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Blue Sky Through the Window of a Moving Car

Comics for Beautiful, Awful and Ordinary Days

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Jordan Bolton's Blue Sky Through The Window of A Moving Car is a poignant collection of comics that explore universal experiences and emotions through art and poetry. Small yet powerful, and equal parts heart-breaking and heart-warming, these poetic comics are intensely relatable and go straight to the heart of what it means to be human.
Most of life is made up of mundane moments on ordinary days. But every moment, every good day, bad day, and average day, had to happen exactly the way that it did for you to exist. Everything that made you, connects us all in small, invisible, and beautiful ways.
This first comic collection from artist Jordan Bolton explores the fleeting details that unite us. Jordan brings together the visual language of comics with the heartfelt language of poetry, to express moments of love and heartbreak, embarrassment and shame, hope and disappointment, grief and happiness. Split into sections that reflect where we spend the majority of our time—In Public, In Transit, and At Home—Bolton shines spotlights on the lives and stories unfolding around us every day that we might otherwise ignore.
With the addition of new and unseen comics, Blue Sky Through The Window of A Moving Car is a gentle reminder that everything is ordinary, everything is extraordinary, and everything is connected.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 4, 2024
      Bolton, a graphic designer, debuts with a striking portfolio of reflections about human connections and failures to connect. The collection is divided into three sections—“In Public,” “In Transit,” and “At Home”—that reflect how people’s actions and their meaning change according to context. Bolton’s cool, diagrammatic art, suggesting a sort of instruction manual for life, contrasts with the brashly heartfelt text written over these scenes. In the title piece, for example, the narrator’s description of a rare loving exchange with his father appears over impersonal images of trees and power lines as seen from a car window. Other interludes capture simple, familiar moments—a teenager chewing gum to hide the alcohol on her breath (“Peppermint”), a woman acknowledging the practical gestures of love from her husband (“Range Life”), a feuding couple talking past each other at the store (“Furniture Shopping”)—with restrained, static digital art that seldom shows faces. The effect is distancing but also imbues the stories with a certain universality; it’s easy to project one’s own experiences onto these glimpses of other lives. The story “Ghosts” discusses the relief of “talking with someone about mundane things” in times of trouble, an attitude that sums up the volume as a whole. These delicate tales capture the vitality of everyday.

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  • English

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