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The Country Nurse (Essex County, Vol. 3)
 
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The Country Nurse (Essex County, Vol. 3) [Paperback]

Jeff Lemire (Author, Artist)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 29, 2008
The Country Nurse is the final volume in the critically acclaimed Essex County trilogy of graphic novels set in a fictionalized version of Lemire's hometown in Ontario, Canada. The Country Nurse follows a day in the life of Anne Quenneville, this peculiar farming community's traveling nurse. As Anne checks in on her favorite patients, we finally discover how all three volumes stitch together a portrait of how loss and regret push and pull at the fabric of family in small town life.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. The plot to the concluding volume of Lemire's trilogy of graphic novels about the residents of a quiet Canadian farming region is as low-key as they come: a nurse makes her rounds of her patients and learns that one of them has died; a few characters' secrets are revealed; and we see flashbacks to the 1917 tragedy whose consequences still hover over the community like the black crow that always seems to be flying overhead. Even more than the first two, this volume is about quietness and regret—more pages include silent panels than don't, and a crude superhero comic that an 11-year-old character draws is bluntly about his longing for familial connection. Things unspoken between family members, in fact, count for so much here that Lemire clarifies his plot by devoting a page to a family tree near the end of the book. But the power of Lemire's hushed, deliberately paced storytelling is in his black-and-white linework: raw, scratchy and sometimes minimalist, it conveys a lot with a handful of ragged lines. On one bravura page, a nun and a group of terrified children wade through a snowstorm into the distance; by its final panel, all we can see is a few tiny scribbles. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Grade 10 Up—This final volume in a trilogy shifts the focus to Anne Quenneville, a traveling nurse. Her character primarily works as a device, reintroducing readers to the disparate members of the Lebeuf family. Lester, no longer donning his toy superhero cape, is a little more grown up but seems lonely, while Jimmy continues to hide himself in his job at the town filling station. Anne decides to help the family heal by urging Jimmy to step forward and finally get to know his young son Lester, giving more formal answers to questions of lineage and familial tragedy that were only hinted at in the earlier books. Lemire's cartoonlike art is more cinematic than ever here, making full poetic use of wintry Canadian landscapes to force readers to pause and feel the emotions of the characters. A side story features Lawrence, a Lebeuf ancestor who grew up in a desolate orphanage managed by a nun and a gruff caretaker. Although these flashbacks don't have a direct impact on the modern-day Lebeufs, the past events do bring a deeper layer of history to the family. The first two volumes worked exceptionally well as stand-alone stories. While Lemire still creates memorable moments in this finale, readers will want to know what happened in the previous tales to appreciate this one fully. Well written and beautifully drawn, this wonderful close to a powerful trilogy is ideal for fans of realistic stories in comics.—Matthew L. Moffett, Pohick Regional Library, Burke, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Top Shelf Productions (August 29, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1891830953
  • ISBN-13: 978-1891830952
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 6.4 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,011,659 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Award-winning Canadian cartoonist Jeff Lemire is the creator of the acclaimed monthly comic book series SWEET TOOTH published by DC/Vertigo and the award winning graphic novel ESSEX COUNTY published by Top Shelf. He also writes ANIMAL MAN, FRANKENSTEIN AGENT OF S.H.A.D.E. and SUPERBOY for DC Comics.

In 2008 Jeff won the Schuster Award for Best Canadian Cartoonist, and The Doug Wright Award for Best Emerging Talent. He also won the American Library Association's prestigious Alex Award, recognizing books for adults with specific teen appeal. In 2010 Essex County was named as one of the five Essential Canadian Novels of the Decade!

