Showing posts with label October. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October. Show all posts

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Cancer Vixen


 
October is breast cancer awareness month. It's also Halloween countdown month. I try to stay relevant and set the mood by reading comics and graphic novels that fit the season or an event going on at around the same time. If you noticed the books I have reviewed this month, you'll see that I have done a decent job with the spooky stuff. But when it comes to breast cancer awareness, the best I could do was find a Batman-themed Save the Ta-Tas image for my Facebook page.
   That was until I hit my local library last week and found ‘ Cancer Vixen.’ When I thumbed through it, I thought it was about a woman’s account of her battle with lung cancer. It didn't quite meet the breast cancer awareness requirement I was looking for, but I took what I could get. When I started this a couple of days later and learned that the book’s creator was actually diagnosed with breast cancer; well I must have been the first person in history to cheer for someone getting the disease.

  But only cause I can paint my blog pink for October. I swear!

  The book opens in 2004 with the author Marissa Acocella, right before she becomes Mrs. Marchetto. She's considered one of the Big Apple’s hottest cartoonists, a thriving member of the in-crowd, and in 2 weeks about to get married. But when the artist finds a lump, that all appears to come crashing down. Especially, when she learns that her health insurance has lapsed.

  The book then jumps back and forth to 2001. In the past we see Marissa receive an assignment that will connect her with her future fiance. Then on a fateful day in September, we witness the tragic events that put Marrisa in the dust clouds of the World Trade Center and inspire her to pen a cartoon article that will blast her into the stratosphere as a hot talent in New York’s (magazine) publishing world.

Marrisa remarks that her time in the toxic clouds of Ground Zero could be behind her cancer. But she doesn't dwell on that. In fact, what this possibility does is it opens the reader to a new dimension. What the author does to much success is occasionally travel a parallel universe filled with an array of cartoons she created during her cancer fight such as the “ What Caused My Cancer? Board Game.”

   Cancer Vixen reminds me of another magazine writer making it big in Manhattan at about the same time- Candace Bushnell. Her columns in the New York Observer inspired the hit TV show ‘Sex & The City’ about 4 women who struggle to find love in the social circles of the city that never sleeps.
  
  Now I have never seen a single episode of Sex & The City. So to my knowledge, one of the characters might have battled cancer but I doubt it. However, if they ever did a storyline about one of the girls and their struggles to stay in the ‘IT’ crowd, this graphic novel is what I imagine the HBO hit to be like. ( While researching on this review, I learned that one character named Samantha gets get breast cancer in the final season which occurred in 2004. However, as Cancer Vixen is a true story, any similarities are coincidence more than likely.)

    Cancer Vixen is one of those stories I couldn't put down. Engrossing with a passionate account of a cancer survivor's fight against breat cancer. With inovative storytelling techniques and a no-holds barred approach, this is a graphic novel that while isn't considered a classic yet- it will be. I highly reccommend it.

   Worth Consuming

   Rating: 9 out of 10 stars. 

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Getting Relevent Again



Bullying Captain America
Bullying Guardians of the GalaxyThis October, Marvel will issue a special series of variant covers. Most variants these days advertise an upcoming film or video game. But in the tradition of relevant comics, Marvel's new variants will be promoting the very special message of anti-bullying!
  If there ever was a group of people that needed protection from bullies, it's fans of comic books and geek culture. Man, could I have used my own personal Iron Man to protect me from the jerks, jocks, and both in elementary and high school! The kids on the covers are just that lucky! From Captain America to the Hulk to the oh so popular Guardians of the Galaxy, some of the heavy hitters of the Marvel Universe will be spreading the word that bullying is not OK!

 I didn't know this but October is Anti-bullying month. Heck, I didn't even know there was such a thing!  In coordination with STOMP Out Bullying and their annual Blue Shirt World Day of Bullying Prevention, Marvel will release a handful of variant covers every Wednesday in October. These covers will only be released in comic book shops. But I hope Marvel and STOMP decide to spread the message a little more and release at least one or two of these special covered comics in schools. It would help spread the message that bullying is not acceptable! In my day, teachers turned a blind eye to bullying. So by doing a campaign in schools, maybe the bullying prevention message will reach everyone- kids, parents, teachers, and more importantly, the bullies themselves!

  If you think Marvel should  provide these books to schools as an anti-bullying resource, feel free to share this blog post on your favorite social media site with the hash tag #blueshirtcomicinschool

 Blue Shirt World Day of Bullying Prevention is October 7th. I think I'll be wearing a certain Captain America shirt that day. More on that to come!