Ebook {Epub PDF} Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass by Mariko Tamaki






















 · Mariko Tamaki and Steve Pugh's graphic novel Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass retells the origin of the popular antihero as she grows up in Gotham City, making a lot of changes to the key players typically associated with her bltadwin.ru: Liam Nolan.  · breaking glass by Mariko Tamaki illustrated by Steve Pugh ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 3, Tamaki’s (Laura Dean Keeps Breaking up With Me, , etc.) version of Harley operates with a moral compass while still being bubbly and bltadwin.ru: Sierra Mckenzie. Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass is a coming-of-age story about choices, consequences, justice, fairness, and progress and how a weird kid from Gotham's poorest part of .


Breaking Glass is a standout achievement that demonstrates the unique blend of words, pictures, and color that comics offer. With its diverse cast and respect for the essential natures of long-beloved characters, Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass should appeal to comic book newcomers as well. Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass ebook By Mariko Tamaki. Read a Sample. Sign up to save your library From Eisner Award and Caldecott Honor-winning author Mariko Tamaki (This One Summer) and Eisner Award-nominated artist Steve Pugh comes a coming-of-age story about choices, consequences, and how a weird kid from Gotham goes about defining her. Mariko Tamaki and Steve Pugh's Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass reinterprets Harley Quinn as a high school girl living in Gotham in the modern day. The concept resembles Jeffrey Thomas's cancelled animated series, Gotham High, though Tamaki avoids the urge to force cameos of familiar characters, instead telling her own bltadwin.ru the income inequality of a major city like Gotham and the power.


"Harleen is a tough, outspoken, rebellious kid who lives in a ramshackle apartment above a karaoke cabaret owned by a drag queen named MAMA. Ever since Harle. The latest original graphic novel from DC Ink, DC's publishing imprint for young-adult readers, is Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass, which reimagines the antihero as teenager trying to find her way at a new high school in Gotham City. Created by award-winning writer Mariko Tamaki and fan-favorite artist Steve Pugh, the graphic novel provides a fresh take on the popular character, outside of DC Universe continuity, without jettisoning the more recognizable elements from her classic depiction. Mariko Tamaki and Steve Pugh’s “Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass” reinterprets Harley Quinn as a high school girl living in Gotham in the modern day. The concept resembles Jeffrey Thomas’s cancelled animated series, “Gotham High,” though Tamaki avoids the urge to force cameos of familiar characters, instead telling her own story.

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