
You can find a copy at your local library, buy a copy, or you can read the entire comic online with neat blog posts from Scott and Alex talking about their process at. Highly illegal, but after all a girl has to do what she can to get by. Spill Zone: The Broken Vow is the conclusion to Westerfeld's latest graphic novel duology which began with Spill Zone. But Addison sneaks in to take photos of the bizarre phenomena that occur throughout the spill zone so she can sell them to collectors. Nobody in or out (even supposing there were people who could get out). Club) with his original graphic novel series, Spill Zone. It's been three years and the town is still in quarantine. New York Times bestselling author Scott Westerfeld delivers a 'stunning sci-fi spectacle' (A.V.

Addison's parents were working in the hospital and so, like everyone else, didn't make it out in time. Addison was out of town at the time but her sister had another kind of luck, she and a school bus full of kids somehow made it out but never spoke again. And now everything's straight up nuts there. Three years ago, Poughkeepsie (which I only know of through Looneytoons) was destroyed in some sort of toxic mix-up disaster involving a nuclear and a nanobot production facility. Hilary Sycamore (the colourist) is absolutely on fire here.

In any case, this book would not likely survive being B&W because its use of colour is so integral to what it is, to what it is doing. Like with Asterios Polyp only not quite so much. It's one of those books where the colourist really matters. Genre notes: disaster recovery, post-minor-apocalypse

Daily Graphic Novel Recommendation 163 Spill Zoneīy by Scott Westerfield, Alex Puvilland, and Hilary Sycamore
