Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Graphic Novel Review - 'All-New Wolverine, Vol. 1: The Four Sisters' by Tom Taylor (Writer), David López (Artist), David Navarrot (Artist), Bengal (Cover Artist), Mark Paniccia (Editor), Darren Shan (Editor), Christina Harrington (Editor)

A speedy, simple yet compelling and well written Marvel's 'X-23' comic.

Action-packed and dynamic, 'All-New Wolverine, Vol. 1: The Four Sisters' is about X-23, aka Laura Kinney, aka the, ah, all-new Wolverine (during Logan's, pfft, "death", which has lasted for roughly twenty minutes, give or take).

Laura is a clone of the original Wolverine, a science experiment, a lab rat, an ex-assassin, and a child, whose new nonkilling code keeps being tested again and again, as she finds and then works alongside
her clones, or sisters, named Gabby, Zelda and Bellona.

So many clones in the Marvel universe. How can anyone keep up?

No hunting, and no killing on Laura's end, and a horrifying conspiracy surrounding an obviously evil science, genetics and tech lab industry will be unravelled.

The plot, the beats, and a lot of the action sequences and plot twists of 'All-New Wolverine, Vol. 1: The Four Sisters' kind of remind me of the 'Black Widow' movie. Coincidence?

Cameos include Laura's "father", Logan, as a "ghost" in her head as she temporarily dies too (sure, why not?), Angel (who is Laura's boyfriend...apparently?...but he disappears completely eight pages into the second issue of the trade, and there's a weird, out-of-character moment where she lets him pat her on the head like a puppy after she's just been injured from an action moment...which she'll heal quickly and easily from...and she hasn't been traumatised from seeing one of her dead clones yet...seriously, what was that head-patting?), Taskmaster (wow he's easily defeated by Laura, isn't he?), Doctor Strange, a Cthulhu monster he keeps in his living room cupboard (I reiterate: sure, why not?), the Wasp, aka Janet Van Dyne, and someone who is literally introduced on the final page, but I won't reveal who they are due to spoilers.

Negative criticisms include how 'All-New Wolverine, Vol. 1: The Four Sisters' is not really accessible to new readers, of either X-23/Laura Kinney or Marvel comics at the time of its publication. You are brought into the nonstop action immediately, with barely an explanation on what's going down, on what's going on. The cameo appearances are quick and dispensable. And the only Black and other POC characters are villains; I cannot begin to tell you how psychotic, sociopathic and sadistic the merc and second-in-command-to-the-white-male-mad-scientist Captain Mooney is. He is definitely anti-mutant, to boot. I mean, yikes and holy hel!

However, 'All-New Wolverine, Vol. 1: The Four Sisters' is entertaining enough that I can sort of overlook this, amazingly.

The artwork is nice, fresh, clean, colourful, and, surprisingly, cute yet tasteful - Laura and her sisters actually look like young teen girls. There are humorous moments to go with the bloody violence and grimness of the whole comic. Who knew it was possible that X-23 could have a sense of humour! The sisterhood, and female-support-and-solidarity-through-victimhood-via-abuse-and-entrapment-and-caging-by-powerful-men-who-think-they're-gods-above-the-law theme...it is touching, emotional, heartrending, and tragic. It's an all-too relevant theme.

The patriarchy is oppression and abuse, and rape culture and murder, and inhumane and unnatural, and is plain, pure evil.

Read my review of 'X-23: The Complete Collection Vol. 1' for more (and I apologise if my review here demonstrates a lack of knowledge of X-23, though to be fair, it has been nearly ten years since I read a comic about her (holy shit))


LAURA: I've done bad things. And...bad people have done bad things to me. Are you sure I deserve salvation?

STRANGE: To come from there...to be able to hold all of that back. There's so much rage in you. But you are not your father. You can control it. Channel it. It's...actually a little scary. [...] You are the right person to replace Wolverine.

LAURA: I know there are people who disapprove...guys on the internet mainly. But I'm not replacing him. I don't really know what I'm doing yet. [...] All I know is, while I'm wearing this, he isn't gone. And neither am I. I'm Laura Kinney. I'm X-23. And I'm Wolverine.

STRANGE: Logan would be very proud of you.

LAURA: Yeah. But he had pretty low standards. [...] The sisters deserve the same chance I had.


