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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great drawings, very good story
Enjoyable romp through NYC behind the eyes of an NYU freshman who's reconnecting with her estranged big sister. Hard to resist these vicarious charms of the city, with all its hipsters and distractions and sights to see. Only slight drawback in the story is that the four girls are stated and presumed to be great friends, but we never quite see it happening, only hear...
Published 12 months ago by Schach the Monkey

versus
1.0 out of 5 stars Not my style
I read this book was very unoriginal and predictable I almost stopped reading it it was a quick read I guess it would be great for someone very young and someone who doesn't know a lot of normal story plots . I loved the drawings I only spent a bit more than $4 on it so it wasn't a total waste . I cut out all the illustrations of NYC and threw the book away
Published 1 day ago by mln9


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great drawings, very good story, January 17, 2011
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
Enjoyable romp through NYC behind the eyes of an NYU freshman who's reconnecting with her estranged big sister. Hard to resist these vicarious charms of the city, with all its hipsters and distractions and sights to see. Only slight drawback in the story is that the four girls are stated and presumed to be great friends, but we never quite see it happening, only hear about it. But it wasn't so hard to believe as to ruin the well-paced, beautifully-drawn story. The characters of Merissa and Angie are especially engaging, and the drawings on pages 34 and 59 are especially strikingly done.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The New York Four, December 9, 2008
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
The New York Four (MINX)

To be honest, I originally wanted to hold off on getting this book because of its target demographic, but as soon as I saw the preview art on it I was sold. The art was every bit as good as Local's and Brian's writing was just as good.

I loved the format as well, I've always wanted to read a manga sized American comic. It has the same feel as a manga volume and it has the structure of one too. It's broken down into bite sized chapters, much like in manga, and you can easily finish reading it in about an hour or so (if you're a slow reader like me).

Like in Local, we have a female protaganist, Riley, who has just enrolled into NYU. She's a quiet character though and that dynamic soon comes into play; she has to fend for herself right from the get-go and she soon finds that university is just the beginning of her struggles. But, thankfully, she has help in the form of her girlfriends. Before long, this book unfolds pretty much the way you expect it to, 'girl' problems abound.

In other words, its just like Local but with a lighter tone. And that's great if you want more of that kind of storytelling. If you aren't looking for another Local, then I'm afraid you may find yourself getting bored very quickly. My suggestion would be to read the preview first and see if you like it; that's what I did and that paid off big time; this book will be a permanant fixture on my bookshelf.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Not my style, January 26, 2012
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This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
I read this book was very unoriginal and predictable I almost stopped reading it it was a quick read I guess it would be great for someone very young and someone who doesn't know a lot of normal story plots . I loved the drawings I only spent a bit more than $4 on it so it wasn't a total waste . I cut out all the illustrations of NYC and threw the book away
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5.0 out of 5 stars As Much of a Tour Book as a Graphic Novel, November 24, 2009
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
The New York Four is almost as much of a tour book as a graphic novel. Artist Ryan Kelly duplicates actual Big Apple scenes down to the billboards and graffiti practically, and writer Brian Wood splatters the text with you-are-there descriptions of the locale. He offers sightseeing tips, restaurant guides, record-store reviews and more; it's like getting a tour of the sites used in the making of the story while you're still reading the story.

It's a fun concept for a graphic novel, and with an illustrator as talented as Kelly, one whose work so effortlessly captures real life and true human features, it's a natural. Wood unfortunately dips into pedantry at times with his descriptions (he assumes his audience is not only completely unaware of New York, but also doesn't know who Bob Dylan and Jim Morrison are). No matter. The New York Four has more than enough charm to make up for this, starting with the fact that it's delightfully free of melodrama. It's not purposely dark and insular.

While The New York Four is ostensibly about four friends, the title could just as easily be about the 4 subway train. That's how deeply into the heart of the city the book delves, and how much it succeeds in capturing the look and feel of the city. The story centers primarily on just one of the gang of four (the other three are fascinating too, but they're seen primarily in sequel-preparing glimpses). Riley is a native New Yorker, but her freshman year at NYU is her first trip into Manhattan. She's been raised by obsessively overprotective parents in Brooklyn, pushed to excel academically but not allowed to develop her own interests. Even her personality is sheltered and underformed.

