ComicBookCanon's meta-analysis shows that Maus has been declared the "Best" or "Greatest" or "Most Important" comic more than ...
In the brightly lit Manhattan apartment where Art Spiegelman lives and works, there are cluttered shelves packed with piles of books and colorful framed illustrations and photos filling the walls. It ...
Art Spiegelman is getting ready to unleash a comic on the world that he thinks could make even greater waves than his iconic ...
Two editions of Art Spiegelman's graphic novel "Maus," about his parents' experiences during the Holocaust, have become bestsellers after being banned by a Tennessee school board earlier this month.
In this segment of “Maus,” Art Spiegelman illustrated four Jewish victims hung by Nazis in Poland that Spiegelman’s parents knew. The page provides details about the victims as people, humanizing them ...
The Chicago Public Library’s One Book, One Chicago program, now in its 21st year, has asked the city to read familiar favorites (“Pride and Prejudice”), harrowing memoirs (Elie Wiesel’s “Night”), ...
Okay, so here’s the thing,” Art Spiegelman says into the phone as he paces his cavernous Soho studio, humming with anxiety. “I don’t know what happened. I’m almost positive I took them with me. I put ...
From the first spread of Art Spiegelman’s graphic memoir “Maus,” one can already glean his signature mix of the autobiographical, the fictional and the poetic. “It was summer, I remember I was ten or ...
The cover of the graphic novel "Maus" by Art Spiegelman. A school board in Tennessee has added to a surge in book bans by conservatives with an order to remove the award-winning 1986 graphic novel on ...
After a Tennessee county school system banned his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, author and illustrator Art Spiegelman will speak virtually at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. The book "Maus," ...
Known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning comic book, “Maus,” the author has had a busy year, after the book was banned and jump-started a fresh debate about the sanitization of history. Frankly, he’s ...