Final Score: 3.5/5

Graphic Novel Review - 'Anne of Green Gables: A Graphic Novel' by Mariah Marsden (Adaptor, Writer), Brenna Thummler (Artist), Kendra Phipps (Editor), Erika Kuster (Editor), L.M. Montgomery (Original Author)

A cute, colourful and quaint, abridged graphic novel adaptation of the L.M. Montgomery classic, even if the artwork makes its characters look like they came from the Other Mother's world from 'Coraline' (Hecate, they even share similarities to the Other Mother and her minions from the graphic novel adaptation of 'Coraline'!). Gaia, those tiny, dead, beady eyes, and Muppet noses and mouths.

But I got used to it. It is still 'Anne of Green Gables', with its lovely story, characters and setting.

'Anne of Green Gables: A Graphic Novel', by Mariah Marsden and Brenna Thummler, is atmospheric and well developed, created with clearwater, lily-pad love, affection and respect. Green Gables looks beautiful and enchanting.

Anne Shirley is also enchanting. She's a spirited and temperamental redhead, growing and sprouting, like her Avonlea and nature surroundings, and changing the lives of everyone around her. She touches people's hearts so wonderfully.

I'm glad that subplots such as Mr Phillips' affair with the sixteen-year-old student, Prissy Andrews, have been cut in this adaptation. Though that leaves Prissy herself not being in it either, and neither are certain scenes and scene transitions, such as Anne starting school - she is just suddenly there with no explanation.

'Anne of Green Gables: A Graphic Novel' is probably the best adaptation in graphic novel form of the original 'Anne', with 'Anne: An Adaptation of Anne of Green Gables (Sort Of)' coming a close second. It can be read in twenty minutes or less.

Dedication:


'To Lucy Maud Montgomery,
who reminds us that nothing is more powerful
than a girl with an imagination.
'


See my review of 'Anne: An Adaptation of Anne of Green Gables (Sort Of)'.

And of course, my review of the one, the only, the original, the classic, 'Anne of Green Gables'.

Final Score (for 'Anne of Green Gables: A Graphic Novel'): 3.5/5

Book Review - 'Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic' by Kara LaReau (Writer), Ariane Moreira (Illustrator)

From the blurb:


'In a magical bakery by the sea,
live a witch and a witch-to-be...
'



What a sweet (in every way!) little witchy chapter book for children, that was clearly inspired by 'Kiki's Delivery Service' - Kiki even appears on one page, drinking juice with an old lady on the terrace of a seaside café!

'Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic' also reminds me of 'Sunday The Sea Witch''Witch in Training''The Witching Hour''My Mummy is a Witch''Little Witch's To-Do List''Doughnuts and Doom''Crumble''Pizza Witch''Flying Witch', and 'Sabrina' and 'Hilda', with a light dash of 'Mooncakes' and 'Legends & Lattes' to go with the flavouring. It's a bitsy-witchy of what I imagine 'Books, Iced Coffee & a Side of Dragons' will be like.

It is about Blue, a little blue-haired, sunhat-and-sandals-and-overalls-wearing witch-in-training, who delivers baked goods from their Mama Moon's bakery, to people in their quaint and ordinary seaside town, Shellville.

As Blue helps their varied neighbours with their varied problems, they learn that not everything can be solved with magic. No quick and easy spells. No sprinkle of magical dust. Sometimes a pinch of flour, sugar, or crumbs can do the trick. Hard work, a helping hand, and just listening to people are just as effective and rewarding as using any real magic, if not more so.

Focus on people as well as your spells.

Finding spells can be about looking for what's in hearts as well as what's exterior.

How fulfilling, sweet and adorable.

And those cakes, muffins, tarts, crumbles, biscuits (apparently called 'raspberry sandbars' here? Which sounds very odd to me), buns, pies, bread loaves, pancakes, fries, jam jars, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and more! So many treats and groceries are represented in this darling wickle book!

Shellville looks absolutely cute and colourful and peaceful! As it's written in the book, 'Their village looks like an enchanted town from a fairy tale, the kind Mama Moon reads to Blue before bed.' (page 18). I'd love to live somewhere like it!

