---
product_id: 89709905
title: "Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass"
price: "150 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/89709905-harley-quinn-breaking-glass
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass

**Price:** 150 zł
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass
- **How much does it cost?** 150 zł with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pl](https://www.desertcart.pl/products/89709905-harley-quinn-breaking-glass)

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## Description

desertcart.com: Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass: 9781401283292: Tamaki, Mariko, Pugh, Steve: Books

Review: Best book I've read in the past year - This book is so full of imagination, and is such a perfect match of author and artist. From the author: the characters are awesome, the dialog is great, the story is original and absorbing from start to finish. I especially love Mama. She's the kind of character that it's hard to accept that she's fictional. She is SO real and likeable in the book, I really want to meet her. From the artist: the depiction of the characters, and their expressions, is so real, and so unique, that every one of these characters springs to life. And the shading and coloring! I've never seen coloring like this, where the artist purposely uses a limited palette. Steve Pugh pulls it off like a master. Almost every page brought a new gasp of enjoyment. I really don't the last time I've enjoyed a book this much.
Review: So relatable to my own experience - I see a lot of folks complaining that it is not like the canon comic universe but I don't think it was ever meant to be just like with DC's other YA novels. They take some liberties. I took everything with a grain of salt. I knew going in, it wasn't going to be like canon and I was okay with it. I think the author did a great job establishing a new background for Harley that was relatable in a lot of ways to queer teens. There were many things I loved. I enjoyed that Harley got a new background that wasn't her being created by the Joker. It made Harley have a lot more power to have already been that quirky, weird, fun person that we already know and love. Honestly this story made me love Harley again because the character has a tendency to be a little too much at times. The author was able to let Harley be quirky but also be reflective and show that there's accountability for her actions. Ivy is great in this graphic novel and I would love to see a YA novel with her one day because the author really made her come to life. I also loved that even though the characters were a bit different than their comic counterparts, Harley and Ivy's connection and the way they balance each other remained true. The story talks about gentrification which a real problem that has been happening frequently in many major cities and how it damages communities and culture. I loved everything about this book and would highly recommend it to my friends.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #852,904 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #200 in Young Adult Coming of Age Comics & Graphic Novels #326 in Teen & Young Adult Superhero Comics #12,717 in Teen & Young Adult Science Fiction & Fantasy |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 654 Reviews |

## Images

![Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81DvEW7qEdL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Best book I've read in the past year
*by E***D on November 17, 2019*

This book is so full of imagination, and is such a perfect match of author and artist. From the author: the characters are awesome, the dialog is great, the story is original and absorbing from start to finish. I especially love Mama. She's the kind of character that it's hard to accept that she's fictional. She is SO real and likeable in the book, I really want to meet her. From the artist: the depiction of the characters, and their expressions, is so real, and so unique, that every one of these characters springs to life. And the shading and coloring! I've never seen coloring like this, where the artist purposely uses a limited palette. Steve Pugh pulls it off like a master. Almost every page brought a new gasp of enjoyment. I really don't the last time I've enjoyed a book this much.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ So relatable to my own experience
*by R***X on September 9, 2019*

I see a lot of folks complaining that it is not like the canon comic universe but I don't think it was ever meant to be just like with DC's other YA novels. They take some liberties. I took everything with a grain of salt. I knew going in, it wasn't going to be like canon and I was okay with it. I think the author did a great job establishing a new background for Harley that was relatable in a lot of ways to queer teens. There were many things I loved. I enjoyed that Harley got a new background that wasn't her being created by the Joker. It made Harley have a lot more power to have already been that quirky, weird, fun person that we already know and love. Honestly this story made me love Harley again because the character has a tendency to be a little too much at times. The author was able to let Harley be quirky but also be reflective and show that there's accountability for her actions. Ivy is great in this graphic novel and I would love to see a YA novel with her one day because the author really made her come to life. I also loved that even though the characters were a bit different than their comic counterparts, Harley and Ivy's connection and the way they balance each other remained true. The story talks about gentrification which a real problem that has been happening frequently in many major cities and how it damages communities and culture. I loved everything about this book and would highly recommend it to my friends.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A Phenomenal Reinterpretation of Harley Quinn!
*by R***D on September 10, 2019*

Mariko Tamaki and Steve Pugh’s “Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass” reinterprets Harley Quinn as a high school girl living in Gotham in the modern day. The concept resembles Jeffrey Thomas’s cancelled animated series, “Gotham High,” though Tamaki avoids the urge to force cameos of familiar characters, instead telling her own story. Using the income inequality of a major city like Gotham and the power structures that reinforce it as a backdrop, Tamaki focuses on Harley Quinn finding a group of misfits to call family and the struggles they go though just to find some joy in a world that seeks to grind them down. Along the way she meets Ivy, who introduces Harley to ways she can challenge the status quo, though Quinn naturally makes those ideas her own. The spoiled sons of the wealthy demonstrate all the sociopathic tendencies one would expect from children who have never had to face the consequences of their actions, with John Kane, heir to the Kane fortune and Millennium Enterprises, leading the bunch. Tamaki plays with the concept of performative identity in the story. Harley discovers her own as the story progresses, learning from drag queens how to express her bubbly personality through flamboyance. If she and her friends are expressing their inner joy to the world, people like the Kanes use a mask of joy to hide their soullessness. As Tamaki writes, “Harleen’s mother said to watch out for anyone who can’t smile with their eyes” (pg. 64). In nearly every scene, artist Steve Pugh perfectly depicts the Kanes’ smiles more like rictus grins than anything friendly. Through Ivy, Tamaki sums up the timeliness of the book’s message. Facing the eviction of her entire neighborhood to pave the way for luxury condos, Ivy says, “This is not just about Mama. Or you. Or me. It’s not just about Gotham. It’s everywhere. It’s corporations before communities. It’s a system that protects the rich, ----- the poor. That keeps the powerful, powerful and the oppressed, oppressed. It always has. It always will” (pg. 92). This comes through in Pugh’s art, which brilliantly uses color to set the mood. His depiction of characters is dynamic and lifelike while his color washes evoke emotion in a way more traditional coloring might not. DC markets their DC Ink line of graphic novels to young adults and “Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass” shows that, like other current YA fiction, they’re not shying away from addressing serious topics. Tamaki and Pugh write honestly about issues that teens will understand and they don’t try to sugarcoat the hard facts. Their book uses Quinn to tell a story that’s both faithful to her character and relevant to readers, further demonstrating the power of graphic novels.

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*Product available on Desertcart Poland*
*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-04-28*