
Tess Stone
Author of Buzz!
About the Author
Series
Works by Tess Stone
Taming Kane (Fated Mates #1) 4 copies
Hanna is Not a Boy's Name, Case File 2: in which a ghost becomes too much of a theater critic 2 copies
Seen Nothing Yet, Volume 3 1 copy
Bravest Warriors #15 1 copy
Bravest Warriors #16 — Author — 1 copy
Seen Nothing Yet, Volume 2 1 copy
Seen Nothing Yet, Volume 1 1 copy
Associated Works
Lumberjanes Vol. 1: Beware the Kitten Holy (2015) — Illustrator, some editions — 2,555 copies, 138 reviews
Atomic Robo Presents Real Science Adventures: The Nicodemus Job (2019) — Letterer, some editions — 22 copies, 1 review
The Alloy Anthology presents: Electrum - An All-Ages Mixed Race Comics Anthology (2019) — Contributor — 9 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Stone, Tess
- Other names
- Stone, Tessa
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
An intriguing, dreamlike story about coming of age in a mirror universe to our own with similar ongoing crises (climate change catastrophes) but also very fantastical elements. I absolutely loved the art in this; every other scene looked like an incredibly rad band poster.
Buzz! by Ananth Panagariya is a graphic novel about street fighting. Except, the fighting is done with words, not weapons. Nonetheless, the fights are still illegal and still dangerous.
Webster (ha ha) is a new high school student but is quickly roped into a spelling bee gang. He's been warned about them from his sister. But he's good at it. He's quick and he has flair. His words carry power.
Drawn in black, white, and yellow, to drive home the bee aspect of the spelling bee, Buzz! takes a show more ridiculous sounding concept and makes it work. There is the drama of a family torn apart by crime (spelling), there's the thrill of power that comes from winning, and the lingering danger of either being caught or injured to the point of never being able to fight again. It has all the ups and down and excitement of a manga. show less
Webster (ha ha) is a new high school student but is quickly roped into a spelling bee gang. He's been warned about them from his sister. But he's good at it. He's quick and he has flair. His words carry power.
Drawn in black, white, and yellow, to drive home the bee aspect of the spelling bee, Buzz! takes a show more ridiculous sounding concept and makes it work. There is the drama of a family torn apart by crime (spelling), there's the thrill of power that comes from winning, and the lingering danger of either being caught or injured to the point of never being able to fight again. It has all the ups and down and excitement of a manga. show less
BUZZ! takes an odd concept (spelling bees are illegal so a circuit of back-ally contests rises) and runs with it, to hilarious results.
The best thing about BUZZ! is back-from-the-dead Tessa Stone's super stylish, ridiculously neon art. (See the preview: http://onipress.tumblr.com/post/69644454671/buzz-free-preview) But the writing is also great, consistently clear even when tackling difficult subjects, and often laugh-out-loud funny.
This is a great little indie comic. Recommend to fans of show more "Hanna is Not A Boys Name!", "Applegeeks" and "Johnny Wander". show less
The best thing about BUZZ! is back-from-the-dead Tessa Stone's super stylish, ridiculously neon art. (See the preview: http://onipress.tumblr.com/post/69644454671/buzz-free-preview) But the writing is also great, consistently clear even when tackling difficult subjects, and often laugh-out-loud funny.
This is a great little indie comic. Recommend to fans of show more "Hanna is Not A Boys Name!", "Applegeeks" and "Johnny Wander". show less
ARC provided by NetGalley
In a world where spelling bees are regulated, illegal underground spelling bees become a way of life, where letters become weapons to defeat or harm your opponent. Young Webster and his sister Merriam live a quiet life studying for the sanctioned spelling bees...until the day Webster gets caught up in an underground Spelling Bee after impressing the Outlaw King, who grooms Webster to get into the regional Spelling Bee and expose the Spelluminati for the scoundrels show more they are! Along the way Webster makes friends with other underground champions and prepares to battle the one person he never thought would cross his path at the final battle.
Ananth is bit better known for his webcomic that he works on with Yuko Ota, called Johnny Wander (an autobiographical strip) but he branches into fiction here with this excellent, fast paced tale. You wouldn't think spelling could be fun, but Ananth turns it into a power to make letters come alive and makes it illegal outside of sanctioned events. It's a fast paced story with action, battles, and a couple of death matches and interesting and entertaining characters. I ended the book wanting more and I really hope they give it to us.
The art is Scott Pilgrimish in style, with sharp lines to create shadows and depth to the characters. The characters are well designed and Tessa does an excellent job of blending words in with the characters making sure that neither gets lost. The bulk of the book is black and white, with yellow used to accentuate the colors. And to be honest I wish they had chosen a different color or perhaps a different shade of yellow as it's a bit eye glaringly bright at times. Overall though great illustrations.
I can't wait to read this in print and I really hope they come out with a second volume in the series. I can see middle school aged and up enjoying this fast paced enjoyable comic, and who knows it might even create some new spelling champions out there? I give the book 4 out of 5 stars. show less
In a world where spelling bees are regulated, illegal underground spelling bees become a way of life, where letters become weapons to defeat or harm your opponent. Young Webster and his sister Merriam live a quiet life studying for the sanctioned spelling bees...until the day Webster gets caught up in an underground Spelling Bee after impressing the Outlaw King, who grooms Webster to get into the regional Spelling Bee and expose the Spelluminati for the scoundrels show more they are! Along the way Webster makes friends with other underground champions and prepares to battle the one person he never thought would cross his path at the final battle.
Ananth is bit better known for his webcomic that he works on with Yuko Ota, called Johnny Wander (an autobiographical strip) but he branches into fiction here with this excellent, fast paced tale. You wouldn't think spelling could be fun, but Ananth turns it into a power to make letters come alive and makes it illegal outside of sanctioned events. It's a fast paced story with action, battles, and a couple of death matches and interesting and entertaining characters. I ended the book wanting more and I really hope they give it to us.
The art is Scott Pilgrimish in style, with sharp lines to create shadows and depth to the characters. The characters are well designed and Tessa does an excellent job of blending words in with the characters making sure that neither gets lost. The bulk of the book is black and white, with yellow used to accentuate the colors. And to be honest I wish they had chosen a different color or perhaps a different shade of yellow as it's a bit eye glaringly bright at times. Overall though great illustrations.
I can't wait to read this in print and I really hope they come out with a second volume in the series. I can see middle school aged and up enjoying this fast paced enjoyable comic, and who knows it might even create some new spelling champions out there? I give the book 4 out of 5 stars. show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 43
- Also by
- 11
- Members
- 225
- Popularity
- #99,814
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 23



