New reviews for B.P.M.

Nice online review from Iain Jackson, via LiveJournal:LINK
B.P.M. (Paul Sizer; Cafe Digital)
$15.99, 94p.
50 page preview online at paulsizer.com
“Roxy wants to be a DJ. In fact, she is a DJ, but she wants to be a great one, not just a good one. She starts investing more of herself in finding out just how to do this, spending more time with her friend Atsuko, who is a very good DJ, with her friend Dominic who is both a DJ and a recording engineer. This causes conflict in her romantic relationship with her girlfriend Hannah, who wants Roxy to spend more time with her. At the same time, Roxy gets some unsolicited but very good advice from this guy whom she’s never met before. After doing a little research, she discovers that he’s Philippe Robicheau, a one-time luminary on the club DJ scene who self-destructed in a haze of drugs and sex, among other things. She starts working with him, absorbing his knowledge to make herself a better DJ. In the meantime, her relationship with Hannah pretty much implodes, and Roxy’s forced to make hard decisions about her life. How much does she want to give to her work? How much to a relationship? Where does she want her priorities to lie? Just how much does she want this, anyway?
Sizer does a very good job of depicting how it feels to be a young adult, just beginning to take your work seriously, deciding just how driven you are and how successful you want to be, and what sorts of sacrifices it takes to get where you want to be. Roxy gets portrayed a bit inconsistently — in most of her life, she’s forthright and assertive, but when it comes to the breakup of her relationship with Hannah, she just takes the hits without pointing out that Hannah’s doing the same thing that she’s doing, prioritizing her career over the relationship. That really is the one character quibble I do have about the story. Sizer’s New York is also very inclusive — it takes place in a New York with all sorts of people, as opposed to the “Friends” New York, for example. The colors are strong and vibrant throughout, with a playlist running along the bottom of the book for evocative music. The one place where the artwork has a few — a very few — problems comes in his depiction of faces; there’s something about a few of the faces where he’s drawing them full-face or close to it where they look clunky and squished; a perspective issue of some sort. Again, that’s in a very few places; otherwise, the faces are very expressive and distinct.
BPM is a very enjoyable read. Older teens and adults who like stories about music and the people who work in that world might like it very much. Highly recommended.”
And B.P.M. is also the featured review for Diamond Bookshelf, based on the Publishers Weekly review from a few weeks back:
LINK