As if the cuteness and preciousness factor wasn't high enough, in this mini witch lit cauldron there also lie shells, sea glass, a bottle of full moon water, a lucky rabbit's foot, Blue's seagull familiar (Gully), Mama Moon's cat familiar (Pearl), a guinea pig (Barnacle), a deceased pug (Marina) (okay, that's less cute and more sad, but still, it works well with the grief theme presented by the end of the story), crescent moons, and so much of the seaside magic aesthetic (no broomsticks here, only a delivery bicycle). It's a pity there isn't a mermaid in sight, actually. Or a selkie. That would have been perfect.

Oh, and of course there is POC and LBGTQA+ representation. Blue is referred to by they/them pronouns, and the seaside café is owned by the married Spinnakers, Cliff and Derrick, who have a son, Jib, the owner of Barnacle the guinea pig, who is Blue's age (Jib, not Barnacle).

The only thing I'm iffy about 'Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic' is the inconsistent way the issue of consent is raised. At the beginning, Mama Moon uses 'soothing magic' on the confrontational, talking sentient animal familiars, Gully and Pearl, without their consent, to 'quiet' them. Then it is used by Blue after they specifically ask for permission from people like Jib and Mr. Haddock the grocer, who is grieving for his pug Marina. Then there is the dubious way Blue treats Mrs. Sanderson, an exhausted, stressed and overworked mother of four; I highly doubt Blue didn't use magic on her to make her fall asleep without her consent...

really hope Mama Moon and Blue never use magical drugs spells in their baking...

But apart from that, 'Witchycakes #1: Sweet Magic' is a lighthearted, soft, cosy, funny, charming and charmed little witchy book that comes with a big recommendation from me.

A slice-of-life-and-crumble-with-whipped-cream mini witch delivery chapter chronicle that can be inhaled in under an hour. I'm glad books like it exist for children to read.


'In a village by the sea
live a witch and a witch-to-be.
Life is sweet and never dull,
and it's always, always magical.
'


It comes with a recipe for 'Mama Moon's Beach Crumble' (from her 'beach plum crumble') at the end, too!

What multiple, magical treats!

Final Score: 3.5/5

Book Review - 'Rosalina's Storybook' by Nintendo (Creator), Dark Horse Books

A sweet, soft, sad, whimsical, wistful, woeful, and beautifully, lushly illustrated little storybook/picture book.

I can definitely tell now that Rosalina's story from 'Super Mario Galaxy' was inspired by 'The Little Prince'; only this cosy yet existentialist sci-fi fairy tale for all ages has a little princess protagonist.

I'm not really a gamer - my brother is the big gamer of my family, and it is originally, mainly through him where my knowledge of Nintendo and 'Super Mario' games (and the movies, but that's another thing entirely) comes from. It is through him that I know of Rosalina, whom I am a fan of.

Rosalina is probably my favourite Nintendo character (whenever I am player two with my brother, I always pick her as my playable character in the 'Super Smash Bros.' and 'Mario Kart' games). She's like Princess Peach with a compelling, interesting personality and backstory. She's a mentor, and a ruler and leader - a ruler and leader of the cosmos, even. She is not a damsel in distress. And she's a magical space princess with star powers. She's a cool female character, is what I'm saying.

It is because of my admiration of her that I decided to check out 'Rosalina's Storybook', for real. As in, it's a real, physical Nintendo product, and not just from a Nintendo game as an interactive cutscene.

The book, which tells the tale of Rosalina's origin, is enjoyable, and sad and kind of bittersweet, like I said. Poor Rosalina (or "the girl" as she's called here). But kids need to learn from sad stories in their lives, from time to time. As well as being creative, 'Rosalina's Storybook' is surprisingly deep, well detailed, thoughtful, introspective, thematic, dramatic, and cosmically existential. There are themes of space exploration, family, friendship, loneliness, and grief. It certainly does not talk down to its audience.

I am not as interested in the Lumas as I am in Rosalina herself - she's a great, complex character in her own right. Not just a mother of Lumas, or a princess (of what exactly, I'm not sure. Not every female character has to be a princess, Nintendo, get with the times. Though at least she's not anyone's girlfriend).

Rosalina is a star, too. A stellar cosmopolitan.

So I do recommend 'Rosalina's Storybook' for fans of 'Super Mario Galaxy', and of Rosalina. I even recommend it to non-gamers, such as myself. It's a good, well crafted, well planned space fairy tale, containing universal, adult themes.

