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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: subways, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Swipe File: Kris Mukai’s Commuter and a real woman with a subway pole in her butt

While there were more great comics than you could count at this weekend’s MoCCA Fest one that got a little notice was Kris Mukai’s Commuter (available for sale here) which captures real life moments of subway horror (rats, puke, bums, vandals, peoples selling batteries, mariachi bands) in comics form.

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And lest you think she made the whole thing up, here’s a photo posted today on NY Magazine’s Daily Intelligencer blog that shows that THE TRUTH IS MORE HORRIFYING THAN ANY FICTION

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This is why I use gloves on the subway even in summer. Do not touch!

At the same time, you need to admire the strength of the grip of that woman’s butt cheeks.

1 Comments on Swipe File: Kris Mukai’s Commuter and a real woman with a subway pole in her butt, last added: 4/9/2014
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2. Review: Earth-Friendly Buildings, Bridges and More: The Eco-Journal of Corry Lapont by Etta Kaner

Venture into the world of marvels of engineering with "green" building advocate, Corry Lapont. Click here to read my full review.

0 Comments on Review: Earth-Friendly Buildings, Bridges and More: The Eco-Journal of Corry Lapont by Etta Kaner as of 1/1/1900
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3. Subway

Subway by Christoph Niemann

Take a trip through the tunnels with two children and a father on a rainy day.  Wait for the train to come, feel the breeze and the rumble.  Take the A train to all 44 stations.  Then the F train filled with interesting people.  You can take the 1 or 2 trains depending on whether you need the express.  7 heads to Times Square and you get a wonderful view on Q.  F and G run together, then apart, and then return together again.  When the day is done, you will still want to be riding the rails underground. 

Told in happy rhyme, this book plays with rhythm and internal rhyme.  It has the pace of trains, pauses at stations, rushes forward at times.  The illustrations are done in thick lines with bright colors on black backgrounds.  They evoke a feeling of looking at signs rather than illustrations.  At the same time, they have a jaunty sense of humor that works really well.

I’d grab this one in a New York minute to use in a transportation unit or storytime.  Children from New York will immediately recognize the places, while folks from around the country will enjoy this uniquely NY title.  Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from library copy.

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