotation
It’s 2100A.D. in this futuristic manga about a virtual reality game called "Second Life"* where the 19-year-old protagonist, Feng Lan, is challenged by her twin to play in a life changing game. *This is a different Second Life.

Summary
It’s a boring summer break for Feng Lan until her twin brother comes home with the newest virtual reality game “Second Life.” This virtual reality game is really real. “The realism level is 99%. Even the slightest wind, the buzz of insects, and the chirping of birds seem life-like.” Feng Lan is challenged by her brother to play against him in “Second Life” and taunts her by saying that “girls are afraid of pain” and “being a girl would be so easy. You don’t have to fight, since someone will always volunteer to fight for you.” This incites her to play. While her brother is using the bathroom, she puts on the dream gaming device and starts to play.

Feng Lan is surprised, however, to discover that she is first online and that she can be granted one wish. Determined to prove to herself and her brother that her abilities are independent of her gender/sex and that she can win without gender benefits, she requests to play as a male avatar. Feng Lan is granted her request and plays as a handsome elfin named “Prince.” The adventures start here. From this point on, Prince gatherers other characters to form the “Odd Squad.” One companion is a meat bun.

Later in the series, the Odd Squad fights against opponents to win a large city named Infinity City and Prince gatherers players to fight against the threat of the Lord of Life.

My thoughts
This is the first manga/manhua series that I have ever read. I did not know what to expect. This particular one is amusing and interesting. Fantasy has always appealed to me and this has lots of that in addition to some plot twists and humor. 

(Half Prince can be read online through: http://www.mangareader.net/278/12-prince.html)

Curricular connections
This book could be used outside of class for teens interested in gender and identity construction. 

Reading level/ Interest Age
Grade 9 and up

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Rapunzel's Revenge by Shannon and Dean Hale

Rapunzel's Revenge (Rapunzel's Revenge, #1)


Hale, Shannon and Dean. Illustrated by Nathan Hale. Rapunzel’s Revenge. New York: NY Bloomsbury. ISBN 1-59990-070-X

Annotation
A graphic novel based on the classic fairy tale but with some twists. This adventurous version is set in the Old West and Rapunzel uses her hair as a lasso and finds a unique posse for this adventurous book.

My thoughts
In the beginning of this graphic novel, Rapunzel escapes from her tower and the adventure begins. She then takes on a sidekick outlaw named Jack, and fights her way back home to face Mother Gothel and frees the oppressed people under Gothel’s rule all while using her hair as a lasso in an Old West setting. Importantly, Rapunzel is a strong female who can take care of herself without having to be saved by her Prince Charming. Personally, I love stories set in the Old West and I like fairytales and adventure stories. This story combined the three genres to produce an entertaining graphic novel with a strong female protagonist (another plus), so I would recommend this book. This modern twist on the fairytale is suitable for older readers such as teenagers. Boys will enjoy reading about the outlaw Jack, and girls will enjoy reading about Rapunzel. It is a good book for both boys and girls.

Reading level/ Interest Age
Age 10 and up.

Reviews and Awards
ALA 2009 Notable Children's Book
YALSA 2009 Great Graphic Novel for Teens
Nominee for the Texas Lone Star reading list
Texas Maverick Graphic Novel
Starred reviews in Horn Book, Library Media Connection, School Library Journal, and Publisher’s Weekly
Positive Reviews in Booklist and Wilson’s Children’s and Junior High School

Illustrator website: http://www.shannonassociates.com/artist/nathanhale
Media: Pen and ink and gouache
Genre: Graphic novel