Final Score: 3.5/5

Sunday, 14 June 2026

Top 20 Favourite Episodes of 'The Owl House' AND 'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power' AND 'Hilda'

I have decided to list my personal favourite episodes of three of my favourite modern feminist fantasy animated series of all time - 'The Owl House', 'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power', and 'Hilda'. 

Partly I am doing this in anticipation of 'The Owl House' graphic novel that is coming out in September 2026, but mostly I want these magical, enchanting, creative, passionate, beautiful, brave, bold, heartfelt and hopeful shows to keep receiving the love and attention they so rightly deserve.

For all their epic, fantastical elements, their colourful, soft and smooth animations, and heart and love, they are also female-led - and majorly LBGTQ+ and POC female led!

Here they are! The trio of great cartoons and their best episodes - Artemis Crescent's Top 20 Favourite Episodes of 'The Owl House' AND 'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power' AND 'Hilda':





Top 20 'The Owl House' Episodes:


1. Knock, Knock, Knockin' on Hooty's Door (Season 2, episode 8)

2. Lost in Language (Season 1, episode 7)

3. Enchanting Grom Fright (Season 1, episode 16)

4. Keeping up A-fear-ances (Season 2, episode 4)

5. Yesterday's Lie (Season 2, episode 10)

6. King's Tide (Season 2, episode 21)

7. Hollow Mind (Season 2, episode 16)

8. Them's the Breaks, Kid (Season 2, episode 15)

9. Through the Looking Glass Ruins (Season 2, episode 5)

10. Hooty's Moving Castle (Season 1, episode 6)

11. A Lying Witch and a Warden (Season 1, episode 1)

12. Young Blood, Old Souls (Season 1, episode 19)

13. Eclipse Lake (Season 2, episode 9)

14. The Intruder (Season 1, episode 4)

15. Understanding Willow (Season 1, episode 15)

16. Really Small Problems (Season 1, episode 14)

17. Reaching Out (Season 2, episode 14)

18. Any Sport in a Storm (Season 2, episode 13)

19. The First Day (Season 1, episode 13)

20. Season 3 - Thanks to Them, For the Future, and Watching and Dreaming



Top 20 'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power' Episodes:


1. Hero (Season 4, episode 9)

2. The Heart (Parts 1 and 2) (Season 5, episodes 12 and 13)

3. Roll With It (Season 2, episode 4)

4. Corridors (Season 5, episode 3)

5. Promise (Season 1, episode 11)

6. Save the Cat (Season 5, episode 5)

7. Stranded (Season 5, episode 4)

8. Mer-Mysteries (Season 4, episode 7)

9. Boys' Night Out (Season 4, episode 8)

10. Princess Scorpia (Season 4, episode 6)

11. Protocol (Season 4, episode 5)

12. Once Upon a Time in the Waste (Season 3, episode 3)

13. Shot in the Dark (Season 5, episode 8)

14. The Perils of Peekablue (Season 5, episode 7)

15. Raz (Season 1, episode 3)

16. The Coronation (Season 4, episode 1)

17. The Valley of the Lost (Season 4, episode 2)

18. White Out (Season 2, episode 5)

19. Huntara (Season 3, episode 2)

20. Ties That Bind (Season 2, episode 2)



Top 20 'Hilda' Episodes:


1. The Deerfox (Season 2, episode 9)

2. The Windmill (Season 2, episode 5)

3. The Fifty Year Night (Season 2, episode 8)

4. The Hidden People (Season 1, episode 1)

5. The Midnight Giant (Season 1, episode 2)

6. The Fairy Isle (Season 3, episode 8)

7. The Stone Forest (Season 2, episode 13)

8. The Train to Tofoten (Season 3, episode 1)

9. The Troll Rock (Season 1, episode 5)

10. The Giantslayer (Season 3, episode 3)

11. The Forgotten Lake (Season 3, episode 6)

12. The Witch (Season 2, episode 3)

13. The Nightmare Spirit (Season 1, episode 6)

14. The Tide Mice (Season 1, episode 8)

15. The Fairy Mound (Season 3, episode 2)

16. The Nisse (Season 1, episode 12)

17. The Black Hound (Season 1, episode 13)

18. The Eternal Warriors (Season 2, episode 4)

19. The Jorts Incident (Season 2, episode 11)

20. The Laughing Merman (Season 3, episode 4)





Reading material:


