Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?
Autor Roz Chasten Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 iul 2014
Vezi toate premiile Carte premiată
New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association Award (2014), Thurber Prize for American Humor (2015), New England Book Award (2014)
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781608198061
ISBN-10: 1608198065
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: Colour illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 191 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1608198065
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: Colour illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 191 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Great
package:With
four-color
illustrations,
family
photos
and
documents,
and
handwritten
text
throughout,
all
wrapped
up
in
a
unique
cover
treatment
with
high
production
values,
Roz's
memoir
will
be
a
collector's
dream.
Notă biografică
Roz
Chastgrew
up
in
Brooklyn.
Her
cartoons
began
appearing
in
theNew
Yorkerin
1978,
where
she
has
since
published
more
than
one
thousand.
She
wrote
and
illustrated
the
#1
NYT
bestseller
(100+
weeks)Can't
We
Talk
About
Something
More
Pleasant?,
a
National
Book
Critics
Circle
Award
and
Kirkus
Prize
winner
and
finalist
for
the
National
Book
Award;What
I
Hate:
From
A
to
Z;
and
her
cartoon
collectionsThe
Party,After
You
LeftandTheories
of
Everything.
She
was
awarded
the
Harvey
Award
Hall
of
Fame
Award.
Recenzii
By
turns
grim
and
absurd,
deeply
poignant
and
laugh-out-loud
funny.
Ms.
Chast
reminds
us
how
deftly
the
graphic
novel
can
capture
ordinary
crises
in
ordinary
American
lives.
A tour de force of dark humor and illuminating pathos about her parents' final years as only this quirky genius of pen and ink could construe them.
An achievement of dark humor that rings utterly true.
One of the major books of 2014 . . . Moving and bracingly candid . . . This is, in its original and unexpected way, one of the great autobiographical memoirs of our time.
Better than any book I know, this extraordinarily honest, searing and hilarious graphic memoir captures (and helps relieve) the unbelievable stress that results when the tables turn and grown children are left taking care of their parents. . . [A] remarkable, poignant memoir.
Very, very, very funny, in a way that a straight-out memoir about the death of one's elderly parents probably would not be . . . Ambitious, raw and personal as anything she has produced.
Devastatingly good . . . Anyone who has had Chast's experience will devour this book and cling to it for truth, humor, understanding, and the futile wish that it could all be different.
Gut-wrenching and laugh-aloud funny. I want to recommend it to everyone I know who has elderly parents, or might have them someday.
Joins Muriel Spark'sMemento Mori,William Trevor'sThe Old Boys,and Kingsley Amis'sEnding Upin the competition for the funniest book about old age I've ever read. It is also heartbreaking.
Chast tackles those intimate and difficult changes with just the same humor and honesty as everything else. Readers who are starting to transition from children to caretakers of their own parents will find comfort in Chast's work, and almost anyone can appreciate the pleas to talk about something more pleasant with your family.
Revelatory. So many have faced (or will face) the situation that the author details, but no one could render it like she does. A top-notch graphic memoir that adds a whole new dimension to readers' appreciation of Chast and her work.
Chast is at the top of her candid form, delivering often funny, trenchant, and frequently painful revelations -- about human behavior, about herself -- on every page.
Never has the abyss of dread and grief been plumbed to such incandescently hilarious effect. The lines between laughter and hysteria, despair and rage, love and guilt, are quavery indeed, and no one draws them more honestly, more . . . unscrimpingly, than Roz Chast.
Roz Chast squeezes more existential pain out of baffled people in cheap clothing sitting around on living-room sofas with antimacassar doilies in crummy apartments than Dostoevsky got out of all of Russia's dark despair. This is a great book in the annals of human suffering, cleverly disguised as fun.
A tour de force of dark humor and illuminating pathos about her parents' final years as only this quirky genius of pen and ink could construe them.
An achievement of dark humor that rings utterly true.
One of the major books of 2014 . . . Moving and bracingly candid . . . This is, in its original and unexpected way, one of the great autobiographical memoirs of our time.
Better than any book I know, this extraordinarily honest, searing and hilarious graphic memoir captures (and helps relieve) the unbelievable stress that results when the tables turn and grown children are left taking care of their parents. . . [A] remarkable, poignant memoir.
Very, very, very funny, in a way that a straight-out memoir about the death of one's elderly parents probably would not be . . . Ambitious, raw and personal as anything she has produced.
Devastatingly good . . . Anyone who has had Chast's experience will devour this book and cling to it for truth, humor, understanding, and the futile wish that it could all be different.
Gut-wrenching and laugh-aloud funny. I want to recommend it to everyone I know who has elderly parents, or might have them someday.
Joins Muriel Spark'sMemento Mori,William Trevor'sThe Old Boys,and Kingsley Amis'sEnding Upin the competition for the funniest book about old age I've ever read. It is also heartbreaking.
Chast tackles those intimate and difficult changes with just the same humor and honesty as everything else. Readers who are starting to transition from children to caretakers of their own parents will find comfort in Chast's work, and almost anyone can appreciate the pleas to talk about something more pleasant with your family.
Revelatory. So many have faced (or will face) the situation that the author details, but no one could render it like she does. A top-notch graphic memoir that adds a whole new dimension to readers' appreciation of Chast and her work.
Chast is at the top of her candid form, delivering often funny, trenchant, and frequently painful revelations -- about human behavior, about herself -- on every page.
Never has the abyss of dread and grief been plumbed to such incandescently hilarious effect. The lines between laughter and hysteria, despair and rage, love and guilt, are quavery indeed, and no one draws them more honestly, more . . . unscrimpingly, than Roz Chast.
Roz Chast squeezes more existential pain out of baffled people in cheap clothing sitting around on living-room sofas with antimacassar doilies in crummy apartments than Dostoevsky got out of all of Russia's dark despair. This is a great book in the annals of human suffering, cleverly disguised as fun.
Descriere
An
alphabet
of
things
to
avoid,Do
Not
Wantshowcases
the
fears,
phobias,
and
anxieties
that
occupy
the
fertile
imagination
of
Roz
Chast.
Premii
- New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association Award Winner, 2014
- Thurber Prize for American Humor Finalist, 2015
- New England Book Award Winner, 2014
- National Book Awards Finalist, 2014
- Kirkus Prize Winner, 2014
- L.A. Times Book Prize Finalist, 2014
- National Book Critics Circle Award Winner, 2014
- Books for a Better Life Winner, 2015
- Indies Choice Book Awards Honor Book, 2015