Heart of the City by Steenz for April 13, 2019

  1. Missing large
    cdcoventry  over 5 years ago

    if she had based the diorama on “Maus” which uses a graphic format to discuss the horrors of WWII, her teacher would need to eat her word.

     •  Reply
  2. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  over 5 years ago

    Maybe Heart will settle the diorama to be of “A Christmas Carol”?

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    codycab  over 5 years ago

    After this, plan B will probably be “Misery”.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    GuntherGrass  over 5 years ago

    Good for Mr Burgess!!!

     •  Reply
  5. Blep
    Maizing  over 5 years ago

    Comics are gateway books that introduce new readers to the joys of reading.

     •  Reply
  6. Billcat
    ACK! Premium Member over 5 years ago

    A nod to Burgess Meredith and a classic Twilight Zone episode?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_at_Last

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    asrialfeeple  over 5 years ago

    I really must protest. Graphic novels can be literature. They’d prefer A dork’s diary above a comic that explains, for instance, DNA?

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    sueb1863  over 5 years ago

    Hopefully Mr. Burgess made it clear in the instructions that students could NOT use graphic novels. Graphic novels might be more extensive than comic books but it’s still a comic book format.

     •  Reply
  9. 5f3a242a feac 42cc b507 b6590d3039f7
    Plods with ...™  over 5 years ago

    sigh Wow. A comic strip slamming a graphic novel. Kinda makes you want to stop reading the word balloons.

     •  Reply
  10. B 58 hustler bomber
    John Leonard Premium Member over 5 years ago

    That’s it Mr. Burgess, teach the kids that form is more important than content. I would refer yo to such “comic books” as “Maus”, “Persepolis”, “Logicomix”, “Footnotes in Gaza” and “Safe Area Gorazde”.

     •  Reply
  11. Successful runner
    skipper1992  over 5 years ago

    Yeah, I’m going to side with Heart on this one.

     •  Reply
  12. Opus   bill
    DW Premium Member over 5 years ago

    Just because a book is illustrated does not automatically detract from its content. This, in itself, does not detract from the story it is telling. Often a graphic novel can be quite lengthy, going for a more in depth story than words alone can portray. The illustrations can itself lead to a better understanding of the story. There are many long graphic novels, which would exceed shorter book stories. Which would you rather have – a student who reads a very short book (less than 100 pages) or a student who reads a longer graphic novel (more than 300 pages)? The content can be many varied topics, and opens the mind, as long as a person is reading.

    Comic books, not graphic novels, are what first got me interested in reading. But I would have liked graphic novels, also, had I known about them. When I was little I liked to look at the comic books and learned to read them later, as I got older. That love of reading transferred to novels, with my reading some of the classics even while in elementary school. Encourage kids to read, regardless of the format!

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    rlstephens57  over 5 years ago

    A BIG part of me learning HOW to read was by comic books back in the early 60s. It made me a life-long lover of books!!!

     •  Reply
  14. Hdlogo
    pdking77  over 5 years ago

    Sooooo, what would be the difference between a graphic novel and just about any work by Dr. Seuss? Would Dr Seuss be considered “literature” or “comic book”?

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    Katsuro Premium Member over 5 years ago

    Honestly? I’m the biggest comic book/graphic novel fan I’ve met in my life—just the manga books I’ve read number in the thousands— and I think it’s fine to tell kids that a specific book report can’t be about a graphic novel, just like it’s fine to tell them that it has to be about a classic, or a book of non-fiction. Not every book report needs to be inclusive of every single kind of book.

    Also, while obviously some comics use a bigger vocabulary than some “regular” novels—compare, for instance, Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing to any Hemingway novel—in general, the vocabulary used in graphic novels is smaller, since less description is needed. Does this make them “lesser” art? Of course not! Just different. But in English class, at least some of the point of reading is to expand your vocabulary. So if you ask me, it’s fine for teachers to say “this specific book report needs to be about a ‘regular’ book,” as long as it’s not dismissive of the comics medium.

     •  Reply
  16. Giancarlo
    cholomanaba  over 5 years ago

    It is a book anyway you see it… why put it so hard? (think outside the box, teacher)

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    Hello Sweetie  over 5 years ago

    Sorry teacher but reading comics is reading. Some people are visually oriented, some are verbally oriented and the goal of teaching is to help both to learn. Not try to jam square pegs into round holes.

     •  Reply
  18. Jless
    jless  over 5 years ago

    “From Hell” by the celebrated writer Alan Moore and illustrated by Eddie Campbell is a meticulous researched account of Jack the Ripper murders. The storytelling is excellent, and it would stand as such in comparison with any book.

     •  Reply
  19. Image
    SukieCrandall Premium Member over 5 years ago

    There have been studies that kids who read comic books tend to become better readers, but the subjects were discovering comics at an earlier age than Heart.

    I wonder how Heart would respond to being given play scripts to read instead of novels. Would that format turn out being better for the way her mind works? There certainly are more than enough plays with challenging concepts.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    Jefano Premium Member over 5 years ago

    I’ve never heard of reading graphic stories being a hindrance to reading prose (or poetry). I have met people who read prose voraciously who can’t seem to “decode” how words and pictures work together in comics. Maybe Mr. Burgess is one of those? But more likely just biased and uninformed. On the other hand, the assignment is for the student to produce their own visualization of what the author depicted in words, not try to recreate what was already visualized by the illustrator.

