Crabgrass Comic adventures

Tauhid Bondia

Book - 2022

Crabgrass is a comic strip set in the fictional town of Crabgrass Drive, and chronicles the close friendship of Kevin, who is white, and Miles, who is black, and the many stumbles and breakthroughs they encounter growing up together. The main characters exemplify the resilience of the bonds we form when we are young, and are a reminder of why we remember those times fondly. Crabgrass is also a thrilling exploration of the adventures and mischief that children can get into when allowed to roam. Set in an ambiguous time before cellphones and the internet, the strip finds a way to connect to the old and the young without alienating either. Crabgrass explores the same youthful themes of friendship and adventure as Calvin and Hobbes, and the hum...or, warmth, and innocence will appeal to readers of bestselling middle grade series like Phoebe and Her Unicorn and Big Nate.

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Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Comics (Graphic works)
Published
Kansas City, Missouri : Andrews McMeel Publishing [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Tauhid Bondia (author)
Physical Description
189 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 23 cm
Audience
GN350L
ISBN
9781524875558
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Opening this book is a risk. Readers of this collection of comic strips may find that they can't stop quoting the funniest lines. For example: "I think complicated is just a word adults use when they don't get it either." Or: "Squirrels are like little super heroes, huh?" The squirrel joke, admittedly, makes more sense when it's accompanied by drawings of a squirrel soaring aerodynamically between a power line and a tree. The premise of the strip is simple: Miles is an only child in one of the few Black families on Crabgrass Drive. Kevin is White and the middle child in a large family. The two of them become instant best friends. Some elements may feel familiar to fans of comics. Linus has his security blanket, and Kevin used to tote around a toy rabbit named Crumbs. More important, the characters are always playing tricks on each other, much like Lucy pulling away the football just before Charlie Brown kicks it. One incident involves firecrackers inside a peanut butter--and-jelly sandwich. Bondia also has some of Bill Watterson's gift for dynamic movement and expressions. And a few moments are as poignant and bittersweet as scenes from "Calvin and Hobbes" and "Peanuts." When Kevin's distant father leaves his family, Miles asks, "Is it bad that I didn't notice?" And Kevin responds, "Nah. Hardly anyone did." The author has learned exactly the right lessons from the history of comics. (Graphic humor. 8-12) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.