Brave

Title: Brave
Author: 
Svetlana Chmakova
Artist: Svetlana Chmakova
Audience: Middle Grade

If your library has Svetlana Chmakova’s book Awkward then Brave is an automatic braveaddition to your middle grade graphic novel collection.  Brave is the follow up book to Awkward and follows the life of Jensen Graham in Berrybrook Middle School. You may remember Jensen as a background character obsessed with sunspots in Awkward. He still thinks sunspots will cause the destruction of the earth, but we also get more character depth. What Jensen really wants is to be a hero as he daydreams how to save his friends from zombie apocalypses to natural disasters. But he’s often not as heroic in real life as he gets bullied by Yanic and Foster. Even some of his friends in Art Club could stand to be nicer to him. Jensen just wants what most people want which is to be appreciated for who he is and to have a group where he belongs.

As we follow Jensen through his daily routine, we see familiar faces like Peppi and Jaime (main characters from Awkward). When Jensen is running away from the bullies he takes refuge in the Newspaper Club’s classroom introducing us to Akilah, Jenny, and Felipe. Always wanting to help, Jensen assists when they need him and eventually gets roped into Akilah and Jenny’s science project on human behavior. They are conducting a survey on the lizard brain’s bullying effect on middle schoolers. This is when Jensen starts to realize he is getting bullied, and he doesn’t like it. There are other subplots that run through this graphic novel that really gives other characters depth and help to move the plot forward. Such as Akilah and Jenny having a huge fight, the Art Club getting excited over an author visit to the school, and Felicity (Art Club friend) getting suspended from school for wearing a short skirt in her Sailor Sunburst cosplay.

This is an automatic buy if your library already has Awkward in the collection. If you don’t have either then you need to purchase these books! Chmakova writes and draws amazing slice of life stories that will keep even your most ADHD kid focused. Her art style has a fun manga feel without being manga (she used to work in manga). I really love how the art style changes when Jensen is imagining something. A great example of this is when Jensen imagines he’s in a video game to get past all the bullies and awkward pitfalls of navigating middle school hallways. The video game level is reminiscent of old Nintendo games, and it is so much fun! Another thing Chmakova nails is facial expressions and body language. Her characters emote freaks out in a hilarious way, but she’s also really good as showing more subtle emotions like when Jensen wrestles with the realization that he is being bullied. This graphic novel features a diverse cast which is so refreshing in this genre. It’s great to see so many types of people represented in this story. And the overall plotline about bullying isn’t overly preachy so it’s not going to be a buzzkill.  While this is a middle grade read, I’d feel fine giving it to a fourth grader too as this plays really well with the Telgemeier fans. The resolution for addressing the bullying and harassment in school is handled very well, and I’m not going to spoil it because you should just read this book!

The Legend of Korra: Turf Wars part one

Title: The Legend of Korra: Turf Wars part one
Writer: 
Bryan Konietzko
Artist: Irene Koh
Audience: Middle Grade & up

If you are or have Avatar: the Last Airbender/Legend of Korra fans at your library this is a must add to the collection!  This isn’t a book that can be easily jumped into without Turf_Wars_Part_One_coverwatching The Legend of Korra because it picks up right where the Nickelodeon cartoon ended with our protagonist Korra and her best friend/girlfriend Asami Sato vacationing in the Spirit World.  It flows really well from the season three finale because Bryan Konietzko also co-created and wrote The Legend of Korra animated series. And a lot of crazy stuff happened in S3 so Turf Wars has so much to work with plotwise.  This is part one of a three part mini-series, and hopefully, there will be more Korra stories to follow (fingers crossed).

One of the best things about this comic is the first fifteen pages are centered on Korra and Asami’s relationship. S3 ended with the two young women expressing their love for each other (they’re both bisexual yay!) and walking off hand in hand into the Spirit portal in Republic City. This is all so new to them, and not having any of the other ensemble cast in here lets them just try to figure it out.  That’s quashed a bit as Korra surprises Asami by taking her to see Korra’s parents which results in an awkward yet mostly positive coming out dinner. The plot switches back to Republic City when our heroes return to find a developer has purchased the land in the park and is a jerk. Cut to Mako and Bolin who are in pursuit of some criminals when a gang fight goes too big. It’s so great to have Bolin teamed up with his brother, Mako, again! This introduces us to the main plot that will run thru Turf Wars: a new bad guy is taking over all the Republic City gangs to create a mafia empire.

An aspect I really appreciate in this comic is Vivian Ng’s coloring work. The Spirit World is so vibrant and bright! When we switch to Republic City the tones are more muted which works since it’s a city that is in an industrial boom. Irene Koh’s artwork is amazing! The LoK world is an action movie set in a political drama with actual, developed characters with rich subplots running through it. Koh’s line work is reflective of this in that quiet moments she nails character expressions (including Korra’s awkward neck rubbing thing she does when flustered) and her action scenes are quite dynamic. Korra can wield the four elements through varying martial arts moves, and I never doubt which element is being expressed. Same goes for the fight scenes with the other benders.  Koh is also making sure there is broader Asian diversity represented with new characters who are Korean and Bangladeshi. I was very excited when I read an interview where she talks about wanting to broaden that out since the Avatar world has only represented Chinese and Japanese culture.

To sum up, if you have Avatar fans in your library this is an automatic selection for your library. It has all the necessary elements in a Legend of Korra story: kick-ass action, a political subplot, well-defined characters, and a great, blossoming romance. It will make a great addition to the LGBT comics section!