Consider this serenely odd book a palate cleanser for a chaotic time. Luke Healy's latest graphic novel seems both a continuation of earlier work ("The Con Artists") and an attempt to move past it.
A graphic novel makes a powerful case that if these two men had never met, 20th-century pop culture might have taken an entirely different course. By Lev Grossman An exciting book with no words ...
WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. It is the essential source of information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation. The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is ...
Or how many Tour de France cyclists it would take to power a vacuum cleaner? These might seem like flippant questions to ask ...
The Kindle Colorsoft releases October 30 and is available to preorder now alongside updated versions of the Scribe, ...
Michel Houellebecq has been in the English-language media in recent weeks because of the publication of the translation of ...
As National Comic Book Day coincides with Banned Books Week this year, graphic novels find themselves at the center of a nationwide controversy over censorship and educational content. According ...
An exciting book with no words, a murder mystery, an author mocking their own pain and a poetic masterpiece highlight this month’s offerings. This month’s top graphic novels include “The ...
Global Screen has picked up Ineke Houtman's 'The Book of Everything,' which is adapted from Guus Kuijer's autobiographical ...
17, Cormac McCarthy's The Road: A Graphic Novel Adaptation by French illustrator Manu Larcenet is a new twist on a haunting story. According to the publisher, Abrams Books, McCarthy "personally ...