What would happen if Indiana Jones was an Israeli woman? And what if her hunt for the Ark of the Covenant could embolden Israeli settlers and upend the lives of Palestinians? Eisner Award winner Rutu ...
Graphic novelist Rutu Modan’s award-winning book, “The Property,” now adapted as a film directed by her sister, actor Dana Modan, will reach Israeli movie theaters this December. The book, which won ...
Modan, a new Japanese restaurant from former Nobu D.C. executive sushi chef Micheole Dator, is opening in Tysons, Virginia, this fall, with an award-winning interior design, sushi counter and private ...
In Israel — a country almost entirely bereft of homegrown graphic novels — Rutu Modan is a one-woman industry. Her new book, “The Property,” published in both Hebrew and English, follows Mica, a young ...
At Modan, fine dining doesn’t take itself too seriously. The shiny new Japanese restaurant from Nobu alum Micheole “Chico” Dator swings open on Friday, November 8, wowing McLean diners with standout ...
Israeli graphic novelist Rutu Modan's deceptively clear and simple line work — she can conjure a face in two dots and a single, expressive pen stroke — is a deliberate artistic choice. Narratively, ...
Matthew Kang is a correspondent for Eater. Previously, he was the lead editor of Eater’s Southern California/Southwest region. He has covered dining, restaurants, food culture, and nightlife in Los ...
A curious double — or is it triple? — vision marks Rutu Modan’s graphic novel “The Property” (Drawn & Quarterly, 222 pages, $24.95), which involves a grandmother and a granddaughter on a journey ...
In Rutu Modan's second full-length graphic novel, Mica Segal, a young Israeli woman, travels to Warsaw with her paternal grandmother, Regina, to help her reclaim the apartment building her family was ...
If there's always a fine line between "hilarious" and "offensive," Israeli comics artist Rutu Modan is one heck of a tightrope walker. This is a woman who managed to edit the Israeli edition of Mad ...
The story of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is rarely told with much economy. Just the question of where to begin can stop things before they start. 1917? 1948? 1967? But the Israeli graphic ...