Jillian and Mariko Tamaki's "This Summer" is a graphic novel by Caldecott Honor (and award-winning awards). This book captures the bitter pause of adolescent nipples, soaks the readers into the conflicting needs of girls who want to continue childish games - and peeps into the drama of teenagers in the town and mysterious sad mysterious Sadness. - Megremoke
Read more about Mutha magazine editor and New Illustrated PEN guest editor Meg Lemke introducing "This Summer"
Jillian Tamaki is an illustrator and a cartoonist. She is a co-author of Skim and This One Summer, and is the author of SuperMutant Magic Academy and Boundless (2017). She teaches comics and illustrations at New York's SVA and News Cool. She lives in Toronto. Please visit jilliantamaki.com.
The work of Tamaki Mariko includes the Young Adult Essay (which saves Montgomery only with you) and graphic novels (Skim and This Summer, both Jillian Tamaki). This summer, the Printz Award and the Caldecott Award, and the Eisner Award and the Ignatz Award have been awarded. He wrote for radio and the stage. Her future projects include super graphics of graphic novel Laura Dean and Rosemary Valero-O'Connell (the first two books), Super Girl: Joëlle Jones (DC comic) and Hulk and Nicoleon (Marvel)
Michelle Richmond is the author of four novels, including Golden Year Warriors and the New York Times bestseller "Fog Year" (including excerpt from the middle) and two award-winning collections. Her new novel will be published next summer, foreign copyrights will be sold in 23 languages, and movie rights will be available in 20th Century Fox. You can find a story more similar to her media publication The Caffeinated Writer.
This is the second work after AFTER ON. It is a Silicon Valley novel that will be published on August 1st. If you are ready to turn over the page, the third excerpt is here. Please follow the author Rob Reid to inform all future extracts through the media. For God, do not miss our next part where we learned about the horrifying facts about Mitchell's suffering, a foolish cousin could not avoid him; the technical industry contracted without a term Bondage spreading, and support judge Brock Hogan learned the meaning of "decisive strategic advantage".
Metaphor: This excerpt corresponds to the state of the town, open tomb or summer sunshine, opens in a grave open to anyone, and the summer sun can be enjoyed by anyone. It figuratively obscures these associations rather than using direct comparison words like "likes" or "like" that associate the town and tomb / sun straightforwardly in an unrealistic way! Exaggeration: When Ellie suggests that the dialogue feels like eternity, he does not mean that the whole is eternal; no one can be related to such a long time. He expresses the unrealistic feelings of dialogue in this exaggerated way, but this exaggeration is serious as it certainly does not mean eternity.