![]() ![]() Bonus content includes three recipes and instructions on how to make African braids. The panel structure is consistent, with no more than six similarly sized panels per page. ![]() Sapin’s art is earth-toned, with a scratchy yet precise line quality. But with its gross-out humor and plucky heroine, the collection reads like Dennis the Menace meets Pearls Before Swine, set in West Africa-and may appeal to fans of both. Realistic moments are not softened, such as when Akissi eats rotten fruit off the ground and contracts tapeworms that crawl out of her nose. The short story format sacrifices some character development, but the dynamic among Akissi, her brother, and their parents is classic nuclear family drama and hilarity. In “Midnight Pee,” Akissi’s brother, Fofana, refuses to wake up to accompany her to the outside bathroom, so she urinates on his blanket. In “Good Mothers,” Akissi and friends steal their neighbor’s baby to play “mums.” In “Sunday Feast,” Akissi consumes all the food for Communion at church (including the wine) before the service begins. The tales, translated from French, follow Akissi’s day-to-day life in her Ivory Coast town. Gr 2-5 –This comprehensive volume includes the seven short stories featured in Abouet & Sapin’s Akissi: Cat Invasion, along with 14 others. from French by Judith Taboy & Marie Bédrune. ![]()
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