     •  Reply
  21. Durak ukraine
    Durak Premium Member over 5 years ago

    Most teachers and librarians welcome students reading graphic novels and give assignments to include both. Don’t be too hard on Mr. Burgess. No doubt he made it clear when he first gave the instructions.

     •  Reply
  22. Avatar92
    JPuzzleWhiz  over 5 years ago

    “To be continued”?

    What happened to “Stay ’tooned”?

    d;o)

     •  Reply
  23. N1495118875 241922 2408
    Ermine Notyours  over 5 years ago

    She should have done a Desmond Pucket diorama.

     •  Reply
  24. Mbsils
    marilynnbyerly  over 5 years ago

    If you’re not familiar with graphic novels, go to your library and ask a librarian for one. They tend to have the story complexity of a novella-length novel, but the story is told in images as well as words.

     •  Reply
  25. Quitn
    DukeDiamond  over 5 years ago

    I agree with Heart. Graphic comics ARE very much books. Stand firm, Heart!

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    Jug of Voodoo  over 5 years ago

    I used to work in an elementary school library. Raina Telgemeier’s books used to cause RIOTS because every kid wanted them. We had to start keeping them in a drawer in the checkout desk. Kids had to request them and were limited to one per person.

    Everyone should read her first autobiographical comic, “Smile”. It’s the story of how Telgemeier’s front teeth were broken off in 6th grade. She spent her middle & early high school years dealing with insane dental procedures on top of mean girls, boy trouble, and the 1989 San Francisco earthquake. It’s a modern coming-of-age classic.

     •  Reply
  27. Missing large
    sew-so  over 5 years ago

    When I first discovered graphic novels, they weren’t in libraries. Then you could find them in with juvenile fiction. The local library has a graphic novel section, and it’s close to the adult fiction, not juvenile – for VERY good reason.

    I kind of hope the juvenile section has it’s own graphic novels (I haven’t checked because it’s on the 2nd floor and I haven’t taken the time), because when I browsed them, I was amazed at how the medium had grown up. History, science fiction, fantasy, mysteries… any genre you care to name, with adult themes and vocabularies and art. They are MARVELOUS.

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    LtPowers  over 5 years ago

    Look, Mr. Elitist Jr. High English Teacher: Either you can accept that a graphic novel is a book, or you can give Heart the weekend to do a new diorama.

     •  Reply
  29. Img 20180813 121350 hdr kindlephoto 25923426
    TXD2  over 5 years ago

    Hopefully, the teacher will change his mind in the continuation & learn something himself. :)

     •  Reply
  30. Shout avatar
    vanaals  over 5 years ago

    Uh-oh. Teach suffers that old European stigma that intelligent, educated people do not, and should not, read books with pictures.

     •  Reply
  31. Missing large
    whelan_jj  over 5 years ago

    If it has pages it’s a book. If it has words it can be read. An F for Mr. Burgess unless there were some initial conditions (like a list of the possible books). But then he should have said something like, “That wasn’t on the reading list”.

     •  Reply
  32. Missing large
    theincrediblebulk  over 5 years ago

    I am and always was an outlier. I can read a graphic novel but I get nothing from the artwork. The first book I ever read was “Keep the Wagons Moving” by West Lathrop. My mother read it to me as a bedtime story and had me follow along with her reading. One night I said I wanted to read it to her and other than a few hard words I actually read it clearly. I was 4 and the book had been withdrawn from one of the local high schools, so it was no where near a starting level book. I still read many age appropriate books, but I also read many books that were advanced for my age. If I was the teacher I would accept a graphic novel as an appropriate book choice given the age of the students, unless I had given specific instructions that only what children I know refer to as “chapter books” were appropriate for the project.

     •  Reply
  33. Lady dragoncat
    Dragoncat  over 5 years ago

    Imagine if she had read from the Harry Potter series. I remember how critics said reading those books were evil.

     •  Reply
  34. Penfold
    Bill Löhr Premium Member over 5 years ago

    I could argue the first book i was ever given to read in school was a graphic novel. Fun With Dick And Jane had moreimage on the page than text. :-) http://venezky.stanford.edu/images/modern/full-resolution/IMG_0222.jpg

     •  Reply
  35. Missing large
    mischugenah  over 5 years ago

    People have been telling stories through pictures since BEFORE the written word existed!

     •  Reply
  36. 37cdc61d 2dfd 4a3c 9796 a93e73f76317
    MCProfessor  over 5 years ago

    Graphic novels are books and reading is reading if it comes with pictures or not.

     •  Reply
  37. Bbjcesh
    barister  over 5 years ago

    You took stuff out of a trash can on the day of…..now your mad cuz it’s failing???!!!

     •  Reply
  38. Sixshotprofile
    Decepticomic  over 3 years ago

    Oh good, Heart’s teacher is an idiot.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Heart of the City