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Marco Polo

Dangers and Visions

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The son of a traveling merchant, Marco Polo spent his early years among the ports of Venice, Italy. As a young man, he headed eastward with his father and his uncle toward the lands of the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan. Their journey from Europe into Asia, marked by risks, setbacks, and discoveries, transformed every person involved. It also led to one of the world's most studied and most debated travelogues. Marco Tabilio, an emerging talent of Italian cartooning, creates a graphic novel in the form of a puzzle and finds the coming-of-age tale within the legend of Marco Polo.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 24, 2017
      At the beginning of the 14th century, the Venetian Marco Polo accompanied his father and uncle through Jerusalem, Baghdad, and Persia to the court of the Great Khan. They returned to Venice, then set out again for the Khan’s court, where Marco served for nearly 20 years. Based on the Travels of Marco Polo, Italian illustrator Tabilio’s acccount doubles back and forth in time through Marco’s life, peopling his graphic novel with thinly outlined, empty-eyed figures and writing in blunt prose (“Venice is a salty hole,” Marco tells a Mongol courtier). Panel sequences follow Marco on sea voyages and desert treks, through battles and privations (“When there is nothing to eat,” Marco says about the Mongols, “a warrior opens the vein of his horse and drinks the blood”). Renaissance-style maps accentuate the strangeness of unfamiliar lands with flat perspective. Followed in the book from boyhood to old age, Marco is tender, steely, ready for battle, and open to love. Though dense and sometimes hard to follow, the resulting epic casts a spell; readers won’t soon forget Marco’s kaleidoscopic journey—or the miracle that he survived to tell his story. Ages 14–up.

    • School Library Journal

      July 1, 2017

      Gr 7 Up-Framed by the story of how Marco Polo and Rustichello da Pisa wrote the famed travelogue while they were imprisoned in Genoa, this title is the latest take on the oft-adapted Il Milione, or The Travels of Marco Polo. A teenage Marco joins his merchant father and uncle, Niccolo and Maffeo Polo, as they traverse the Silk Road on a three-year journey to Khanbaliq (known today as Beijing). Once there, Marco befriends Kublai Khan (grandson of Genghis Khan) and serves a variety of roles at the Great Khan's court for nearly 20 years before returning to a much-changed Europe. This book is a historical record, a coming-of-age tale, and a musing on storytelling and storytellers. Rustichello's writing process is an apt vehicle for that commentary; he considers Marco his protagonist and is shown adding a three-headed dragon to the narrative while Marco is feverish, as that is what the European audience would expect from a work about the Far East. Tabilio's dynamic illustrations have a distinctly medieval style and include the occasional grotesque image, e.g., skeletal monsters or a detailed map of the divisions of the Mongol empire in the shape of Genghis Khan's dismantled body. However, these painstakingly intricate visuals, though attractive, may be hard on the eye. Many readers will find it difficult to become immersed in this volume, but it's an effective introduction to the explorer, especially compared with more typical biographies. Back matter includes a straightforward account of Marco Polo's life and a glossary of terms. VERDICT Useful as a supplemental text in art, history, geography, or literature classrooms, and recommended as an additional purchase for large graphic novel collections.-Kacy Helwick, New Orleans Public Library

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2017
      Italian cartoonist Tabilio and translator Schwandt breathe some new life into Marco Polo and his travels in this debut graphic novel.Using Polo's Il Milione as a launching pad, this fictional biography explores the Venetian traveler as much as it does his travels. Captured and imprisoned by the Genoese after the Battle of Korcula, an injured Polo awaits the negotiation of his release and meets Pisan writer Rustichello. When Polo's fluency in the language of Cathay (a medieval name for China) sparks his curiosity, Rustichello convinces Polo to share the story that would eventually become Il Milione, with an added focus on Polo's coming-of-age. The chronicle of Polo's daunting travels and perilous adventures with his father and uncle takes on fantastic proportions as it intertwines with dreams, visions, and Tabilio's transporting illustrations that are as complex in content as they are simple in style. Although it seeks to humanize the nearly mythic figure of Marco Polo, the narrative does not offer a challenge to its source material's Western, Christian worldview, and the resulting perspective on Asia's myriad cultures and history is awash in colonial exoticism. However, small anachronisms and metafictive comments from Rustichello invoke the many centuries of debate around Marco Polo's travelogue, situating readers to question where his perspective might depart from truth. Complex even for history buffs, this one requires and merits a second read. (afterword, glossary) (Graphic historical fiction. 14-adult)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2018
      �add subject Storytelling]Marco Polo recounts his adventures to his prison cellmate, who writes them down; this narrative will become the (real) travelogue The Travels of Marco Polo. In this graphic novel, Tabilio distills the story's essence, capturing its wonder and exoticism without losing its grand sweeping nature. The illustrations balance the intimate with the epic, and the sketchlike style leaves lots of room for the reader's imagination. Glos.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      September 1, 2017
      After leading a ship against the rival Genovese, Marco Polo, the son of a Venetian traveling merchant, finds himself in prison and begins to recount his own amazing adventures to his cellmate, who writes them down. Little do they realize that this elaborate narrative will become the world's most celebrated (real) travelogue--The Travels of Marco Polo--detailing Polo's long career and many adventures in the service of the emperor Kublai Khan. In this graphic novel, Tabilio distills the essence of the story, capturing all of its wonder and exoticism without losing its grand sweeping nature. The illustrations balance the intimate with the epic by alternating between unpaneled full-page illustrations or double-page spreads (some very busy, others using generous amounts of white or black space) and tight layouts with six to twelve rectangular panels per page. The sketchlike style, with thin lines, minimal details, and a limited color palette of cool, pastel tones, leaves lots of room for the reader's imagination. An author's note and glossary are appended. jonathan hunt

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:490
  • Text Difficulty:1-2

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