  • Text from a post of mine from a few years ago:
On a much needed positive note, happening in the present, I have now seen all of The Owl House. It is a great, wonderful, clever and highly emotional series. It might even be my favourite show of all time. It was made for me. I love it so much, and it makes me happy to see that so many other people do, too. This fandom is so positive and adoring. No toxicity in sight! Yes, one can't help but be saddened and wonder what could have been if Disney wasn't run by a complete and utter *%^*$! or two, but what we ended up with in the shortened finale is awesome nonetheless. As my love of Harry Potter has soured over the years due to its author being a terrible person, The Owl House has filled that void, in my love of fantasy franchises. And what I didn't get from Buffy (ditto its own toxic and abusive creator) I got from The Owl House. A fantastic, sensitive, and diverse and inclusive, animated fantasy series, made by a loving, passionate and dedicated crew - of passionate and worldly geeks and nerds! Remember: support creators, not companies. Companies, conglomerates, they have enough money, and fuck 'em in general. Dana Terrace's dislike of musicals still baffles me, though. As yet known she isn't a problematic person, at least.

These beautiful, enchanting, emotional femme fantasy cartoons are hopeful. They signify and indicate hope for a better world, that their respective (and respected) creators dreamed of and believed in, for the good of humankind. They are each idyllic for different reasons, as well as unique in their own ways.

They are celebrations of new and difference. They defy convention.

I love them all, with 'The Owl House' remaining my number one favourite TV show.

Stay safe, kind, caring, compassionate, and hopeful, everyone. You are loved, and always will be.



Non-Fiction Book Review - 'Marilyn and Her Books: The Literary Life of Marilyn Monroe' by Gail Crowther

The moment I heard about this book, I knew I had to have it.

'Marilyn and Her Books' - the title says it all.

From the blurb: 'Timed to the 100th birthday of Marilyn Monroe comes an investigation into the literary life of the Hollywood icon and actress,' [...] 'In 2026, for her centenary, this book showcases Marilyn Monroe, the reader. Because at the end of her life, it was not her jewels or her furs, her shoes, or dresses that she cared about. It was her books.'

'Marilyn and Her Books: The Literary Life of Marilyn Monroe' by Gail Crowther is a very interesting, intriguing, fascinating, psychoanalytical, and comprehensive look into Marilyn's home library, and her love of literature and learning in general.

It is not about Marilyn the Hollywood actress. It is about Marilyn the reader.

Marilyn was nowhere near a dumb blonde stereotype in real life, nor was she a poser, an attention seeker, or a "fake geek girl". She was a bookworm, an intellectual, who would read anything she could get her hands on, through and through. Trying to overcome her lack of education from a hectic, troubled and traumatic childhood, she always strived to improve her mind, as well as her acting talents - her looks were secondary to her. She valued brains over beauty. She clearly had a very sensitive heart and soul, as well.

It is another reason to admire the Hollywood icon and goddess. Who was in fact painfully, tragically human.

It is a side of her that was not allowed or accepted by the popular culture masses. Until now. Hopefully.

'Marilyn and Her Books' also discusses all the writers Marilyn met in her life (it certainly wasn't just Arthur Miller), and the writers who may or may not have met her, but were enchanted and inspired by her all the same - all of whom are too many to count and list.

Then there are the other golden age Hollywood actors and royalty, who were also, in fact, well read bookworms who valued intelligence, such as Montgomery Clift, James Dean, Marlon Brando, and Elizabeth Taylor.

'Marilyn and Her Books' is full of surprises and touches; not least of which are these quotes by Ayn Rand (Marilyn had none of her books in her personal library), in the aftermath of Marilyn's death:


'[...] if there was ever a victim of society, Marilyn Monroe was that victim.' - page 59


Gail Crowther additionally writes of Rand: 'Describing Monroe's upbringing as Jane Eyre-ish, being both "sordid and horrifying," Rand praises Marilyn for having gone through this and still be able to present a radiant benevolence, innocence, and joy. This took, Rand claimed, "a heroism of the highest order." Making her way to the top, once she got there Marilyn discovered that not only was it as horrible as where she had come from, but that it was filled with jealousy and people who delighted in others' misfortune. Rand argued that Marilyn was envied for her goodness, her beauty, her earnestness, and her joy. Like a classic gothic heroine, she did not stand a chance surrounded by such corruption. It was the evils of the current cultural moment. Rand ended her article with a brutal accusation: "Anyone who has ever felt resentment against the good for being the good, and given voice to it, is the murderer of Marilyn Monroe."' - pages 59-60


This is the only positive reference I will ever make regarding Ayn Rand.

