Author:Julian Hanshaw
The noodle soup called pho is the national dish of Vietnam. When Little Blue-- having been dropped by a mysterious man with a red car and being told to count to 500 -- finds himself in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's baffling, daunting capital, his salvation is his own mobile pho stand. Little Blue's relationship with the city and its food brings an understanding to what it means to never want to return home and the fact that everyone goes away in the end.
Beautifully drawn and coloured, and featuring many delicious recipes for pho, this is a startlingly original and immensely appealing graphic novel by a brilliant new talent.
Play the interactive motion comic at http://artofpho.submarinechannel.com/
Telling the story of Satrapi’s childhood in Iran, this is funny, wise and sad.
—— StylistPersepolis…has an outward simplicity that utterly beguiles: her black and white drawings resemble old-fashioned woodcuts; her narrative is almost breezily concise
—— Rachel Cooke , Royal Academy MagazineThis touching, funny, illuminating memoir deserves a much wider audience.
—— Kate Figes , GuardianThe magic of Marjane Satrapi's work is that it can condense a whole country's tragedy into one poignant, funny scene after another.
—— Natasha Walter , Independent on SundayPersepolis is a stylish, clever and moving weapon of mass destruction.
—— David Jenkins , Sunday TelegraphMarjane Satrapi's books are a revelation. They're funny, they're sad, they're hugely readable. Most importantly, they remind you that the media sometimes tell you the facts but rarely tell you the truth. In one afternoon Persepolis will teach you more about Iran, about being an outsider, about being human, than you could learn from a thousand hours of television documentaries and newspaper articles. And you will remember it for a very long time.
—— Mark HaddonI cannot praise enough Marjane Satrapi's moving account of growing up as a spirited young girl in revolutionary and war-time Iran. Persepolis is disarming and often humorous but ultimately it is shattering.
—— Joe SaccoAn adult and difficult story but [accompanied by]very simple black and white illustrations, comic book style, and it is exceptionally powerful... show the amazing power and depth that can come from a literary story shown through words and images
—— Ink PelletMoving, funny, and anarchic.
—— Catherine Taylor , iWith 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 ReviewCollins’s [book] is a love song – or is it? – to facial hair and all who get tangled up in it.
—— Rachel Cooke , ObserverA 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 CoolIn 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 , IndependentWith 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 ReviewCollins’s [book] is a love song – or is it? – to facial hair and all who get tangled up in it.
—— Rachel Cooke , ObserverA 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 CoolIn 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