Peter Kuper's Speechless was reviewed in the all-important Sunday Book Review Section of the New York Times on June 24. Elissa Lin Meyers gave Speechless a short but very positive review in the 'Books in Brief' section of the Book Review. Meyers noted that Speechless 'documents a career dedicated to bringing the glee of a child's immersion in a picture book to adult concerns like justice, romance and freedom of speech. Though he draws comics, Kuper does not make joke books; instead he uses stencils with collage, watercolors or pencil drawings to depict urban chaos in panels astonishing for their clarity and concision.'
The New York Times Book Review is still considered the number one venue for reaching mainstream bookstores and much of the audience that visits them. For years (with the exception of Art Spiegelman's Maus) the New York Times ignored the development of the modern comic book and graphic novel, but that attitude has changed in the past twelve months. Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan received a rave review last winter as did Joe Sacco's Safe Area Gorazde (see 'Safe Area Gorazde Reviewed by N.Y. Times'). Even books about the history of comic books like Les Daniels' Wonder Woman volume have been reviewed positively by the Times (see 'Wonder Woman Book Reviewed by the N.Y. Times'). The Book Review even commissioned Chris Ware to provide a series of illustrations and decorations for its all-important 'Summer Reading Issue.'