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    To the Heart of the Storm #1

    To the Heart of the Storm » To the Heart of the Storm #1 - To the Heart of the Storm released by Kitchen Sink on January 1, 1991.

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    Autobiographical Novel of Will Eisner's life in the 1920-30's. Eisner's most overtly autobiographical work: a reflection on how the anti-Semitism of America in the 1920s and '30s shapes a young man's developing personality and life. It is also a touching family history told through flashbacks as a young man heads for basic training immediately after the beginning of World War II.  
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    4.2 stars

    Average score of 3 user reviews

    Review: To the Heart of the Storm 0

    Eisner does an excellent job of telling a very personal story in the midst of the growing tensions leading up to World War II. As he relates to us his life in New York City, there’s a tangible inevitability to the brewing conflict. I’m not much of a history enthusiast so my knowledge of the time period doesn’t go much beyond the broad strokes. So I appreciated that his tale that dealt more with the emotional climate (no pun intended) rather than the broader political landscape I was already fami...

    0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

    Aw... 0

    Sorry, I didn't care for this. I wish I did. I went and got my money back.The book covers the childhood of Will Eisner, not his entire childhood, but specifically all the antisemitism he would see and experience. If you're expecting it to cover him and his art, it doesn't. Pages show him doing so, but that's just to show what he's doing in the scene. The best part of the whole book his near the beginning, where Willy's father tells him, "Only one weapon is needed when up against a dumb force." A...

    0 out of 0 found this review helpful.
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