by Bruce Guthrie
While I was at San Diego Comic-Con, Paul Levitz mentioned there was a
New York City project which brought education comic books to city
schools. He mentioned they had one on Jack Kirby. Afterward, I had to
look it up.
The link for these is:
It's described on the site as:
The page provides links to all of
the individual titles. All are PDFs that can be read online or
downloaded and printed. (There is a link to request hard copies but it
says it isn't supported until late August. Most of the titles have
"Free in NYC" where regular comics would have previously had the Comics
Code Authority seal. In theory, if they send these outside of NYC, it
should only be to educational facilities anyway.) Also provided are
associated links to online resources.
Most of the titles are 24
or 28 pages in length. I saw a few that were 40 or 44 pages long. One
was 26 pages which is an unusual count -- books are almost always in
multiples of 4 pages.
They're clearly labeled for their intended
age group ("K-5" or "7-12"). Most of them read like "educational" comic
books for kids and are probably one and done.
Most of the ones
geared toward younger readers were done by Fred Van Lente and Ryan
Dunlavey but the older-intended ones have a variety of authors. Nick
Bertozzi gave me a copy of his "The Draft Riots" title at last year's
NYCC. Others have contributions from Sarah Myer, Andrew Aydin (his Good
Trouble Productions was involved in several books but he personally
wrote one of them), Paul Levitz, Joe Staton (Joe and Paul did the book
"Sketches on the Sidewalk: Secret History of NYC's Jewish Comic
Creators"), Janice Chiang, Amy Chu, Greg Pak, Gene Luen Yang, Nate
Powell (you'll immediately recognize his style on the cover), and Kami
Garcia.
Basically, none feature straight, white, male, Christian
hero figures as the saviors of all people and property. If DEI is
Kryptonite to you, you may need to have an enema before you feel clean
enough to kiss the ring of the blonde dictator. Reading more than a
half dozen of these probably qualifies us for being deported but you may
want to risk it anyway.