![]() ![]() With the rise of women finding their voices and speaking out about sexual assault in the media, this reworking of the enduring 1999 classic should be on everyone’s radar. ![]() Carroll’s stark black-and-white illustrations are exquisitely rendered, capturing the mood through a perfectly calibrated lens. Melinda relies upon art to work as a vulnerary this visual adaptation takes readers outside Melinda’s head and sits them alongside her, seeing what she sees and feeling the importance and power of her desire to create art and express herself. Although Anderson’s novel came out nearly 20 years ago, this raw adaptation feels current, even with contemporary teenage technological minutiae conspicuously absent. In addition to internalizing the emotional aspects of the assault, Melinda is relentlessly bullied by her peers and often runs into her attacker-a popular senior-who delights in terrorizing her. When the semester begins, Melinda has become a pariah who spends her days silent. ![]() In an attempt to report the crime, Melinda calls 911, and the party is shut down. Melinda, a nascent freshman, is raped at a party shortly before the beginning of school. ![]() Anderson’s timeless and important tale of high-school sexual assault and its aftermath undergoes a masterful graphic novel transformation. ![]()
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