Heart of the City by Steenz for April 18, 2019
Transcript:
heart: Mr. burgess, I wanted to prove to you that reading a graphic novel is really reading, because I don't think you've actually read one. so I went to the library to take some out. heart: But you know what? I went there, and they were all checked out! Heart: so it tracked down some of the readers instead... oh, boy....
einarbt almost 6 years ago
Good one Heart! Well played.
Templo S.U.D. almost 6 years ago
I’d be surprised that either all or some of the graphic novel readers there are Heart’s classmates in Mr. Burgess’s class.
codycab almost 6 years ago
What teach? You’d rather she get the whole group?
blunebottle almost 6 years ago
I’d side with Heart. If a kid will get deeply involved with a story with graphics, they are still reading. Did you know you can get a Manga Bible? From Genesis to Revelation? Let me tell you, it’s graphic!.
Seto_kaiba0101 almost 6 years ago
100% with Heart!
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member almost 6 years ago
Well, as Somerset Maugham put it, “if forty million people say a foolish thing it does not become a wise one, but the wise man is foolish to give them the lie.”
Nevets almost 6 years ago
If reading a graphic novel like Maus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maus), a Pulitzer Prize winner, isn’t reading, then I’ll submit many books without pictures shouldn’t qualify either.
John Leonard Premium Member almost 6 years ago
As long as he’s judging books on appearances, rather than content, I suppose I should confess that a lot of my books look like my cell phone.
Amra Leo almost 6 years ago
YES!
cholomanaba almost 6 years ago
I guess that teaches Mr. Burguess NOT to mess with Heart…. one point to the oppressed!
ShadowBeast Premium Member almost 6 years ago
Heart brought an army.
1001770 almost 6 years ago
Reader powers unite!
DM2860 almost 6 years ago
Many great classics have been reproduced as graphic novel.
DukeDiamond almost 6 years ago
YES!!! <3
Plods with ...™ almost 6 years ago
!
Mary Sullivan Premium Member almost 6 years ago
She’s certainly learned a lot from this project, that’s for sure.
marilynnbyerly almost 6 years ago
I’d have done some research and told him what some very important adults thought about the subject. Or I’d sic Neil Gaiman on him. Same results.
Herb L 1954 almost 6 years ago
Ya gotta have Heart ;)
Dragoncat almost 6 years ago
Hence the answer to that famous question, “You and what army?”
willie_mctell almost 6 years ago
A woman i worked for in IT originally taught high school remedial English. She had her students bring stuff to class to read aloud. They could bring comics, car magazines, celebrity trash, anything they wanted. It got them engaged in a way that “good” reading matter couldn’t.
Laurie Sefton Premium Member almost 6 years ago
Heart could have brought in the school librarian….
barister almost 6 years ago
Unfortunately, that group proves the teacher’s point and explains alot about kids today.
asrialfeeple almost 6 years ago
Our name is Legion, for we are many.
Sailor46 USN 65-95 almost 6 years ago
We had to have our book approved by the teacher before even doing the report.
sueb1863 almost 6 years ago
He never said reading a graphic novel wasn’t reading, he said it wasn’t the same as reading a book and he’s right. They’re two different mediums. Reading a graphic novel adaptation of a book is not the same thing as reading the book itself.
lemon868 almost 6 years ago
I too read a great many graphic novels, and some are just that. They are autobiographies, science fiction adventure, and many are magnificent. So I side with Heart too.
Teto85 Premium Member almost 6 years ago
Good to see the large population of girls in that last panel.
eladee AKA Wally almost 6 years ago
Well at least they are reading SOMETHING! Sometimes as a teacher you have to pick your battles.
Decepticomic over 3 years ago
So I get the complaint Burgess has. Text-only novels are generally longer, more complex, and more boring to read. Kids should have a tough time with reading so that they can develop negative associations with it. That way, when they become adults, they’ll generally try to avoid reading books at all (besides textbooks) because of terrible memories from school. After all, that’s what HE probably had to do.