Recently named one of Wizard magazines 25 "rising stars", Jeff is also hard at work on a new graphic novel for Top Shelf called THE UNDERWATER WELDER, due in 2012. He currently lives and works in Toronto with his wife and son.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Last in Essex County series another haunting tale, March 13, 2009
This review is from: The Country Nurse (Essex County, Vol. 3) (Paperback)
The County Nurse: Essex County Vol. 3 by Jeff Lemire is the concluding book in this terrific trilogy. While you don't need to have read Tales from the Farm, the first book, to enjoy the second one, Ghost Stories, it is absolutely essential to read it before diving into The County Nurse. The story picks up shortly after the end of Ghost Stories with the county nurse going on her rounds and wondering if she actually makes a difference in anyone's life. She visits her grandmother at the nursing home, and the story flashes back to 1917 and the grandmother's story of taking care of other's in need and regret. The nurse tries not to meddle in other's lives, but can't help herself, so Les and his uncle from the first book continue their story here. The book isn't as strong as the first two in the series and leaves some loose ends that I hope Lemire ties up elsewhere, but it's still such a wonderful read. I can't say enough good things about his artistry and the way he captures the slow pace of rural life.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Rich Tableau When Read Together, November 24, 2009
This review is from: The Country Nurse (Essex County, Vol. 3) (Paperback)
Lives and generations of families quietly fade in and out through the Essex County trilogy, woven expertly by writer and artist Jeff Lemire. Quiet lives, quiet people, and quiet drawings rest on every page, in the middle of vast, quiet farmlands that seem perpetually cold and barren, but somehow still sustain life.

It all starts with Lester, a kid who loves comics. While this is a perfect sympathetic device to draw in the casual comic reader (as it did for me), it evolves into something far richer and deeper. As an orphan living on his uncle's farm, Lester Papineau is isolated both geographically and emotionally, losing himself in comic worlds of his own creation, hanging out at a creek behind the farm, and eventually befriending Jimmy, the hulking service station attendant. The first volume is even augmented by Lester's hand-drawn comics, which were drawn by a young Jeff Lemire and lend the story credibility, and even more sympathy. People barely talk, but when they do, it's important. If only the rest of the world functioned with such gravitas.

It's already clear that everyone is dealing with their own self-imposed loneliness and rich inner lives by the beginning of volume two, where the life of an aging, deaf hockey player is explored. In the third and final volume, a traveling nurse does her best to heal the wounds of the town, bringing the whole story back around through an entire century of secrets and loss. The family tree at the end of the third volume doesn't hurt either, because these things get complicated, especially when family similarities over five generations and a minimal art style confuse whom we might be looking at in a few panels.

Lemire's pen and brushwork are intentionally scratchy, loose, and splotchy, not caring as much for details as the impression that the whole careful mess of jagged lines creates. Everyone looks perpetually haunted by something or other (which could just be the scribbly, hollow eyes), and by the end of the trilogy, you realize how true that actually is. The drawing style is especially sparse, with large, almost bare panels, mixed panels of deep blacks and shadows, all organized thoughtfully and gracefully. Think Dave McKean's epic Cages. The very organic, handwritten lettering of the first volume seems to match the art a lot better than the later, more careful lettering, but it's not too difficult an adjustment to make, as the drawing itself becomes more careful and restrained as the pages progress.

The books of the Essex County trilogy can definitely be enjoyed separately but make a much more rich tableau when read together, as characters recur and grow and evolve within the pages of each other volume. The books are intended for mature readers more than young kids, given the frequent subject of death, the complexity of dealing with messed-up families, an instance of infidelity, and some good old-fashioned profanity.

-- Collin David
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5.0 out of 5 stars Country life, August 10, 2010
This review is from: The Country Nurse (Essex County, Vol. 3) (Paperback)
Lemire finishes his superb trilogy of comic books set in the fictional Canadian county of Essex County, with "The Country Nurse". The character was last seen in the last book, "Ghost Stories" as the nurse looking after Lou LeBeuf before his death, and in this book we see more about her life and her family's life.

She is a widower with an unloving son who lives with her and spends his time at work and out of the house. She talks to her dead husband at his grave once a week and visits her mother, the oldest woman in Essex County, who can't speak once a week: in short, we see the loneliness of her life as she questions whether she does any good at all.

The origins of her family and the LeBeuf family are revealed in this book with a flashback sequence with her mute mother, and the revelations tie together the first two books in the series nicely.

The artwork, as I've said of the other books, is nothing short of masterful, haunting, beautiful, and unique. Lemire's shown with this trilogy of books how gifted a comic book artist he is and having read his other excellent books I have to say I've enjoyed the Essex County books the most. They have heart, soul, wit, beauty, and ingenuity on every page. Fans of comic books will find rewarding reads with this book and the others in the series.
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