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Justin du Coeur

jducoeur@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 month ago

Lifelong comics and graphic novel omnivore; into Programming (particularly Scala), SCA, SF/Fantasy fandom, Historical Dance and Games, etc. On Mastodon as @jducoeur@social.coop.

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Justin du Coeur's books

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The Deep Dark (Paperback, Scholastic Graphix) 4 stars

Everyone has secrets. Mags’s has teeth.

Magdalena Herrera is about to graduate high school, but …

A quiet, excellent queer meditation on the burdens we carry

4 stars

Mags is just about grown up, but her life revolves around home by necessity. Part of that is because she needs to care for the aged abuela, but just as much is because of the thing in the basement, that she needs to feed every day. She is stoic about it, never complaining about a weight that would break most adults twice her age.

This all begins to get upended when her childhood best friend, long moved away, comes back home -- now transitioned, with the new name of Nessa. Nessa is more lively, and wants Mags to live more herself. But as far as she knows, the thing in the basement was just a childhood fantasy that they made up when they were kids.

This isn't a big loud fantasy book: aside from its one fantastical element, it is very much grounded in the here and now of small-town …

Amazing Grapes (GraphicNovel, HarperCollins) 3 stars

A reminder of old classics

3 stars

Amazing Grapes, a new graphic novel from Jules Feiffer, is remarkably reminiscent of the legendary Phantom Tollbooth (for which he did the art).

This surreal story centers on kids Shirley, Pearlie and Curly, as well as Mommy, starting on the day when Pearlie and Curly are swept away on a two-headed swan to explore other dimensions (most of them not terribly nice). Along the way, they befriend guide dog (cat?) Kelly and the monstrous and frequently-dead Lord Muckety Muck, along with a host of nasties from worlds like Feartopia, before being followed years later by Mommy, Shirley, and Shirley's fiancee who is sometimes named Earl.

Is it as good as Phantom Tollbooth? No -- in particular, the story wanders a lot more, and isn't nearly as cohesive. But it's a neat little romp, and worth the read.