![]() ![]() ![]() Aya is the winner of the Best First Album Award at the Angoul?me International Comics Festival was nominated for the YALSA’s Great Graphic Novels list and was included on “best of” lists from The Washington Post, Booklist, Publishers Weekly, and School Library Journal. Inspired by Abouet’s childhood, the series has received praise for offering relief from the disaster-struck focus of most stories set in Africa. This second volume of the complete Aya includes unique appendices―recipes, guides to understanding Ivorian slang, street sketches, and concluding remarks from Marguerite Abouet explaining history and social milieu. With a little help from the tight-knit community of Yopougon though, Aya comes through these trials stronger than ever. It’s written by Marguerite Abouet (based in part on her own experiences growing up in the west African nation) and drawn with an elegant and whimsical flair by Clément Oubrerie. ![]() When a professor tries to take advantage of Aya, her plans to become a doctor are seriously shaken, and she vows to take revenge on the lecherous man. Aya is a really fun and engaging story set in late 1970s Ivory Coast. While the stories found in Aya: Love in Yop City maintain their familiar tone, quick pace, and joyfulness, we see Aya and her friends beginning to make serious decisions about their future. Aya is a lighthearted story about life in the Ivory Coast during the 1970s, a particularly thriving and wealthy time in the country’s history. ![]() The dramatic conclusion to the AYA series.Īya: Love in Yop City comprises the final three chapters of the Aya story, episodes never before seen in English. ![]()
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