Reviews

An Age of License by Lucy Knisley

alittleoverdue's review

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4.0

I really enjoyed another of Knisley's graphic memoirs so I picked this up on a whim. I was pleasantly surprised and delighted by how much I enjoyed this one too. Even though I'm at a different stage of my life than the protagonist, I could relate to a lot of her self-examination and the "age of license" I explored in my twenties. No matter what your age or even if you don't think you're interested in travel, I imagine you'll see something of yourself reflected in Knisley's experience (and maybe get the travel bug yourself).

emdowd's review

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5.0

I'm so glad I waited as long to read this as I ended up doing, though it was unintentional. Everything about it reminded me of my own age of license, what I call my "backpacking through Europe phase": 3 years living in Germany broke, unsure, single, and more or less figuring my shit out. What might have been painful and fresh in 2012 was actually perfectly nostalgic and wonderful in 2017.

Beautifully drawn and touching.

(I still don't have my shit figured out.)

Book Riot Read Harder 2017 Challenge #8: A travel memoir

carstensena's review

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5.0

So personal, and yet touches on the universal feelings of growing up. Less teen, though some will love it too, more 20s figuring out life and where you want it to take you. Add in Europe, Scandinavia, beauty, scrumptious food, love, and art.
Love this book!

heyjude1965's review

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3.0

Is this my 7th graphic novel? Wow! And I just started reading them. Do they really count as books? I'm counting them! This is a pleasant little book about her travels in Europe in 2011. Her books are really her diaries with drawings. Fun to read someone else's diary, with their blessing. I would not recommend this to an impressionable youth, however. My opinion.

ohsusanna's review

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3.0

Liked it just a bit more than the last book I read by Lucy Knisley. Probably would give this one 3.5 stars if I could. The author has developed as a writer and actually had more of a theme and focus in this book than the last.

haia_929's review

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4.0

This is a trimmed down version of my review, to view the full review visit The Book Ramble.

Lucy Knisley was invited to travel to Norway for a comic arts festival. She decided to make a bigger trip of it, stopping in to visit friends, new acquaintances, and lovers along the way. The trip leads her to some introspection on her life and career, which is relatable for everyone, young adults especially.

I really enjoyed this book, which surprised me because I wasn't such a fan of Knisley's Relish. I've always liked Knisley's art style, which is gorgeous. I found the story interesting, fun, sometimes a little heartbreakingly real for someone who is also in what is meant to be my "age of license", and beautiful.

The storytelling in An Age of License is done well. I found the transitions from piece to piece smooth for the most part, with only a few places where I felt jarred by the movement from one section of the story to another. I did find the pace a little quick, which was sometimes annoying. Knisley would introduce concepts, ideas, and stories that piqued my interest but she would simply pass them by without reflecting or sharing further, which made the book feel a little too quick for comfort sometimes. I felt like Knisley touched on a lot of really important subjects, like feeling disconnected, feeling like her life was moving forward, heartbreak, longing, which really helped me form a deep connection with the content of the book.

A lot of people have described this as the Eat, Pray, Love of our generation, I can definitely see where the comparison comes from as the journeys start from really similar places. I would probably say this, to me, felt a little like You Can't Get There From Here, because it had the same levels of introspection and dealt a lot with the tension of relationships, heartbreak, and love. These books are very different books, but had similar emotional/introspective moments for me.

I was also glad to she her deal with the idea of editing. She shared her life, but of course she has edited and censored it to some degree. I was glad to she her discuss this, and it was really excellent to think about how she made these decisions. Overall I was really quite pleased with the actual content of the story and how she told it.

The art in this book is the high point for me, as it often is. I absolutely love Knisley's style, and I always have even when I didn't enjoy the book itself. Knisley's style is clean, round, sort of cute looking. If I had a graphic memoir I would want it to look like An Age of License. The story is mostly told in these panels with sparse details, and just people with a little background, however there are some pages with lots of detail and lots going on. Those are my favourite, and I feel kind of glad to get them less often because they're like a treat. Same with the coloured pages, these are the absolute best thing in the book. I love the colours and the way she uses them so rarely, there's something really sweet about this to me.

I highly recommend this. It's probably not a perfect travelogue, but it's a very good book for introspection and exploration of the "age of license" we're meant to have. The art is beautiful and the story is moving. I just really loved this!

nabergel's review

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2.0

2.5/3.00 stars

smemmott's review

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2.0

A mildly interesting story, and a cute drawing style, but nothing that made a deeper impression on me.

kaliaddy's review

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2.0

I’m clearing my queue of books that have been in my list for a while and I think I probably should have read this book a few years ago when I wasn’t overly exasperated by the state of the world. I know most young adults go through uncertainty (for me my hand wringing was always about income and never about relationships). But then you outgrow it and just live your life. With a pandemic going on, I just was not really into the story of a girl in her mid-20s traveling and wondering where her life is headed. “A pandemic is coming sweetie so it won’t matter” - is what I want to say. Nothing atypical happens insofar as “traveling to Europe in your youth” stories go. Jet lag, a brief romance, some cute towns, an existential crisis, then home again. The illustrations are cute and you can read it in an hour. Maybe young teenagers or 20-somethings who are currently experiencing angst would enjoy it more.

yrtzjmnz7's review

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3.0

Cute story and drawings, perhaps a little more text would've been nice but overall a lovely reading experience. Definitely makes me want to travel now!