What if fairy-tale characters lived in New York City? What if a
superhero knew he was a fictional character? What if you could
dispense your own justice with one hundred untraceable bullets?
These are the questions asked and answered in the course of the
challenging storytelling in Fables, Tom Strong, and 100 Bullets,
the three twenty-first-century comics series that Karin Kukkonen
considers in depth in her exploration of how and why the
storytelling in comics is more than merely entertaining. Applying a
cognitive approach to reading comics in all their narrative
richness and intricacy, Contemporary Comics Storytelling opens an
intriguing perspective on how these works engage the legacy of
postmodernism—its subversion, self-reflexivity, and moral
contingency. Its three case studies trace how contemporary comics
tie into deep traditions of visual and verbal storytelling, how
they reevaluate their own status as fiction, and how the fictional
minds of their characters generate complex ethical thought
experiments. At a time when the medium is taken more and more
seriously as intricate and compelling literary art, this book lays
the groundwork for an analysis of the ways in which comics
challenge and engage readers’ minds. It brings together comics
studies with narratology and literary criticism and, in so doing,
provides a new set of tools for evaluating the graphic novel as an
emergent literary form.