Marissa meyer graphic novel6/19/2023 To see that, while they’re now part, their lives are still very much interconnected.Īnd while I’m still not sure how I feel about seeing the cast in graphic form, I do like reading works in which the author branches out from (his or) her original genre. I’m still not sure how I feel about seeing them in this medium, I did enjoy seeing how they have moved forward in their lives. It was a new experience to see them not just as words but as images on the page. This is done through the contrast of characters who defy Iko (telling her that she’s just an android), characters who accept Iko as she is, and Iko herself, who sometimes forget taht she isn’t human. While this was briefly touched in The Lunar Chronicles, Wires & Nerves further explores the question of what it means to be human. I also loved seeing further evidence of her loyalty to Cinder and, by consequence, of her human-like traits. She’s always had a crazy fun personality, which makes for a bellyful of laughs in the midst of high-tension moments. The highlight definitely had to be Iko’s narration. Wires & Nerve is the first volume in a duology that takes place between the end of Winter and the epilogue short story “Something Old, Something New.” Of course, reading from Iko’s POV was a bonus. I picked up Wires & Nerve because I wanted to see more of the world. I’m a big fan of Marissa Meyer’s The Lunar Chronicles series.
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