Some of the world's best stories are retold in these graphic novels. Well known villains and heroes take new shape while staying true to their original characters in these revised stories that range from medieval England to the pirate haunted South Seas.
Terry Davis is an American novelist who lives near Spokane, Washington, and is a professor emeritus of English at Minnesota State University, Mankato (MSU Mankato), where he taught Creative writing – fiction and screenwriting – as well as adolescent literature. Davis, who has been a high school English teacher and a wrestling coach, is the author of three novels for young adults: Vision Quest (1979), Mysterious Ways (1984), and If Rock & Roll Were a Machine (1992). He has also written Presenting Chris Crutcher, a biography of the respected young-adult author.
Lo leí en formato novela gráfica, osea bastante resumido. Pues va de un hombre algo extraño que llega alojarse en una posada, es raro porque tiene toda la cara llena de vendajes y eso no les gusta a muchos de los otros inquilinos. Llega el momento en que el hombre se quita los vendajes y todos se dan cuento que es invisible. La gente lo rechaza y le tienen miedo
I love this book becouse is about a man the came to this city and when to a hotel he always had a mask he like to make a potion to make him self invisible and he got on a fight and he took of his nose and he when to jail.
The Science experiment went right, but once you are invisible how can you get back to normal. Griffin wen invisible man and he don't know to how be normal. So Dr Kemp helped him, but when he became normal he was death.
Interesting take on the tale. Glad I had read the original, but it might be enough to entice a kid into reading the real tale later in life.
Man of extreme hubris experiments until he makes himself invisible. Begins to go mad or is already part way there. Thinks he can do no wrong, and he kills because nothing should stop him from his experiments.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.