Get Jiro! Blood and sushi

Anthony Bourdain

Book - 2015

"Acclaimed chef, writer and television personality, Anthony Bourdain and Joel Rose (Kill The Poor) return for the follow-up to their #1 New York Times bestseller GET JIRO from Vertigo. In GET JIRO: BLOOD AND SUSHI, Bourdain and Rose examine the origins of the mysterious Jiro and what made him into the chef he has become. Born the heir to a Yakuza crime family, Jiro never longed to travel the criminal path laid out before him, but instead chose to secretly study the rich culinary history of his homeland, something that would have significant repercussions if discovered by his gangster father. As Jiro's interest in the culinary arts deepens, his ability to keep his artistic and criminal worlds separate becomes too great, triggering ...a great personal loss that will forever change Jiro's path"--

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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics GRAPHIC NOVEL/Bourdain/Get Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Published
Burbank, CA : DC Comics/Vertigo [2015]
©2015
Language
English
Main Author
Anthony Bourdain (author)
Other Authors
Joel Rose (author), Alé Garza (illustrator), José Villarrubia, 1961- (colorist), Clem Robins, 1955- (letterer)
Item Description
"The prequel to the New York Times bestseller"--Cover.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : chiefly color illustrations ; 27 cm
Audience
"Suggested for mature readers"--Jacket.
ISBN
9781401252267
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In Get Jiro! (2012), celebrity chef Bourdain and cowriter Rose told the story of gastronomic samurai Jiro, who manipulates both sides of a dystopian future's culinary gang war. In this prequel, they fill in the backstory with plenty of blood, severed heads, and raw fish. Jiro is going against the wishes of his father, a powerful Yakuza gang lord, by secretly learning the art of sushi. Hounded by his rapacious, brutal half brother, Jiro finds himself in the midst of a family bloodbath that ultimately drives him out of Japan and into his prescribed future. Though lacking the zest of the original's genre mélange, this prequel tells a swift, grisly tale of secret passion and family betrayal, cooked in the sort of gangster stew that Frank Miller perfected with Sin City. The artificiality of the digital coloring unfortunately robs the visuals of a vital solidity, and the depiction of women is barely short of pornographic, but Garza and Villarrubia's jaunty linework is a comfortable fit for the energy and pace of the story.--Karp, Jesse Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.