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15+ oeuvres 200 utilisateurs 16 critiques

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Comprend les noms: Camille Jourdy

Séries

Œuvres de Camille Jourdy

Oeuvres associées

Léopold: chien de divan (2008) — Illustrateur — 6 exemplaires

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Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Jourdy, Camille
Date de naissance
1979
Sexe
female
Nationalité
France
Lieu de naissance
Chenôve, France
Lieux de résidence
Lyon, France

Membres

Critiques

A graphic novel about a dysfunctional family that is relatable for it's ordinary nature. When Juliette leaves Paris to go back to her hometown and crash with her dad - she isn't sure how long she plans on staying. She knows she wants to reconnect with her family and spend time with her older sister and eccentric mom. Juliette is dealing with crushing anxiety and depression - her father is lonely, her sister is unhappy in her marriage, and her grandma is getting lost in dementia. Told through beautiful and charming watercolor panels - this graphic novel is a breath of fresh air. It's emotional and filled with relatable characters - while not terribly exciting - it's still a nice quick read.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ecataldi | 3 autres critiques | Feb 27, 2024 |
This domestic drama is a bit mild but kept me reading along eagerly enough.

Juliette, an anxious and introverted young woman, visits her family in her hometown. Her parents are divorced and a bit acrimonious. Her outgoing sister is having an affair. And she meets a loser slob who she doesn't mind hanging out with. Bickering, slapstick and flirting ensue.

Side note: This is the third book I've read in the last month that has an out-of-nowhere cameo of the Pink Panther, and I'm not sure what the universe is trying to tell me with this weird confluence.

(Best of 2023 Project: I'm reading all the graphic novels that made it onto NPR's Books We Love 2023: Favorite Comics and Graphic Novels list.)
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
villemezbrown | 3 autres critiques | Jan 16, 2024 |
Pretty fun! I liked how easily the story flowed. The characters meandered from one place to the next, but their goal was to overthrow a tyrannical king. Jo felt perfectly like a headstrong little kid. The lore of the world doesn’t get explained, but it didn’t hinder the story in any way. Stuff just is.

Major Studio Ghibli x Hilda x Storybook vibes.

3.5
 
Signalé
DestDest | 2 autres critiques | Sep 13, 2023 |
Gasp! A graphic novel sitting on the table of new books in the library and one that I might like. What can I say? I grabbed it.

I don't know Camille Jourdy but this is a wonderful book telling of the return of Juliette to her family but with a family in chaos. Her mother and father are divorced but still niggle each other, her sister is having an affair out in the greenhouse at the end of the garden with the man from the costume shop and her Grandma is suffering from dementia. Oh, and Juliette is suffering with anxiety. What could possibly go wrong?

The story starts with the train journey, and if I didn't know before that this was France, I certainly did after this series of pictures. I suppose it could be anywhere but the pylons are definitely french in shape as is the post for the sign in the last image. I have seen those concrete posts all over France. Each image has so much detail in it - the industrial centres, rural towns eventually pulling into her hometown.

However, it is like all those coming home trips. You look forward to it but once you are there it feels like you want to go back to where you came from, in this case Paris.

There are some very funny moments in the book. Her sister's lover making the most of the costumes he has in the shop to wear when he visits her in her greenhouse. He's a bunny, a wolf and a ghost. It's the ghost trip where it all falls apart for her sister because her children complain that they have a ghost under the desk in their bedroom and although they aren't believed, he is eventually caught.

The main feeling throughout the book is melancholy, with things seeming to fall apart including the duckling she finds with a man she met in a bar. He looks after the duckling but in the end it gets squashed so even that doesn't succeed - nor does the relationship with him.

The pictures I really loved were the whole page or double page images. They are bright, often of the outside and where they are not, there is a wall decorated or papered in trees, twigs and birds. They are often referred to as Matisse-like but I think they are very like Hockney's Spring collection. The image of MaryLou's boyfriend dressed in his wolf costume in what looks like a wooded area is excellent. I love the toys strewn at the base of the fence just to remind us that this is not a Little Red Riding Hood story although it could be argued he is playing the role of the big, bad wolf in their marriage. On the following page, Juliette visits her Grandmother and sees her false teeth in a jar beside her bed. She, of course, says "Oh Grandmother, what big teeth you have . . .". This being 'real' life, her Grandmother can't hear her so the joke is dropped.

I loved this book even though nothing is sorted out at the end.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
allthegoodbooks | 3 autres critiques | Aug 25, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
15
Aussi par
1
Membres
200
Popularité
#110,008
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
16
ISBN
31
Langues
5

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