User Profile

Justin du Coeur

jducoeur@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 weeks, 6 days ago

Lifelong comics and graphic novel omnivore; into Programming (particularly Scala), SCA, SF/Fantasy fandom, Historical Dance and Games, etc. On Mastodon as @jducoeur@social.coop.

This link opens in a pop-up window

Justin du Coeur's books

View all books

User Activity

Sweetness Between Us (2024, Roaring Brook Press) 4 stars

A story of high-school romance, diabetes, and vampirism

4 stars

A sweet, educational, mildly queer coming-of-age fantasy graphic novel.

One protagonist is Perley -- from a family of farmers and crafters, leader of the high school knitting club. (And a really fine example that you can be queer in spirit even if you're neither gay nor trans.) His life was recently disrupted when he found out the hard way that has Type 1 Diabetes, and he's now catching up in school and learning how to cope with the disease.

He shares his catch-up process with Amandine, a fellow junior in this small Maine town. She comes from a distinguished vampiric family, and was prematurely inducted into vampirism to save her life. She's also having to learn coping techniques -- particularly important for a vampire who is also a fairly committed vegan.

They become close friends, and develop a measure of inter-dependency when they discover that she can taste his blood …

Ink Girls (2023, HarperCollins Publishers) 4 stars

Coming of age story about resisting tyrrany

4 stars

In this graphic novel, Cinzia is a printer's apprentice in a loosely medieval city. (Not supernatural, but not a real historical place either.)

As the powers that be begin to clamp down on the freedoms of the people of the city, she finds herself leading a group of kids to bring their secrets to light.

Girl-centric and inspiring, it's a good read and a good message -- likely excellent for tweens and young adults. (And fun for us grown-ups as well.)

The Refrigerator Monologues (2017) 5 stars

The lives of six female superheroes and the girlfriends of superheroes. A ferocious riff on …

A brilliant, savage look at the way comics treat women

5 stars

If you know a bit about comics, The Refrigerator Monologues is a fascinating book; if you know a lot about comics, it's absolutely searing.

The framing story here is The Hell Hath Club -- a gathering of ladies who lunch in Deadtown. They're all dead; they were all associated with superheroes (and/or villains); and their stories are sad, and smart, and honest.

All names have been changed to protect the poor innocent IP, but if you know comics at all well, it's pretty obvious who all of them are. The framing story is narrated by our Gwen Stacy variant; other members of the club range from Mera to Jean Grey to Harley (yes, she's not dead in-canon, but it's an interesting counterpoint) to, of course, poor forgotten Alex DeWitt, whose fate spawned the meme of "fridging" in the first place.

Each of them gets to tell their own story, and …

Spinning (Paperback, 2017, First Second) 5 stars

A powerful graphic memoir about coming-of-age, coming out, and competitive figure skating.

A growing-up memoir about being trapped by what you love

4 stars

Spinning (now out in a new edition from Avery Hill) is generally labeled as a queer coming-of-age story, and that's true as far as it goes, but it's a bit less queer-centered than that label might suggest. Tillie has known she was gay for almost her entire life, and the struggle to come out is definitely part of the story here (especially after her parents move to Texas).

But the story isn't nearly that reductive. This is a much broader memoir, told in quiet shades: it's a very introspective story, starting around the time of that move to Texas in sixth grade and continuing through high school. It's partly about her relationships with other girls, but far more about her rather troubled relationship with figure skating.

Tillie is a talented skater, but not world-class, and she knows it. She's been skating for most of her life, much of that preparing …

Girlmode (2024, HarperCollins Publishers) 4 stars

Solidly excellent trans coming of age story

4 stars

Phoebe and her father have just moved to LA, so she has to get used to a new high school -- at the same time that she's starting to figure out how to be a girl, having just transitioned.

This is a refreshingly positive trans story. It is not about the horrors of transphobia, of which there is little -- the kids of the school are generally friendly and accepting. But it's very much about the experience of rebuilding one's life with little clue about the new world one has dived into.

Phoebe meets lots of people her first day, but particularly Ben -- ringleader of the local geeks, who is more than happy to find a new girl geek to game with -- and Mackenzie -- perfectly-coiffed leader of the "popular girls", who decides to adopt Phoebe as a project and teach her how to be a successful girl. …

The Deep Dark (Paperback, Scholastic Graphix) 4 stars

Everyone has secrets. Mags’s has teeth.

Magdalena Herrera is about to graduate high school, but …

A quiet, excellent queer meditation on the burdens we carry

4 stars

Mags is just about grown up, but her life revolves around home by necessity. Part of that is because she needs to care for the aged abuela, but just as much is because of the thing in the basement, that she needs to feed every day. She is stoic about it, never complaining about a weight that would break most adults twice her age.

This all begins to get upended when her childhood best friend, long moved away, comes back home -- now transitioned, with the new name of Nessa. Nessa is more lively, and wants Mags to live more herself. But as far as she knows, the thing in the basement was just a childhood fantasy that they made up when they were kids.

This isn't a big loud fantasy book: aside from its one fantastical element, it is very much grounded in the here and now of small-town …

Amazing Grapes (GraphicNovel, HarperCollins) 3 stars

A reminder of old classics

3 stars

Amazing Grapes, a new graphic novel from Jules Feiffer, is remarkably reminiscent of the legendary Phantom Tollbooth (for which he did the art).

This surreal story centers on kids Shirley, Pearlie and Curly, as well as Mommy, starting on the day when Pearlie and Curly are swept away on a two-headed swan to explore other dimensions (most of them not terribly nice). Along the way, they befriend guide dog (cat?) Kelly and the monstrous and frequently-dead Lord Muckety Muck, along with a host of nasties from worlds like Feartopia, before being followed years later by Mommy, Shirley, and Shirley's fiancee who is sometimes named Earl.

Is it as good as Phantom Tollbooth? No -- in particular, the story wanders a lot more, and isn't nearly as cohesive. But it's a neat little romp, and worth the read.