Black Solstice

Travon Free

Book - 2023

"Last winter solstice the whole world turned upside down when every single Black person gained a superpower that lasted exactly one day before disappearing entirely. It's three days until the next solstice, and everyone on earth is anxiously holding their breath to see if it happens again. Everyone except the Wallace kids-they're betting their lives their powers will return and they plan to use them to change everything. . .for everyone"--

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Science fiction comics
Graphic novels
Published
Milwaukie, OR : Dark Horse Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Travon Free (author)
Other Authors
Martin Desmond Roe (author), Aremo Massa (artist)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
69 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781506733227
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A trending social media meme that Black people were granted brief superpowers on winter solstice 2020--"Black power had a whole new meaning"--is turned into a lackluster debut graphic novel by Oscar-winning directors Free and Roe that fails to capture the serendipity of its inspiration. The disorganized narrative opens in 2021, when Solstice will arrive again in three days and Black people are hoping to receive "a good ol'-fashioned, no-bullshit superpower" for 24 hours. Info dumping slows the pacing until the focus switches to Quentin and Nekesa "Kesa" Wallace, siblings who gained celebrity during the last solstice. Sassy Quentin is known as The Whore, who "fooled that pop star into marrying" his "tight tight chocolate gold" (with paper-thin reference to Harry Styles as groom), and activist Kesa is The Prophet (she could communicate with all Black people simultaneously). In a baffling attempt to "change the whole fucking world," Kesa assembles a team to rob the Federal Reserve--a scheme that unspools in the narrative's tepid finale. Massa's chunky drawings too often lose detail, creating an unfinished, flat look. Despite some funny beats, the script lacks finesse, aiming at timely satire but coming up stale. This doesn't live up to its clever potential. (Dec.)

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