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Summary
Summary
A sweet, funny contemporary teen romance for the inner geek in all of us from graphic novelist Faith Erin Hicks.
Miriam's family should be rich. After all, her grandfather was the co-creator of smash-hit comics series The TomorrowMen. But he sold his rights to the series to his co-creator in the 1960s for practically nothing, and now that's what Miriam has: practically nothing. And practically nothing to look forward to either-how can she afford college when her family can barely keep a roof above their heads? As if she didn't have enough to worry about, Miriam's life gets much more complicated when a cute boy shows up in town . . . and turns out to be the grandson of the man who defrauded Miriam's grandfather, and heir to the TomorrowMen fortune.
In her endearing debut novel, cartoonist Faith Erin Hicks pens a sensitive and funny Romeo and Juliet tale about modern romance, geek royalty, and what it takes to heal the long-festering scars of the past (Spoiler Alert: love).
Author Notes
Faith Erin Hicks is a writer and artist in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her graphic novels include Zombies Calling , The War at Ellsmere , Brain Camp (with Susan Kim and Laurence Klavan), Friends with Boys , Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong (with Prudence Shen), the Bigfoot Boy series (with J. Torres), The Last of Us: American Dreams (with Neil Druckmann), the Eisner Award-winning The Adventures of Superhero Girl , and the Nameless City series.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 7 Up-When Miriam meets Weldon in the bookstore where she works, it seems like the beginning of a relationship that was meant to happen. They are smart, have similar senses of humor, and are both fans of the TomorrowMen comics. But their grandfathers cocreated the TomorrowMen, and after they split apart, their families spent decades resenting each other. Now Weldon is the heir to a fortune, while Miriam's family is just scraping by. Miriam thinks that a romance between them is impossible, but little by little Weldon starts wearing down her resistance. Over the course of the narrative, she reexamines her feelings about her friends, her family, Weldon, and herself in order to find closure with the past and embrace happiness. Readers will enjoy watching this flawed and conflicted character evolve, and they will be glad that she has a support system around her to help her deal with her grief and anger. This is Hicks's first prose novel, but like her previous graphic novels, it tells a tale that is filled with humor and heart. VERDICT For fans of realistic fiction, family problems, all-too-human characters, and star-crossed love stories. A must-have.-Andrea Lipinski, New York Public Library © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
In her first prose story for young adults, graphic novelist Hicks (The Nameless City) explores feuding families, comic books, and love. Years ago, Joseph Warrick and Micah Kendrick, cocreators of the popular TomorrowMen comics, fought each other for financial rights. Warrick ended up with millions, and Kendrick received a pittance. Resentment has trickled down through the generations, and now Warrick's grandson Weldon leads a glamorous but unhappy life in L.A., while Kendrick's granddaughter, high school junior Miriam, scrapes by with her family in tiny Sandford, Nova Scotia. After Weldon's parents break up, his bad behavior lands him in Sandford to spend a summer with his aunt and uncle, and the teens' comics shop meet-cute spells instant attraction. They date secretly, aware of their families' wariness of one another, until a lie Weldon tells threatens the budding romance and stirs up old injustices. This modern-day tale of fortune-crossed lovers features a relatable hero and heroine and a happier ending than Shakespeare's tragedy. If supporting characters seem somewhat underdeveloped and resolutions a little too tidy, snappy dialogue and a dramatic climax compensate. Ages 12-up. Agent: Bernadette Baker, Victoria Sanders. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Two heirs to a comics franchise find love and low-stakes drama in a small Nova Scotia town.Quiet Miriam works in a down-and-out comic-book store to save money for college. Cute rebel Weldon walks in one day and buys a painting depicting the Marvel-esque TomorrowMen. Awkward sparks fizz between them, but it's soon revealed that they're the heirs to a years-old family dispute. Miriam's grandfather helped create the TomorrowMen but signed a bad contract with his co-creatorWeldon's grandfather. The two men spent the rest of their lives in a legal battle over the rights to their characters, which eventually resulted in Weldon's father's taking the creative helm and Miriam's mother's accepting a settlement. Even though the issue is largely settled, both teens still feel the need to exorcise their family demons, at least long enough to delay their happy ending for a few hundred pages. The family drama and resulting tension between Miriam and Weldon never feel substantial, with little risk involved for either of them; misunderstandings work mostly to beef up the plot and are tritely brushed aside in an underwhelming climax at Comic-Con. All major characters are white. The narration feels flat and strained throughout, with none of the rich color and movement that explodes out of the superhero genre that provides this story's backdrop. Read a comic instead. (Romance. 12-15) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Before TomorrowMen was a megapopular comics series about to become a feature film, it was a tiny strip cocreated by Miriam's grandfather. But for Mir's family, the TomorrowMen are a thing of the past. Her grandfather, in a bad but legal deal, signed away his rights to his cocreation before it ever got big. Mir lives in a tiny Canadian town, works at a failing comics store, and wonders how she'll ever afford college. Then a boy comes in while she's working. He's cute, and he likes Mir's mother's artwork, but there's one huge problem, and that's his name, Weldon Warrick as in Warrick Studios, makers of the TomorrowMen movie. As in Joseph Warrick, Mir's grandfather's old partner, progenitor of the family that stole everything from hers. Graphic novelist Hicks makes her YA fiction debut with this charming novel that celebrates nerd culture and family loyalty. The sweet though somewhat standard romance plot is elevated by thoughtful characterizations, and the plentiful references to comics and conventions will delight fans new and old.--Maggie Reagan Copyright 2019 Booklist