I'm so happy 'Marilyn and Her Books' exists - I say this as both a book lover and a fan of Marilyn Monroe.

Beautiful, informative and educational, and a deep, personal, psychological, philosophical, mystical, and ethereal journey - Marilyn would have been relieved and proud of books like 'Marilyn and Her Books: The Literary Life of Marilyn Monroe'.

I would love to visit Marilyn's library someday. Though for me, I'd like to visit every library in the world, and every single person's bookshelf...I am a weirdo bookworm.

Now for my reviews of the other Marilyn books in my personal library:


'The Little Book of Marilyn: Inspiration from the Goddess of Glam'

'Marilyn Monroe: Private and Undisclosed'

'The Girl: Marilyn Monroe, The Seven Year Itch, and the Birth of an Unlikely Feminist'

'Marilyn Monroe: By Eve Arnold

'My Story'

'My Sister Marilyn: A Memoir of Marilyn Monroe'

'Making Their Voices Heard: The Inspiring Friendship of Ella Fitzgerald and Marilyn Monroe'


Final Score (for 'Marilyn and Her Books') : 4/5

Graphic Novel Review - 'Little Lulu: Working Girl' by John Stanley, Marjorie "Marge" Henderson Buell (Original Creator), Margaret Atwood (Introduction), Frank M. Young (Essayist/Historian)

As an avid fangirl of comics with female leads, I thought it was about time I checked out the one that largely, supposedly started it all, since the 1930s-1940s: 'Little Lulu'.

'Little Lulu', originally created by a woman, Marjorie "Marge" Henderson Buell.

I admit I'd barely heard of the character before, but I wanted to see if this comedic, comic little girl icon holds up, and lives up to the hype; to see if she is, indeed, timeless.

I got 'Little Lulu: Working Girl', a collection in colour, with an introduction by Margaret Atwood, and at the end, 'Girls Want to Get in Everything: Little Lulu Crashes into Comics' by Frank M. Young.

These are pretty much sketches and sitcoms in comic strip form, and their quality is hit and miss, in my opinion, but they are endearing, humorous, and clever overall. Even a little dark; whether overtly, or if you think about any of them for a few second afterwards.

'Little Lulu' is madcap, subversive childhood adventures, complete with clueless and oblivious adults, and Little Lulu herself - Lulu Moppet - is rather funny, contrary, cheeky, sneaky, selfish, obstinate, rude, daring, and defiant. She is willing to try literally anything, and will get into anywhere she wants, no matter what anyone else thinks.

I can see why she would be called a feminist icon; she's a troublemaker, rabblerouser, inventor, and pioneer, defying the gender norms of the 30s and 40s. She is smart, creative, imaginative, curious, and inquisitive. She is like a proto-Matilda Wormwood, Wednesday Addams, and Hilda. And a female Dennis the Menace.

Lulu is like a normal little kid, really

I have to wonder why Lulu and Tubby (a stereotypical fat boy who loves to eat all the time, though he is still funny in his own right) are best friends*. They are pretty appalling to each other. But then, that is how kids often are, especially in their playtimes and pranks, and maybe they only hang out together because nobody else will tolerate them, and their friendship is based on familiarity, and close distance from one another's houses.

Alvin, the little psycho, kind of reminds me of Onion from 'Steven Universe'. In fact, a lot of these comics remind me of a non-fantasy and sci-fi, slice-of-life 'Steven Universe'. As well as 'Dennis the Menace' and 'Hey Arnold!'.

I wish Dolly had appeared in more than one story. She appears to be Lulu's only female friend/frenemy.

So, 'Little Lulu' - I'm glad I finally got to know her, the little feminist rebel.

If you're like me and want to know about the history of female characters in comics (who are not superheroines), and the history of American comics, specifically comedic drawings for children (think The Beano, Harvey Comics, and Archie Comics), then I recommend you check out 'Little Lulu: Working Girl', or any of her collected issues.

Also recommended: 'The Spectacular Sisterhood of Superwomen: Awesome Female Characters from Comic Book History', which highlights Lulu Moppet.

Final Score: 3/5

*You know Lulu and Tubby are going to hate-you-like-you, tsundere-date in the future.