Lost and Found: A Heart of the City Collection
By (Author) Steenz
2
Andrews McMeel Publishing
Andrews McMeel Publishing
7th June 2023
United States
Children
Fiction
741.56973
Paperback
176
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 13mm
313g
"Warm, funny, and a visual delight, Steenz's take on Heart of the City is next-level." Dana Simpson, Phoebe and Her Unicorn
This second collection of Heart of the City comics by award-winning author Steenz includes an entire school years worth of friendship, drama, comedy, and middle school life lessons. Youll want to book a front-row seat!
Heart Lamarr wants to follow in her fathers footsteps as an actor, but she hasnt seen him in yearsuntil he shows up on Christmas Eve with a surprise gift. Its an especially timely reappearance after Hearts dreams of stardom hit a major snag. Meanwhile, Charlotte and friends to lead a high-tech investigation into the mystery of the missing Lost and Found items. A visit from Deans cousin leads to a riveting boys vs. girls showdown, and Charlotte welcomes a shy new girl to the school after seeing her with her family at the soup kitchen where Charlotte volunteers.
The second book collection of Heart of the City comics by Steenz digs deeper into the adventures, friendships, and daily dramas of Heart Lamarr, a girl from Philadelphia with big dreams of heading straight from middle school to Broadway stardom.
Sixth graders find more occasions for stress and laughter in this second collection of the Heart of the City comics.
Drama queen Heart Lamarr (who is White) still takes center stage (except in the school play: UNDERSTUDY!), but some of her friends step into the limelight now and again. Kat, who is biracial, discovers that eyeglasses arent the social stigma she expects and becomes smitten by brown-skinned hijab-wearing classmate Lee. Dean, who is White, stands up to a cousin who accuses him of being soft because of his friendships with girls, and Charlotte, who is Black, does a bit of friendship matchmaking at a family barbecue. Meanwhile, Heart endures an uncomfortable Christmas visit from her clueless remarried dad (So youre 10 now! Huh Im 11), is startled to overhear herself referred to as Charlottes white friend (I dont think about my race! Charlotte: Lucky you!), and, after leading an inquiry into whos selling items from the schools lost-and-found, pressures the culprits into cutting it out. A character list would have been helpful for new readers, particularly as a number of peripheral classmates and relatives drift in and out of view, and adults are often hard to distinguish from the kids in the art. Still, each episode flows seamlessly into the next, and the banter is light and clever.
More minicrises and breezy doses of growing up. (Graphic fiction. 10-13) Kirkus Reviews
* Kirkus Reviews *Christina Stewart, known as Steenz, is a St. Louis-based cartoonist, editor, and professor. They are the cartoonist on the Ringo Award-nominated syndicated comic stripHeart Of The City, the co-creator of Dwayne McDuffie Award-winning graphic novelArchival Quality(Oni Press), and are featured in short story anthologies such as Eisner and Ignatz Award-winningELEMENTS: Fire,Mine!, andDead Beats. Steenz launched and edited the popular RPG periodicalRolled & Told. They participate in and create community-building comics-related programming, and are a frequent panelist at comic cons. Steenz currently teaches cartooning at Webster University while editing titles from independent publishers.They live with their husband, two cats,and watch a lot of esoteric social documentaries.