![]() ![]() ![]() Obviously the father, does not approve, and removes his daughter by first sending her out of the country and when that doesn’t work, he has her committed. He never implies (like her father does) that she is doing anything wrong or that she is “broken” in any way. ![]() At one point, he shares a couple of YouTube videos (the links worked when I checked) to a variety of different “Chopsticks” performances. From the beginning, Frank does not see her inability to play other music a problem. While it is left to the reader to decide whether her inability is due to mental illness, grief (dead mother alert!), rebellion against her very controlling father, or from having to “perform” almost her entire life and never getting to just be herself, her attraction to Frank is life-altering. Glory, an extraordinary pianist, has in the past few years suffered from the inability to perform any composition other than “Chopsticks.” Every time she sits down to play, the only music she can perform is Chopsticks. The story opens with the “breaking news” of missing musician Glory Fleming. ![]() In alternating viewpoints, the romance between a genius musician and her next-door neighbor – an average student with an incredible gift for drawing – unfolds. Chopsticks by Jessica Anthony and Rodrigo Corral is not quite a graphic novel, but a mix of story with a variety of media images, including: photos, text messages, mix CDs, pencil drawings, TV screen shots, letters, emails, and even ticket stubs. ![]()
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