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Reviewed by Anne-Marie Reynolds for Readers' Favorite
A Girl Teaching Art Classes In The Spooky Woods Near A Witch by Bob Pendarvis is the second graphic novel in a series. Jennie and Jenny are two contented cats, happy to wander Spooky Woods and sleep their days away. Then Ana sets up an art class, inviting Jenny and Jennie to join her. All is well until a giant robot decides to try to break up their classes, but only because he’s a boy and there are far too many girls in the category for his liking. How does it end? This is more than a story; it’s also an educational book that teaches drawing and writing skills to young people to help them grow and learn how to communicate.
A Girl Teaching Art Classes In The Spooky Woods Near A Witch by Bob Pendarvis is one of the most unique graphic novels I have ever read. It uses black and white graphics to tell the story; every page has beautiful illustrations. While it is a story at heart, it teaches many lessons, including the art of inclusion, not judging people at first glance, and accepting others regardless of their looks, size, or anything else. Toward the middle of the story, there are many lessons on teaching people to draw, illustrating how simple straight lines, boxes, and circles can be turned into just about anything. This is art made easy, and it teaches us how to communicate, not just with words but with pictures too. It is full of energy and is not just for kids; plenty of people can learn from it. After all, we all have an artist hidden inside us, and this story will help bring it out.