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bromazepam vs diazepam Bastien Vivティs’s Polina (Cape, ツ」16.99) has been translated by Cape after winning several prizes in its author’s native France, and it is a distinctly continental sort of graphic novel: 200 sepia-tone pages of rambling story about a young Russian ballet dancer’s training and young adulthood, rather like Black Swan without the madness and body horror. Although the dialogue sometimes drags, the real draw here is Vivティs’s art, which combines great splotches of black shading with an apparently haphazard line-drawn style that omits needless detail in favour of conveying essential form and motion. The effect can be peculiar, especially when Vivティs stops bothering to draw eyes on his characters, but it’s arrestingly confident in its economy and can be hugely impressive.