It rhymes with Takei
Authors: George Takei, Stephen Scott, Justin Ajjator
Artist: Harmony Becker
Publisher: Top Shelf Production
Publication date: June 2025
Rhyming with the new graphic novel It Tocki, George Takei weaves a historical background that offers a very personal and flinching view of his life and offers an American portrait. With a strong personality on Takei’s own, this book is a hilarious memory of things being difficult, but it takes courage to protect what is important to us. Publisher’s Top Shelf offers plenty to help you sink your teeth. In addition to personal and historical elements, this book is Trekkie Heaven and has many celebrity cameos. What cuts everything is the message that we need to be proactive and the change we want to see. It all becomes an exciting and simply lovely book, looking at icons from our era.
Takei’s first graphic memoir, they call us our enemies, and are already a comic of reading, and rhyming with Takei will definitely join the list. There is a magical thing that George participates not only in the witnesses but also in various moments in American history through his work. This is a 336-page graphic novel, but it works best about it because the book is so covering. The connective tissue of the graphic novel is Takei’s struggle to be published as a gay that he didn’t do until he was 68 years old. He is deeply involved in many causes, including political campaigns, the Vietnam War, and the civil rights movement. Still, despite speaking out about many other causes, he was cautious about speaking up about LGBTQ+ moves. Having a chronological approach to storytelling emphasizes what is at stake and how brave the brave snatch to rise up on that opportunity. There’s real momentum to get the book when it enters the second half because you want to be invested and eradicate George Takei.
Harmony Becker’s art is gorgeous. The face is very expressive and the colours really stand out on the page. I love the part where George gets embarrassed, and art style will shift more towards cartoon style. It made the joke and punchline part so much better. And Becker lends gravity to the calm parts of the story. It’s truly an incredible job and a praise from IDW Publishing to reunite this team.
Structureally, we follow the early years of his life of Take and are placed in detention camps during World War II without vanishing a sense of anxiety. The experience of taking as a young boy leaves him with the restlessness he wants to fit in. “To show the character to the world…it was my complete self, but not at all. It’s not something similar. “It’s like rhyme,” Takei said. In your eyes, Takei and his partner Brad Altman will deal with it and make the decision to come public.
Overall, it is a vital book necessary in this current political age to rhyme with Takei. The scope of this graphic autobiography goes beyond dealing with sexuality. It’s about agreeing and accepting who you are and your place in your community. Look, the times are tough everywhere, but if you do what you can, take it every day and it might turn out all…
rhymes with takei is available here via the shelf above, anywhere in bookstores
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