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      • Graphic novels
        2020

        Wooden Crosses

        by Roland Dorgelès, JD Morvan and Facundo Percio

        In 1919, Albin Michel publishes Les Croix de bois, a novel written by Roland Dorgelès which forever revolutionized the war novel genre. Inspired by the author’s time as a soldier in the trenches of WWI, the book is immediately met with wide acclaim from critics and surviving soldiers alike. It is awarded the Prix Femina and narrowly misses the Prix Goncourt to Marcel Proust. Terrible, appalling, unforgiving but also light and funny at times, the novel tells of the harsh reality of what can only be described as hell on earth. JD Morvan and Facundo Percio deliver a brilliant adaptation of this masterpiece by connecting the fictional novel written by Roland Dorgelès and events of his own life, thus demonstrating the thin line between truth and fiction.

      • Graphic novels
        2020

        Vernon Subutex

        by Virginie Despentes and LUZ

        An icon of nonchalance and procrastination, Vernon has been unemployed since his vinyl business went under. Now surviving with the help of an old friend who became a rock star, Vernon watches his life fall apart from the sidelines. When the generous friend suddenly dies of an overdose, he finds himself crashing at old friends’ apartments. Unbeknownst to Vernon, the internet is going wild, journalists, fans and moguls are hunting him down as they believe he is in possession of the last recorded interview of the famed musician. Virginie Despentes uses Vernon’s downfall to deliver a gallery of eccentric, unlikable and yet relatable characters, unable to forget the glory of their youths and to adapt to a fast-paced and unforgiving society. Luz , one of France’s major cartoonists and a former Charlie Hebdo contributor, was the perfect match for Virginie Despentes. They share a deep love of music, a caustic sense of humour and a flair for controversy.

      • Graphic novels
        2020

        The Kids Pay The Price

        by Camille K.

        Ninon is only eight years old but she knows that something is wrong with her mother. She is an alcoholic. Her father wants to keep it a secret and none of the other adults believe her. They brush it off as some welldeserved fun. But they don’t see her mother coming home every evening and opening a bottle, they don’t see her collapsing in the middle of the day, they don’t see the liquor she hides in her children’s bedrooms. How can Ninon love a mother she doesn’t recognize? A mother whom she sees as an animal when she is under the influence of alcohol?

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