<marcxml:record xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:marcxml="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:madsrdf="http://www.loc.gov/mads/rdf/v1#" xmlns:ri="http://id.loc.gov/ontologies/RecordInfo#" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:mets="http://www.loc.gov/METS/">
	    <marcxml:leader>03576cz   2200325n  4500</marcxml:leader>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="001">sh94008233</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="003">DLC</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="005">20050906074027.0</marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:controlfield tag="008">050726i| anannbabn          |a ana      </marcxml:controlfield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="010" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">sh 94008233 </marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">DLC</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="c">DLC</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="d">DLC</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="d">IAhCCS</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="d">WaU</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="150" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Graphic novels</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="360" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="i">subdivision</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Comic books, strips, etc.</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="i">under names of individual persons; under individual sacred works, e.g.</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Bible--Comic books, strips, etc.;</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="i">and under topical headings; and headings for genres of comic books, e.g.</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Fantasy comic books, strips, etc.</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Comic book novels</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Graphic albums</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Graphic fiction</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Graphic nonfiction</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Graphic novellas</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="450" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Nonfiction graphic novels</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Comic books, strips, etc.</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Fiction</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="550" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="w">g</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Popular literature</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Work cat.: 94-23984: Rothschild, D.A. Graphic novels, 1995.</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">LC database, Nov. 3, 1994</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">(40+ entries for individual graphic novels under series title)</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">City of light, city of dark, c1993:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">t.p. (comic-book novel)</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Rothschild, D.A. Graphic novels, 1995:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">p. xiii (a graphic novel is a sturdy, lengthy comic book that contains a single story or a set of interrelated stories told using "sequential art"; other terms: trade comics (which already has a meaning in the industry); commix, invented by Art Spiegelman to describe "a co-mixing of words and pictures" (too similar to comics and comix to catch on); graphic album (the European term--same problem as graphic novel, with audio overtones); illu-novel (too clunky to catch on); and gekiga (the Japanese term for the genre))</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Gorman, M. Getting graphic!, c2003:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">p. xii (graphic novel is used in the library profession to describe an original book-length story, either fiction or nonfiction, published in comic book style or a collection of stories that have been published previously as individual comic books; conventional graphic novel begins and ends a story within the first and last page of the book; the use of the seemingly erroneous label of "novel" for all books created in a comic-style format must be understood and accepted as the status quo) p. 60 (graphic nonfiction) p. 66 (graphic work of nonfiction)</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Wikipedia, July 26, 2005</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">(Graphic novel (sometimes abbreviated GN) is a term for a kind of book, usually telling an extended story with sequential art (i.e. comics); most broadly used to refer to any long-form comic book or manga, i.e. the comics analogue to a prose novel or novella; can apply to works which were previously published serially in periodical comic books, or to works produced specifically for book-format publication; some use the term "graphic novella" for works that fit the general sense of the term (a single, well-developed story), but are less than 100 pages; in the book trade the term is sometimes extended to include material that would not be considered a "novel" if produced in another medium. Collections of comic book issues that do not form a single continuous story, anthologies of short loosely-related pieces, and even non-fiction are stocked by libraries and bookstores as "graphic novels")</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="670" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Lyga, A.A.W. Graphic novels in your media center, 2004:</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="b">p. 15 (comic books can--and do--encompass the entire range of fiction and nonfiction) p. 17 (all graphic novels are comic books, but not all comic books are graphic novels)</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	    <marcxml:datafield tag="675" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Ward. Longman companion to twentieth century literature, 1991;</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Random House;</marcxml:subfield>
      <marcxml:subfield code="a">Web. 3</marcxml:subfield>
    </marcxml:datafield>
	  </marcxml:record>

