The debut graphic novel from the artist of HOPELESS SAVAGES! Continuing the tradition of DUMPED, Christine Norrie’s CHEAT is a modern tale of romance and the failure of love in NYC. Janey and Marc live a hectic lifestyle that constantly keeps them apart. Then Janey ends up in the arms of another man, and the façade of a happy relationship the couple has built begins to crumble around them.
Christine Norrie is an artist and writer, telling stories through comic book illustration, in graphic novel form, as well as for serialized publications, and short story fiction.
Her most noted works include her original graphic novel Cheat , the Oni Press series Hopeless Savages, and the teen drama Breaking Up published in 2007 by Scholastic/Graphix.
Dubbed “a natural storyteller” by Publisher’s Weekly, Norrie has earned two Eisner nominations, A Russ Manning Promising Newcomer Nomination, and a 9th Panel and New York City Comic Book Museum Award.
She lives in New York City's Greenwich Village with her daughter.
You can see the characters get more consistent and nuanced as the book goes and when she gets them just right you'll find that their movement, body language and facial emotion are deliciously rendered!
I've always loved the style of drawing/illustration that she employs. I don't know what to call or how to describe it but Trina Robbins is the Omni-Deity of the style which to my knowledge is all comfortably female. When I saw the cover I knew I'd like it as long as it wasn't within some stup-alup-chuppy genre. UNFORTUNATELY, when I looked in on her Curvitography, the majority of her work is in one of those replunctious branches of the fiction tree.
A quick fun story of a wife who feels neglected - but isn't- and has an affair, only to have tragedy befall her. The art is linear and beautiful and perfectly compliments the story and its events. It is not a deep story but a poignant one and well worth a look.
This book doesn't have a shocking or non- predictable plot line. It's not supposed to- it's features that typical scenario where partners seem to be drifting apart and someone else steps in to fill the void. It's well done with believable characters that are neither villains or victims. The art is pretty good. I love the cover! My only complaint is that the transitions between different scenes with time passage seemed jarring- the sequential art would sometimes jump forward without me expecting it- I think some panels with kind of a montage of activity could have helped with this.
two of those stars are for the art. maybe i'm slow, but the subtext and character complexity just weren't there for me. i could see the gears turning in several places (and hey, i've attempted to write and illustrate a graphic novel before and it's tough. never figured it out, meeself.)
i picked this one up because i really enjoy norrie's artwork, but i agree with another reviewer who said it seemed more like an outline than a fleshed-out story. i kept looking to the artwork to see what i was missing with the dialogue and didn't really find any answers.
Modern day romance comic with a bit of a sad ending. Well drawn, well paced, and with believable dialogue/situation. Quite enjoyable-- and I usually don't like what I call "short" stories in comics.