
Fly-ass b-boy fashions, deadly street fights and bumpin' club parties all get infectiously realized in Wimberly's drawings, which impart a poetic sense of flow on the story's plot. And all of the charged juxtaposition in Prince of Cats creates a gorgeous textual aurora around Shakespeare's original work. Things seem hotter, faster, less mannered. The archaic language feels more approachable when woven in with 20th-Century slang. And Wimberly's art is full of elongated energy where moments seem to stretch and snap with wild unpredictability. Shakespeare's classic observes that life and love and youth are all crazy. Wimberly makes that crazy jump off the page and in the 21st Century.






