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(She's right, but he won't admit it.) In Shortcomings, Asian-American graphic novelist Adrian Tomine (Scrapbook, Summer Blonde) has finally done what many fans and critics have suggested he should ...
Adrian Tomine is known for his comic series “Optic Nerve,” New Yorker covers and graphic novels “Killing and Dying” and “Shortcomings,” the latter of which was adapted into a film.
Cartoonist Adrian Tomine is not, and his new book is a memoir of sorts compiling many of the embarrassments he's endured on tour over his decades-long career. NPR's Andrew Limbong has this report.
Adrian Tomine is best known for his New Yorker covers — finely drawn, wistful and sly illustrations that honor the beleaguered individual in an increasingly soulless, technology-obsessed world ...
The cover of this year’s Entertainment Issue was drawn by Adrian Tomine. Tomine, whose work often plays with narrative, has contributed several covers to the magazine, and is also known as the ...
In his new cover, Adrian Tomine, the artist behind one of the most enduring images of quarantine, depicts the lingering presence of the pandemic on our past, our present, and perhaps even our future.
“Where I live in Brooklyn, there’re always a lot of books being set out on the sidewalk, and there’re also a lot of authors walking around the neighborhood,” Adrian Tomine says of this ...
Eisner Award–winner Tomine (Killing and Dying) depicts choice vignettes from a decades-long cartooning career in this ruefully funny, often deliberately mortifying memoir. In the early 1980s in ...
Graphic novelist and cartoonist Adrian Tomine’s cartoons regularly appear in The New Yorker. His other works include the novel “Killing and Dying” and the comic series “Optic Nerve.” The film ...
Please contact us at plus@slate.com for help. This week, host Rumaan Alam talks to cartoonist and New Yorker cover artist Adrian Tomine, who just released a graphic memoir called The Loneliness of ...