Thursday, July 7, 2011

"The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Roy Thomas, Illustrated by Sebastian Fiumara


Image Courtesy of: http://i43.tower.com/images/mm112160039/picture-dorian-gray-oscar-wilde-hardcover-cover-art.jpg
Bibliographic Citation
Title: The Picture of Dorian Gray
Author: Roy Thomas
Illustrator: Sebastian Fiumara
Year of Publication: 2008
Publisher City: New York
Publisher: Marvel
ISBN: 9780785126546
Author Website: No Author Website
Illustrator Website: No Illustrator Website
Media Used for Artwork: Pencil, Ink, Wash

Fiction Graphic Novel

"The Classics Revisited" Group Project-  Please visit our presentation here to learn more about how this graphic novel and others can be used in a high school curriculum.

Annotation
Dorian Gray, a handsome man in his prime, trades his soul to ensure that he will always have his youth. His portrait ages in his stead, a testament to the black marks he puts on his soul.

Personal Reaction
(Provided by S. Butts)
                The ghastly decline of Dorian Gray is depicted artfully in this graphic novel adaptation. Oscar Wilde's own narration and dialog are used within the frames, so while the illustrations flesh out the story, the reader is still able to feel the intent of the original. Given the strong visual element of this particular story, I wondered how the creators would handle these important aspects. I was not disappointed - Fiumara's interpretation of Dorian has all of the lovely physical attributes Wilde imbued him with, and the painting, as it ages, becomes truly ghoulish without being over-the-top. The lush colors and perspective choices (a close up of Dorian's mouth, the blood on the painting's hand) add force to the carefully selected text that accompany each page. Due to the drug use, sexuality, and violent episodes illustrated and discussed, this book is appropriate for older teens.

Curricular connections: This book could be read in a high school literature class, either in parallel with the original, along with one of Wilde's other pieces, or as part of a section on Victorian or gothic literature. Unlike some graphic adaptations, this novel can stand on its own, without prior knowledge of the canon.

Use of personification: "In her dealings with man, Destiny never closed her accounts." No page number available.

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