Authors' Corner

Author’s Corner: Terry LaBan

By Abby Ballas, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

“If you have to be a cartoonist, you’ll be a cartoonist,” as was the case for Terry LaBan, who discovered his calling in grade school as “the kid who could draw.” Since then, LaBan has led a successful cartooning career, starting with his work at Ann Arbor News where he composed political cartoons. He has also published works with notable comics publishers such as Fantagraphics, Dark Horse and DC Vertigo, but his longest position was with Egmont, with whom he wrote Donald Duck comics for 14 years for Europe’s substantial Donald Duck fanbase. LaBan spent an even longer period working with his wife, Patty LaBan, on Edge City, a comic centered around a Jewish family modeled after the LaBans. Terry LaBan’s most recent work, Mendel the Mess-Up, reflects his intrigue with historical societies while paying homage to his Jewish ancestry. Mendel the Mess-Up is a wholesome and humorous middle-grade graphic novel featuring a 12-year-old Jewish boy prone to accidentally wreaking havoc within his shtetl (a little Jewish village located in Eastern Europe before the Holocaust). Continue reading

Authors' Corner

Author’s Corner: Andrea Rogers

By Abby Ballas, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

The future Dr. Andrea Rogers is in the process of earning her PhD in English. Despite this, the Cherokee writer and former English and art teacher is already an established and award-winning author of children’s and young adult books. In 2024 alone, she published two books: Chooch Helped, which won a Caldecott Medal for its illustrations, and the sci-fi YA novel The Art Thieves. Rogers is a versatile author; her stories vary in genre from fantasy to historical fiction to science fiction and futurism. Using this versatility, she integrates her knowledge of subjects and issues, such as a range of social justice themes and her expertise in discussing different styles of art.

The Art of The Art Thieves

As would be expected in a book titled The Art Thieves, Rogers demonstrates her passion for the fine arts, music and even other literary works through the analytical eyes of her teenage protagonist, Stevie. The primary piece Rogers focuses on in the book is Martin Puryear’s “Ladder for Booker T. Washington.” The piece “manifests worlds” because the viewer brings her own ideas into how she understands it, thereby becoming somewhat of an artist herself. The same rule applies to literature, including to Rogers’ own book. She says, “The book you read is not going to be the same book I read.” Continue reading