Ratings139
Average rating3.9
In the early hours after Halloween on 1988, four 12-year-old newspaper delivery girls uncover the most important story of all time. Suburban drama and supernatural mysteries collide in this series about nostalgia, first jobs, and the last days of childhood.
Featured Series
6 primary books7 released booksPaper Girls is a 7-book series with 6 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by Brian K. Vaughn and Cliff Chiang.
Reviews with the most likes.
The hell?! I literally didn't understand anything, but I liked it... It gave me Stranger Things vibes especially the 80s kids with bikes against weird monsters and stuff. I don't get the Apple logo. Also, I don't understand what is going on? There's swearing but it's cool. Mac is homophobic but it's the 80s so I guess... Also, I want to read the other volume too even though I'm completely lost, lol. Erin seems to talk a lot about Christianity and stuff. Anyways, it's nice!
In 1988, I totally had hair like the main character's. This graphic novel gets the nostalgia right in a big way, without being too reliant on that element. There's plenty of substance, as well as strong plotting reasons for the setting. Seeing those reasons emerge is a huge driver of this story - as we saw more clues about what was happening, I became increasingly desperate to find out what would happen next! Action packed, with a cleverly enticing mystery to pull you along - this story is addictive.
Do yourself a favor - if you decide to give this a try, just have Volume 2 standing by. I'll bet when you turn the last page of this volume, you'll have a burning need to read on!
Oh, and by the way, this has some of the best depictions of nightmares I've ever seen. It viscerally captures the messed up logic, mishmash of subconscious flotsam, and terrifying emotional impact that makes you wake up with your heart hammering after a bad dream. The subconscious flotsam also represents not just an individual girl's but that of the collective unconscious of 1980s America - brilliant!
Would have given five stars, but the repeated use of slurs—even though it was called out—felt unnecessarily damaging. Otherwise, this was interesting with a sort of Stranger Things vibe, but yeah, definitely would have preferred it without the slurs.