- A Wall Street Journal Best Book of 2023
- Selected for the Wall Street Journal Holiday Gift Books Guide
- A Kirkus Best Middle Grade Book of 2023
- A Booklist Editors' Choice: Graphic Novels, 2023
- A Moonbow Best Childrens Book of 2023
- A 100 Scope Notes Most Astonishingly Unconventional Childrens Book of 2023
- Selected for Publishers Weekly's Big Indie Books of Fall feature AND PWs Holiday Gift Guide!
- Selected for A Room of Ones Owns 2023 Holiday Catalog
- A Daily Bulldog Holiday Book Pick for 2023
- Shelf Editions Bookshop Book of the Month, January 2024
- Featured in We Are Teacherss Best New Books Coming November 2023 for Kids and Teachers
- STARRED reviews from Kirkus, Booklist, and Publishers Weekly
Blexbolex is a singular talent, someone whose work, while often referencing the past, is entirely his own. In The Magicians, his beautiful and strange illustrationsbuilt up digitally through his signature spot-color layers, inspired by traditional screen printingare combined with a Japanese binding technique that is rarely ever seen in published books. The seemingly simple layout of almost the entire book (one drawing and a few lines of text per page, two per spread) belies a delightfully complicated story about three magicians being pursued by a huntress and her mechanical dragon. But who are the good guys here? Who are the villains? An exploration of the magic and difficulty of childhood, the wonders of the imagination, and the unique properties of books themselves, The Magicians is another utterly surprising gift from Blexbolex. Youll want to read it again and again. Brian Selznick, author & illustrator of The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Big Tree
With an almost monastic commitment to creating images that feel both universal and deeply personal, Blexbolex has swerved in the course of his career from wild, aggressive mark-making to a pure distillation of forms. He has relentlessly followed a muse that has surely been an exhausting alchemical pursuit. The result is this generous story that trusts the readers youthful intuition that the solidity we perceive in the modern world is only one layer, and its tissue paper thin, like the brilliant, kinetic illustrations themselves.As with all great kids' stories,The Magiciansis really about remembering the things we were born knowing and taught to forget. Blexbolex strives to remember the essence of everything.Jacob Covey, Fantagraphics creative director
TRADE REVIEWS
A Wall Street Journal Best Childrens Book of 2023!This cinematic story by the artist Blexbolex, presented in dynamic silkscreen-like images with text translated from the French by Karin Snelson, is like nothing children ages 9 and older will have seen before... The supple feel of the book in your hands, the curious whispering of its paperThe Magicians is sui generis. Wall Street Journal
A Booklist Editors Choice: Youth Graphic Novels, 2023! Three magicians escape confinement and are pursued by determined magic-hunters in this enigmatic book about imagination, magic, and who gets to wield it, stunninglyillustrated in a brightly colored vintage style. Booklist
Its pages silky to the touch, its colors reminiscent of an ancient book from a forgotten library shelf, French cartoonist Blexbolexs book ushers readers into a fully realized yet exhilaratingly enigmatic world Familiar, mythical story elements play out in new, expectation-confounding ways, like the hunters, one who would be at home in a Chinese New Years parade, the other in a readers favorite manga series. This carries over to the format, conforming to the standards of neither graphic novel nor picture book, its single-page panels contain the visual panache of a comic, with character design like that old half-recalled picture book from your childhood, and each is accompanied by one artfully worded paragraph There is much here that will tug on a nostalgic heartstring and also thrill and mystify. A remarkable creation, particularly so in design and tone, readers young and old will find little else like this lyrical, thrilling, and mysterious tale. Booklist, STARRED REVIEW
A Kirkus Best Graphic Middle-Grade Book of 2023! In this translated French import, three magicians materialize from prolonged dormancy, but hot on their heels are a huntress and a mechanical lion/dragon. Eleven chapter headings organize intriguing third-person episodes The opening suggests that this fantasy occurs now, while the conclusion says it will be again. Nearly square, silkscreenlike images in a controlled palette are framed by the borders of abundant, soft, creamy pages. Several sentences per pageall in blue capsreveal an elegant translation: The elephant slams the door with the surly incivility of a traveler in a hurry. Climactic moments fill double spreads. When the main characters combat their pursuers and acquaintances, tilted angles and sharp-edged shadows dominate; when the protagonists escape outside through a tear in the page, the compositions are less saturated, with childlike scribbles producing a more innocent vibe Recurring threads emerge: the quest for home, the tension between orderliness and chaos, the desirability of magic in the world, and the wisdom of reconsidering first impressions. As these motifs wend through transformations and cameos containing familiar folkloric elements, readers experience the sense of a gifted storyteller improvising as ideas flow. Protecting magic, extending grace, leaping into the future with hopethis tour de force will nourish souls.Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW
In a fast-paced, action-packed chase that traverses time and space, the huntress and the magicians take turns gaining the upper hand, until an even more treacherous party enters the fold. Via expressive text, artist Blexbolex (Vacation) presents a dreamlike fantasy graphic novel adventure that celebrates creativity, imagination, and magic. The silkscreen-style illustrations are awash in a vivid palette of mostly primary colors, giving this visually stunning work a vintage vibe. Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW
Both children and adults will be dazzled Blexbolexs careful compositions evoke sweeping action and emotion, and one will want to constantly leave The Magicians open for display. With its jaunty blue text and cream-colored, double-layered pages, the physical printing of this volume is impeccableamong the best of the yearand accentuates the reading experience Elevated word choice and spirited phrasing give a timeless quality to this fantastic graphic novel, which muses upon mercy, change and possibility. Just as any gift should, The Magicians certainly lends itself to endless revisiting with its thematic and emotional depth. BookPage, STARRED REVIEW
Selected for the WSJ Holiday Gift Childrens Books Guide! The Magicians by the French graphic artist Blexbolex is such an unusual book, so striking and tactile and enthralling, that it is hard to say who will get the most out of it. Younger children will be able to lose themselves in the mesmerizing colors and shapes of the dynamic, retro-feeling illustrations Readers older than 9 will be able to follow the action-filled, multi-dimensional melodrama with the help of text that runs like extended subtitles beneath the pictures Physically the book itself is like a magical object. Despite being thick and oversize, it has a supple feel... Each page is made up of a single sheet of lightweight paper folded over, and as the pages turn they seem almost to whisper. If all this makes The Magicians sound exceptional, well, goodbecause it is. Wall Street Journal
A Moonbow Best Childrens Book of 2023! Peopleby Blexbolex fundamentally changed the way I think about childrens books, and his latest,The Magicians,is another example of the possibilities of the form. Somehow, it manages to be a comic book, graphic novel, picture book, and art book all in one, with suspenseful, magical, fantastical adventures throughout. Everything from the metallic endpapers to the poster-style page layouts to the propelling video-game-like structure adds to its dramatic effect. This is averyspecial book. Taylor Sterling, Moonbow
A 100 Scope Notes Most Astonishingly Unconventional Childrens Book of 2023! This book isnt even the same species as traditional childrens books. The dreamlike multiverse story, the silkscreen illustrations, the binding, the PAPER good god, its like nothing youre going to see this or any year. Travis Jonker, 100 Scope Notes (A School Library Journal Blog)
Imaginative and fantastical Beginning with the phrase once upon a time that is now and ending with once upon a time that will begin again, the creator Blexbolex uses artistic license to create something wholly different. The text is translated from French while the style and color of the illustrations take up most of the page Capable of being read in a single sitting, the story offers creativity and adventure as its backbone, offering escapism and a unique setting similar Jon Klassens The Skull. VERDICT: A gem of a story, it can easily be seen as an all-ages title in a world of imagination which defies true categorization. School Library Journal
Very much in his tradition of the book as an object Blexbolexs silkscreen-style of overprinting three spot colors in layers on these folded and gathered pages gives The Magicians that extra luxuriously antique artbook flavor The reasons for the chase, the identities of the magicians and their pursuers are the mysteries driving the beautifully designed and executed narrative, so you will want to discover those things for yourself. Suffice to say, if you or your children like the fairytale structures of previous books by Blexbolex, this one has all the same ingredients that make those pleasurable reading. Four stars. Woodrow Phoenix, for the Slings and Arrows Graphic Novel Guide
What I like about the book is the utter unpredictability of the magicaladventures and the fact that it really is hard to figure out who is good and who is evil... The scenes of movement and transformation happen quickly, within a page or two, so by the time 182 pages have elapsed, the reader must decide if it's time to reread the book to take stock of whose side they will root for. The physical book feels like a tour de force of cool bookmaking... The author has created the vintage feel of a 1920s silkscreen or woodblock printed picture book from eastern Europe... Recommended for lovers of unique visual storytelling and older readers who like fantastical illustrated books.Stephanie Tournas (Robbins Library, Arlington, MA) for Youth Book Services Review
BOOKSELLER REVIEWS
Selected for A Room of Ones Owns 2023 Holiday Catalog! French cartoonist & artist Blexbolex is well known for his stunning and strange risographs, and this book is among his best! A wonderful journey for anyone who lives at the intersection of imagination and wonder. Gretchen, A Room of Ones Own Bookstore (Madison, WI)
The Magiciansis a fantastical tale of magic and adventure, chaos and control. What would a world look like if there was no magic?An oversized graphic novel that reads like a fable and is packaged in the most dazzling way Ive ever seen. French illustrator Blexbolex's latest is an impressive work of art that will make for a wonderful gift to be treasured. Jen, Boswell Book Company (Milwaukee, WI)
A fairy tale in the gaps, uniquely child friendly. Blexbolex as imagination stimulation Reads like a feast with each course in a different household, and, ultimately satisfying! Griffin, bookseller at Book People (Austin, TX)
An untraditional, mystical story about the last of the tricksy magicians, and the huntress who wishes to defeat them. Each page is a work of art. Anthony Gaetjen, bookseller at Book People (Austin, TX)
The Magicians is a deliriously gorgeous epic adventure about three magicians released from spells of imprisonment and then pursued across time and space A brilliant gift for an inquisitive kid or grown-up. Tom Nissley, owner & bookseller at Phinney Books (Seattle, WA)
A Daily Bulldog Holiday Book Pick for 2023! The Magicians is a unique illustrated tale. Even its design and paper are unexampled! Translated from the French, this story of magic and adventure offers a depth and scope of beguiling strangeness, rewarding vistas and narrative landscapes. Stop by the store and explore this one for yourself! Kenny Brechner, reviewer for the Daily Bulldog and bookseller at Devaney, Doak & Garrett Booksellers (Farmington, ME)