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Jamilti and Other Stories
Jamilti and Other Stories
Apr 4, 2025 5:03 AM

Author:Rutu Modan

Jamilti and Other Stories

Rutu Modan's Exit Wounds was chosen by The Times as one of the three best graphic novels of 2007. It won the 2008 Eisner Award for the Best New Graphic Novel and was nominated for the Angoulême Best Comic Book Prize.

Jamilti and Other Stories collects Modan's early short works: stories that range from darkly fantastical and unsettling to surprising discoveries that shape personal identity. And, as in Exit Wounds, she addresses political violence affecting everyday lives.

Reviews

It’s part satire, part parable, part nursery rhyme and part disaster movie, and it’s an utter joy to read.

—— Tom Gatti , The Times

Clever, funny and beautiful to look at… A fairytale for adults that children will also adore, The Gigantic Beard That Was Evil is surely destined to become a classic.

—— Rachel Cooke , Observer

As splendiferous as its title… An inspired swirling of the mundane with the surreal, the plot may be simple but his satire on modern life is witty and thoughtful.

—— Larushka Ivan-Zadeh , Metro

Collins’ wonderful debut unfolds with slow and simple elegance through black-and-white panels.

—— James Smart , Guardian

It reminds me of nothing so much as a Roald Dahl novel.

—— Alex Hern , New Statesman

Charming.

—— Mail on Sunday

Happily as splendiferous as its title.

—— Siobhan Murphy , Metro Herald

A gorgeously penciled fable… The pacing and page design are immaculate.

—— Teddy Jamieson , Sunday Herald

There’s a touch of Roald Dahl to this dark, beautifully drawn and wonderfully surrealist tale.

—— Monocle

A witty and surreal response to conformity, and how we should embrace our difference. Accompanied by incredible pencil drawings, you will be blown away by the quality, and be humbled by the underlying message.

—— ItsNiceThat

My pick of next season’s graphic novels.

—— The Bookseller

A rich allegorical work with a certain Kafkaesque quality, with the story told in a rolling, rhyming blank verse.

—— Comic Book Resources

This incredible fable is rich with subtext and allegory… It is a singularly spectacular graphic novel… Timeless, uniquely insightful into the human condition, witty and poignant.

—— PM Buchan , Starburst

With The Gigantic Beard that was Evil, Stephen Collins has produced a book too profound to be serious, too good for the patronizing pat of mainstream media...In The Beard That Was Evil, Collins has created a total work of art which elevates itself beyond comparison.

—— Nick Hayes , Literary Review

Collins’s [book] is a love song – or is it? – to facial hair and all who get tangled up in it.

—— Rachel Cooke , Observer

A book to make you sing with the genius of it... A book of revolution, and a beautiful story told with imagination, grace and a lot of pencil lines. And you feel the hard effort on every page. Those individual hairs don’t draw themselves.

—— Rich Johnston and Hannah Means-Shannon , Bleeding Cool

In exquisite pencil drawings, Stephen Collins pursues Dave’s absurd quandary through its logical stages, from infamy to celebrity, from vast scaffolding to hot-air balloons. It’s a timely fable about any government’s attempt to impose conformity on the “becauselessness” of humanity.

—— Paul Gravett , Independent
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