The Return of the Honey Buzzard / Plant
Books that Belong on Paper Issue No. 43
Books That Belong On Paper first appeared on the web as Wink Books and was edited by Carla Sinclair. Sign up here to get the issues a week early in your inbox.
A BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED STORY ABOUT A BOOKSELLER HAUNTED BY HIS PAST








The Return of the Honey Buzzard
by Aimée de Jongh
SelfMadeHero
2016, 160 pages, 7.0 x 0.8 x 9.8 inches, Hardcover
Atmosphere just about drips off these pages. There’s a haunted quality to the images in The Return of the Honey Buzzard: lots of shadows, uncluttered panels, remote locations, and big eyes.
This mood is appropriate because the main character is haunted by an incident from his childhood, and the book builds toward this reveal. The dialogue and the drawings work seamlessly together to craft a sense of isolation and loss, crying out for a resolution.
Many of the pages don’t contain any text at all. Especially in these places, the simple but expressive drawings do a masterful job of communicating a mood, a sequence of events, or even the passage of time. It might be surprising for a graphic novel set partly in a bookshop and partly in a library, but The Return of the Honey Buzzard suggests that images can indeed say more than words.
– Christine Ro
300 OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AND PIONEERING BOTANICAL IMAGES EVER








Plant: Exploring the Botanical World
by Phaidon Editors
Phaidon Press
2016, 352 pages, 10.2 x 1.5 x 11.8 inches, Hardcover
Plants have always attracted artists. Here, in one large, fat, oversized volume is a coffee-table book of the best art about plants through the ages. The variety of approaches to botany is dazzling; the creative interpretations of plants you see everyday is astounding; the views of weird and wonderful plants you did not know even existed is amazing, and the unorthodox perspectives are unbounded. It is a treasure trove, a sacred grove, of inspiration for art, design, engineering, and innovation — in short for anything you do.
– Kevin Kelly
12/3/24