The Reprieve
By (Author) Jean-Pierre Gibrat
Idea & Design Works
Idea & Design Works
1st May 2018
United States
Young Adult
Fiction
741.5944
Paperback
128
Width 217mm, Height 279mm, Spine 9mm
516g
Meet Cecile as she tries to help escaped prisoner-of-war Julien Sarlat avoid capture during the Occupation of France in 1943 in this prequel to the award-winning graphic novel Flight of the Raven. Meet Cecile as she tries to help escaped prisoner-of-war Julien Sarlat avoid capture during the Occupation of France in 1943 in this prequel to the award-winning graphic novel Flight of the Raven. Julien has escaped from a prisoner-of-war train headed for Germany, but fate intervenes when the train is bombed and among the victims a body is identified as his. Dead to the world, he takes advantage of the situation and hides in the small village of Cambeyrac, using his secret observation post overlooking the village square to watch the permanent theater that people offer in the course of the day. Loves, hatreds, jealousies, cowardice, acts of heroism... nothing escapes the observer's eye, especially not the beautiful waitress Cecile. Until the moment comes when, spectator no more, he must become an actor himself and meet his destiny. This hidden life he had hoped to live was just a reprieve. The book also includes a portfolio of pin-ups and sketches featuring its heroine.
Gibrat uses The Reprieve and Flight of the Raven to explore ideas concerning commitment, responsibility, and collaboration, and each of the characters his stories illustrates facets of engag. The art in both works is lush and beautiful, and Gibrats pacing is aptly handled given the contextual action, and sometimes the lack thereof, embedded in each narrative. Comics Alternative
"Each of the pages inThe Reprieveis an impressive work of art. Scoop
Jean-Pierre Gibrat was born in Paris in 1954, less than a decade after the Second World War. "In my generation," he says, "everyone was at least once asked the question- 'What would you have done if you had lived at that time'" It was with the award-winning The Reprieve that Jean-Pierre Gibrat began writing his own scenarios, seamlessly uniting words and pictures.