Riley's older sister was sheltered the same way, but she managed to escape years ago and hasn't spoken to her parents ever since. Now living with her boyfriend in downtown Manhattan, she's the wild child Riley longs to be, and her influence helps Riley to finally exert some of her own personality.

The New York Four centers mostly on Riley's quest for independence and her burgeoning social life, as well as her flirty text-message-only relationship with a mysterious stranger known only as Sneakerfreak. Riley and Sneakerfreak finally meet face-to-face in the final act of the novel, and it leads to the most surprising twist of the story and positions Riley and the rest of her cohorts for more interesting journeys in the city that never sleeps. That's good news. It will be fun to spend some more time--and to get plenty more New York City tips and tricks--in subsequent stories.

-- John Hogan
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Lukewarm., February 24, 2009
By 
Lindsey R. Nichols (Forest, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
After reading "The New York Four," I could really take it or leave it. Lots of potential and good story work, but it gets bogged down until ultimately the comic's not all that great. The main idea of a traditional coming of age story that takes place in NYC really isn't all that bad. Riley, our heroine, is struggling to enter the adult world, figure out how to actually interact with people, and find her own place in the world.

It's the little things that drag this story from a four to a three star. First off, it's a little trendy. It has that whole NYC worship going on, occasionally encourages that hipper-than-thou, I heard that band first attitude, and titles each chapter with the name of a Cat Power song. The book's trying a little too hard to be cool. Secondly, at least half of the group of girls that composes 'The New York Four' have serious issues, that seem to get brushed aside as small, quirky personality faults. One of the girls is described as dating five different guys concurrently, while also dating another guy in order to keep her job. Another of the girls is actually a stalker. Full-fledged, possibly scary movie stalker. Developing her own secretly taken photographs and everything. Additionally, the major plot twist of the story can be seen coming from a mile away. And taking the mystery out of the ending is one of the quickest ways to kill interest in a book.

These flaws overpower Riley's story. Between Riley trying to become an adult and reconnecting with her family, Wood has a pretty solid storyline. Ryan Kelly's art is also very solid. While in the beginning it's somewhat difficult to visually distinguish Riley from the protagonist of Wood and Kelly's other series "Local," that feeling gradually diminishes as Riley's own look subtly changes through the story. One thing that Kelly excels at are the detailed backgrounds and cityscapes. Through these, he's incredibly successful at letting the reader feel completely immersed in the actual streets of NYC.

To best sum up my feelings: Eh... it was alright. If all of Minx's titles were like this, I can see why the imprint was canceled. Probably won't be buying "The New York Four" sequel.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Four stars for New York Four, August 28, 2008
By 
Jesse Haller (Minneapolis, MN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
The New York Four is about Riley Wilder trying to make it though her first semester in college, and the three girls she befriends during that time.

This was a good book. Was it the Citizen Kane of comics? No, but it was a fun read, that rang true with what it is like during your first semester in college, as well as the landscape of New York City. The city felt alive in every since of the word, it felt as much as a character as Riley and her friends and family do.

I was unaware until the end that this is the first of what will be a line of books. Which I am very happy about, I cannot wait to see what happens next in the girls' lives. There are story elements that felt unfinished at the end, like Lona's story with her teacher. This will, I assume, be resolved in a up coming book, but felt like some kind of closer should have been put in, even if it ended up being a cliffhanger.

Ryan Kelly's artwork is wonderful, the panel flow is great, but still has stuff in the background that is interesting to look at. My only problem is that the girls look older then the college freshmen they are suppose to be. But Kelly's use of zip-a-tone has, and still amazes me.

I did find it a little tacky how ever that the book had 24 pages of previews for other Minx books in the back.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Why real people can be better than online ones, November 9, 2011
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)

Riley is shy and sheltered. She is also pretty obsessed with her smartphone. Online people are easy to talk to. When she starts going to college in Manhattan though, things start to change a little. For instance, she starts hanging out with her older sister. Riley hasn't seen her sister in ten years, not since she ran away from home. She also gets a crush on an online guy known as sneakerfreak. She's trying to keep up her grades, job and social life, and it's taking it's toll on her. She can't let her parents find out about her romance, but keeping it a secret might be tricky.

