Description
The sea that calls all things unto her calls me, and I must embark.
One of the best known and most translated works of free-verse poetry ever published in the English language, The Prophet, by Lebanon-born Kahlil Gibran, tells the story of the prophet Almustafa, who was banished from his homeland and who has lived the last twelve years of his life as a refugee among the good people of Orphalese. One day, as he prepares to board the ship that will take him home, Almustafa addresses a gathering of townspeople who have come to see him off. His parting words of wisdom about the human condition reveal him to be a man who sees deeply into the hearts, minds, and souls of his peers.
While remaining faithful to the original text, the script adaptation by A. David Lewis provides backstory details that provide greater insight into the enigmatic main character. And the illustrations by Justin Renteria, inspired by a 1920s Ottoman style, are vibrant, authentic, and skillfully paced. Appearing exactly one hundred years after the original 1923 publication of Gibran's masterpiece, and at a time when entire groups of people are being forced to seek refuge elsewhere, this fresh and visually compelling rendering of The Prophet conveys the original work's bracing and inspirational message about what it means to live well in today's world.
About the Author
A. David Lewis is an Eisner Award-nominated writer whose graphic novels include an award-winning adaptation of Exodus, entitled The Lone and Level Sands, and his revival of the first Muslim superhero: Kismet, Man of Fate. Lewis is a Boston-based university educator, library curator, and comics studies scholar.
Justin Renteria is an award-winning illustrator. His illustrations have been published in the New Yorker and the Atlantic and as frequent contributions to the New York Times's op-ed pages. Before deciding to focus on graphic novels, Renteria worked on everything from book cover designs for the memoirs of media personalities to billboards for popular television series.
Reviews
"While hewing close to the original text, Lewis and Renteria fill in the prophet's backstory through wordless flashbacks, portraying him as a young man caught up in military actions and a romantic betrayal; these narrative flourishes offer fresh angles on Gibran's words."
-Publishers Weekly
"This adaptation of The Prophet accomplishes what surprisingly few comics adaptations manage: elevation of the original. More than simply presenting the work to a new audience, with a few neat illustrations thrown in, the team of A. David Lewis and Justin Renteria have broadened the story and provided visual metaphors that help the poetry sing to the reader."
-Matthew Noe Noe's Comics Nook
"A. David Lewis's skillful weaving of a richly realized underlying narrative coupled with Justin Renteria's evocative drawings that breathe life into the characters of Orphalese create a lively adaptation of The Prophet, one sure to draw in new readers and invite those with well-worn copies of Kahlil Gibran's beloved work to rediscover it all over again."
-Nick Sousanis,author of Unflattening
Book Information
ISBN 9781637790502
Author Kahlil Gibran
Format Paperback
Page Count 112
Imprint Graphic Mundi
Publisher Pennsylvania State University Press
Weight(grams) 431g
Dimensions(mm) 254mm * 175mm * 8mm