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The Nib #7

The Nib #7

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Nonfiction comics anthology, edited abd published by Matt Bors. This is Volume 2 Issue 3, and themed on the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Unknown Binding

3 people are currently reading
30 people want to read

About the author

Matt Bors

59 books58 followers
Matt Bors is a cartoonist, writer, editor, and the founder of The Nib. He was a Pulitzer Prize Finalist for his political cartoons in 2012 and 2020 and is the co-writer of the dystopian satire Justice Warriors with Ben Clarkson.

His cartoons have appeared in The Nation, The Guardian, CNN, The Intercept, and were collected in the book We Should Improve Society Somewhat. He also drew the graphic novel War Is Boring written by David Axe.

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5 stars
47 (52%)
4 stars
33 (36%)
3 stars
9 (10%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Matt Graupman.
1,049 reviews20 followers
January 1, 2024
I think this is probably my favorite issue of “The Nib.” Every piece is a banger and there’s an urgency to the whole thing given the theme. It’s smart, honest, desperate, and jammed full of acidic humor. It’s a great time capsule of our terrible shared history.

FAVORITES:
“Plague Rats” by Lisa Rosalie Eisenberg - An icky reminder that the COVID-19 pandemic affected more than just humans
“Comfort Food” by Victoria Ying - A bittersweet commentary on cultural identity and racism as seen through the author’s native cuisine
Comic strip by Ben Passmore - A brief diary comic about an ally helping rip down a monument to Philadelphia’s racist past
BONUS: ALL the interstitial drawings by Noah Van Sciver and Eleanor Davis
Profile Image for Kelsey Atherton.
26 reviews
January 10, 2021
It will be hard, after the pandemic, to describe what exactly life was like inside of it, in the endless months of social distance and similar days. The Nib, always an unflinching witness to the truth of the present, manages with the Pandemic issue to capture something that would be otherwise lost. Reading the issue feels like living inside the late summer and early fall months of 2020, with a grim acceptance of the present and a lack of knowledge about when an end might come.

This is valuable for that, though I should also say it tells these stories with a powerful humanity. It is not just that it was bad, it is that people made jokes in the midst of it all, while knowing how bad it was. Worrh reading, and especially, worth rereading five years from now.
Profile Image for meg (the.hidden.colophon).
532 reviews3 followers
April 29, 2023
I got this at a used bookstore for $3. I now am subscribed to The Nib.

I wish I’d had this during the actual pandemic, and am sad to just be aware of its existence. However! I’m so glad to have discovered it regardless, and reading it now brings up a lot of buried feelings around the pandemic and it’s effect even today.
Profile Image for Leonardo.
26 reviews2 followers
May 28, 2021
Descubrí The Nib durante la pandemia. Me divierte, me encanta y me inspira todo lo que hacen. Este volumen de cómics es de lo mejor que he leído en mi vida.
Profile Image for Ula.
281 reviews10 followers
November 27, 2022
I think it’s important to work through and learn from what’s happened since 2020 and this issue is a wonderful complex and heartening collection of experiences around the world. In the rush to move forward, I’m afraid we’re not going to learn anything and continue to make mistakes that will result in mass illness, poverty, and death.
43 reviews5 followers
October 25, 2023
Ran across this in a Little Free Library in 2023. It's a good reminder of what it felt like to live in 2020, at least from liberal points of view. Most of these short pieces are more informational than dramatically gripping, but they are valuable and well-drawn. Brilliant artwork on the cover and inside by Eleanor Davis.
Profile Image for Chris.
147 reviews
December 18, 2021
This was a good one. It’ll give people an insight to the early days of the pandemic. Given how long it may last, they may want to do another pandemic issue next year.
Profile Image for Ali.
1,400 reviews14 followers
March 5, 2022
While I had read many of these comics before, this volume really does speak to the realities of the pandemic and I love that.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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