G AifIS- ptSL_- s" r>EN6 whtE O/NN f IaKAMCk BOOKS Cmic 0n . I p 1i' -i - .../y1pNT9rR.'UA Wq ~yA4Tri fr aCK .~t ,3A'/EL. /xA~/ CoP+suC rp' t gC$A g t E / ' '7 7W LM 7f T A looks y~ grow UP . hen "Maus" ($8.95) was published by Pantheon Books last year, it looked like a black-and- white comic book. The drawings were sim- ple-cute, anthropo- morphic images of mice, cats and pigs. But all notions of juvenilia faded once someone read "Maus." Graphic artist Art Spiegelman had fashioned a har- rowing collection of his father's Holocaust rec- ollections in a straight- forward narrative that perfectly matched the somewhat static draw- ings. "Maus" sold 80,000 copies and launched a flood of il- lustrated volumes. a TM DC COMICS INC. ' 1986 USED BY PERMISSION Post-Goetz warrior: Batman gets a makeover in Dark Knight,' new books show range (bottom) ~ I h OCTOBER 1987