Bootblack
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
By the author of the critically acclaimed Giant. On the German front, in the spring of 1945: the war leaves only death and destruction in its wake. To escape the horror of the present, Al, an American soldier, the only survivor of his unit, immerses himself in the memories of his New York life. Son of German immigrants, born in the United States, he was not yet ten years old when, in one night, under the approving eyes of anti-immigrant Americans, he lost his parents and his home in a terrible fire. Turning his back on his origins, Al has no choice but to live on the streets; he becomes a Bootblack, a shoe shiner. With his friend Shiny, they somehow manage to survive by sticking together. Six years later, in 1935, they meet Buster and the ambitious Diddle Joe. And then there's Maggie, the girl Al is in love with and whose esteem he ardently longs for. And this, even as she makes it clear to him that they do not live in the same world. New York offers no future for the poor, Al understood that. He is therefore determined to earn more money, whatever the means. But he does not imagine, at that point, that the war which threatens will soon give him an appointment with his past...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Mikaël (Giant) returns with another immersive graphic novel set in old New York in which the plot is almost secondary to the intricate worldbuilding. During the Great Depression, Al Chrysler, orphaned by a tenement fire and determined to leave his immigrant origins behind, makes a living as a shoeshine boy and romances the haughty Maggie. "All I knew of the world was that city," he recalls. Al's gang of bootblacks, the East River Wolves, start running money for the Mafia and get mixed up in a plot to take down Mayor LaGuardia. Flash forward to the battlefields of WWII, where a slightly older and much wiser Al reckons with the darkest night of his back-alley past. Mikaël's art, drenched in faintly sepia-toned colors, feels strongly influenced by Will Eisner's classics, but he brings his own formidable draftsmanship. The characters have memorable faces and expressive body language, but occasionally the action pauses just enough to allow readers to take in the spectacularly realized period setting, an endless labyrinth of busy immigrant neighborhoods, rat-infested harbors, rattling streetcars, and seedy cabarets. Fans of historical thrillers and classic comics alike will delight in this tour through vintage neighborhoods so real one can almost smell the shoe polish.