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The Shiniest Jewel

A Family Love Story

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A moving graphic memoir that poignantly recounts Marian Henley's trials and tribulations in her late 40s: adopting a baby from Russia, deciding whether to marry her younger boyfriend, and coping with her elderly father's illness.
At 49, cartoonist Marian Henley hasn't committed to marrying the man with whom she has been dating for seven years. But as the Big 5-0 looms, she realizes that above all else she wants a child. Her story follows the heartbreaking ups and downs of going through the international adoption process; deciding when it's time to grow up and maybe even get married; and in the end, it's the story of a daughter's relationship with her father, and how becoming a mother finally led her to understand him.
The Shiniest Jewel is a touching narrative, accompanied by Marian's winsome drawings, that beautifully weaves together her realizations about the joy, and sometimes heartbreak, of building a family.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 21, 2008
      Nationally published comic strip artist Henley offers a warm, funny memoir of adopting her son, William, which will make you cry. With its talk of yoga, dating and the wacky freelance life of a cartoonist, it starts off sounding like a Sex in the City
      for the Austin, Tex., set. It’s not. Where many older women comic artists fall into triteness, quips about men and snark, Henley rolls the reader back to a place where different generations matter and life makes sense. Comics are known for craziness, but they’re also a medium that, unlike prose fiction, has a talent for making art from happy situations. On the surface, the protagonist’s life is going to the aging, creative woman’s hell: approaching 50, childless, with a younger boyfriend possibly afraid to commit, and, oh, yeah, her dad’s dying. But even as the adoption agency screws up again and again, people come through, and her father finally meets the new son. The art’s thin black lines belie the depth of the book. The drawings’ simplicity works with the story, but the lines could be more expressive. Someone needs to take her roller-ball away from her. Otherwise, it’s a near perfect book, especially for women over 30.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 1, 2008
      Nationally published comic strip artist Henley offers a warm, funny memoir of adopting her son, William, which will make you cry. With its talk of yoga, dating and the wacky freelance life of a cartoonist, it starts off sounding like a Sex in the City for the Austin, Tex., set. It\x92s not. Where many older women comic artists fall into triteness, quips about men and snark, Henley rolls the reader back to a place where different generations matter and life makes sense. Comics are known for craziness, but they\x92re also a medium that, unlike prose fiction, has a talent for making art from happy situations. On the surface, the protagonist\x92s life is going to the aging, creative woman\x92s hell: approaching 50, childless, with a younger boyfriend possibly afraid to commit, and, oh, yeah, her dad\x92s dying. But even as the adoption agency screws up again and again, people come through, and her father finally meets the new son. The art\x92s thin black lines belie the depth of the book. The drawings\x92 simplicity works with the story, but the lines could be more expressive. Someone needs to take her roller-ball away from her. Otherwise, it\x92s a near perfect book, especially for women over 30.

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  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

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