November

Matt Fraction

Book - 2019

"November follows the lives of three women intersecting in a dark criminal underground. As fire and violence tears through their city on a single day and night, they discover their lives are bound together by a mysterious man that seems to be the cause of it all."--Provided by publisher.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Comics Show me where

COMIC/November v
vol. 1: 1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics COMIC/November v. 1 Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
Detective and mystery comics
Noir comics
Published
Portland, OR : Image Comics [2019]-
Language
English
Main Author
Matt Fraction (author)
Other Authors
Elsa Charretier (artist), Matt Hollingsworth (colourist), Kurt Ankeny (letterer)
Item Description
Cover title.
"November created by Matt Fraction and Elsa Charretier."
Physical Description
volumes : color illustrations ; 27 cm
Audience
Rated M for Mature.
ISBN
9781534313545
9781534313699
  • v. 1. The girl on the roof
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The first of a planned trilogy of graphic novellas scripted by Fraction (the Sex Criminals series), this cryptic postmodern mystery introduces a linked series of narrative puzzles. Dee, a hard-drinking reprobate, is hired by the mysterious Mister Mann to crack a daily code in the newspaper and report her solution over a pirate radio frequency. The work is easy if unsettling; but the money somehow never manages to improve Dee's lot in life. "Everybody's got a cage. Everybody's trapped in something," Dee reasons. But when she misses a day, it somehow rips the already seamy fabric of her urban society. Elsewhere in the city a woman finds a gun in a puddle and a police dispatcher overhears sinister voices. If the story doesn't yet make much sense, the art by Charretier (the Infinite Loop series) captures attention, with the characters and their dark, rain-spattered world rendered in chunky lines, bold shapes, and a moodily limited color palette. The art and absurdist logic-puzzle plot recall classic indie noir comics from the 1980s and '90s, such as Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli's adaptation of Paul Auster's City of Glass. Readers will have to wait on future volumes to discover if the tangle of codes, clues, urban legends, and sinister cops will resolve itself into a satisfying piece of metafiction, but this proves an intriguing opener. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved