
Comic Projects: The Really Heavy GreatcoatĪrt from This One Summer written by Mariko Tamaki and illustrated by Jillian Tamaki.Comics Projects: Return to Planet Earth.Starblazer Checklist: Starblazer Abroad.Starblazer Recalled: Forgotten Fantasy Fiction – With Pictures.British Comic Reference | British Comic Characters Profiled | Garth.Marvel UK | “Genesis ’92”: Looking Back and What Might Have Been.Marvel UK in Print: Captain Britain, Death’s Head, Doctor Who and more – A Quick Guide.Action – The Sevenpenny Nightmare – Micro Site.British and Irish Creators and Publishers on Twitter.British Classic Comics and Creators on Facebook.British Comics Sales Figures: The Good Old Days.British News Stand Comics and Magazines for Teens, Pre-Teens and Children.Why Your Favourite British Comic Strip of 1974 Hasn’t Been Reprinted – Yet!.Lakes Festival Focus – Comic Creator Interviews.Roy of the Rovers – Rebellion Books Check List.2023 2000AD, Treasury of British Collections and Specials.This One Summer is a quiet book, it’s a beautiful book, so drop whatever you’re doing and go and read it. With an impressive economy of strokes, Jillian Tamaki perfectly captures: the way time flows differently when you’re on holiday the way time flows differently when you’re a young kid pregnant silences infatuated gazes the way sorrow can affect your posture the weird dance moves your best friend practices in front of you. With an impressive economy of words, Mariko Tamaki perfectly captures: the strange sense of the grownup world kids create for themselves out of overheard conversations and films they’re too young for the complicated nuances in the way kids relate to their parents, to their friends, to their friends’ parents the difference being a year and a half older can make between childhood friends utter heartbreak, and life-changing realisations. And Rose becomes fascinated with the teenagers that hang out at the town’s general store, renting R-rated films so she has an excuse to talk to the older boy at the cash register. Rose’s mother is preoccupied with something, and doesn’t want to join in the fun. This one summer, though, things are different. Every summer, she goes to the same tiny beach town with her mother and father, where she hangs out with her summer best friend Windy, goes for swims in the lake, collects pebbles and counts the stars in the night sky. This One Summer is a graphic novel about Rose, a girl in her pre-teens. And it’s hard to tell people about stuff without using words. I’m facing this same dilemma today, and I think the best I can do is to write the shortest review I can. But you want to tell other people about them, so they too will experience them and fall in love with them. Some works of art a re so delicate, so simple in their beauty, that any words you use to describe them feel clumsy and oafish in comparison.
