A faithfully adapted graphic novel of the beloved 1962 classic, just in time to celebrate its 50th anniversary.
With a keen eye, Eisner Award winner Larson (Mercury, 2010) doesn't stray a moment from L'Engle’s original text, following the Murry children, Charles Wallace and Meg, and their friend, Calvin O’Keefe, as they tesser through outer space looking for Meg and Charles Wallace's lost father. Larson's illustrations are clear and concise, neatly ordered across each page with a tidy sensibility. While it is an amazingly envisioned and sophisticatedly stylized offering, some purists may be slightly put off by the three-color black, white and blue palette. It's difficult to see The Man with Red Eyes with baby blue eyes, or to miss out on her rainbow wings when Mrs. Whatsit morphs into the centaurlike creature on Uriel. Minor grievances aside, this is a stunning reimagining of L'Engle’s Newbery-winning tale, and it should entrance old and new readers alike. Adaptations can be difficult to execute with style and grace; Larson manages to do both and still add her own flair.
Larson’s admiration and respect for the original text shines through; this is an adaptation done right.
(Graphic fantasy. 9-14)