Okay, first off Frank is super cute, even if he is a bit of a creeper. He seems pretty awesome, just wrong place at the wrong time. Riley does seem quite snotty and full of herself. She always interrupts people to answer her phone. That is super rude and I would have ditched her as a friend fast. She doesn't seem to even learn from the dirty looks everyone gives her, that she needs to start living in the here and now. I was a bit disappointed in the ending of this novel, because I don't see Riley grow at all. It seems that there was supposed to be a next book, and maybe she grows up then. Having the back drop of the big city was fun and I liked the way the novel was setup. There were little character bios every now and again, I liked that a lot. This was a neat story and there were some pretty interesting characters in it. I'm really disappointed that there is not a sequel right now, because some of the characters were up to some pretty shady stuff and I would love to know how all that pans out.

First Line:
"Riley?"

Favorite Line:
"Is he really into sneakers?"
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great story., September 3, 2010
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
This graphic novel focuses around four friends who meet while at university and plan on getting a place together. The main character is Riley Wilder, a young woman who always follows the rules, does what she is told, gets good grades and has overly protective parents. Her parents are over protective because of her wild older sister. While at college, she starts meeting up with her sister again, and between that and a stranger texting her, her life slowly starts to unravel.

Drawn with a mixed style of various frames and full page spreads, the artwork in the book is wonderful. The story captures much of the essence of the university experience, also some of the confusion around family dynamics. The story is compelling and it looks like a second book is in the works because it ends with "see you next semester." It would be interesting to see where the story goes next. The four female characters are very well written, and at times, both inspirational and infuriating.

This short-lived graphic novel imprint produced some great stories for and about girls. They are books I will keep for my daughters for when they are older.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something for the geek in all of us, October 20, 2008
This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
The New York Four is a book that is actually worthy of the title graphic "novel." The story and characters are as complex and interesting as in any prose novel or movie.

Riley Wilder is a shy introvert, a feature which her parents have actually fostered because her wild and unruly older sister ran away from home. Riley's social life consists of texting with people she's met online, but has never met in person. But now that Riley is commuting from her home in Brooklyn to college in Manhattan, she's ready to start coming out of her shell. Of course wanting something and actually being able to make that drastic a change in personality are two different things.

Riley finds and makes contact with her long lost older sister through her myspace page. Riley also reaches out to some other freshman girls who are looking for work, recommending they try the job she works at beta-testing SAT and PSAT tests.

Unfortunately, even though Riley has made some real human connections, when somebody slips an e-mail address into her pocket, she finds herself back in old habits, obsessively texting with an anonymous friend, rather than spending time with her real ones.

The story is written by Brian Wood, wirter of DMZ, Channel Zero, Local, and Demo. If you've read Demo, you know he's good at handling real world characters.

The art by Ryan Kelly is amazing. His characters are individual and recognizable. His scenery is detailed and real. There's somthing in the background of every panel. And his zipotone (that's those dots used to make different shades of gray for any new comics readers out there) is some of the best I've ever seen.

My only real complaint about this book is I want it to be longer than the 152 pages. There's so much story, so much personality to each of the characters, that there are parts that I really wish had been fleshed out more. To be fair, most of the Minx books are less than 200 pages, so the creative team may have had size restrictions.

The Minx line was started to get American comics into the hands of people who were only reading Manga, or to appeal to people who read books but not necessarily graphic novels. I've read most of the Minx books and, so far, this one is the most solid. I think this book shows the potential for depth of story that comics have in a way that is accessible to new readers.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Pretty pictures, not much else, September 10, 2010
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This review is from: The New York Four (Paperback)
I was a bit disappointed upon receiving New York Four. It wasn't the coming-of-age story I was expecting. Instead, it was bland and formulaic. Ryan Kelly's art is nice and serviceable, but also looks a bit rushed. Brian Wood's writing is frankly self-indulgent and constantly insists upon his own New York street cred. After a while, you're thinking "Ok, I get it. You like in NY." Not much of a real story. Save your money.
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The New York Four
The New York Four by Brian Wood (Paperback - July 22, 2008)
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