The Green Hand and Other Stories

by Nicole Claveloux

Hardcover, 2017

Status

Available

Call number

741.5

Collection

Publication

New York Review Comics (2017), Edition: Illustrated, 108 pages

Description

"Nicole Claveloux's short stories--originally published in the late 1970s and never before collected in English--are among the most beautiful comics ever created: whimsical, intoxicating, with the freshness and splendor of dreams. In hallucinatory color or elegant black-and-white, she brings us into lands that are very different from our own but oddly recognizable. They are lands filled with murderous grandmothers and lonely city dwellers, bad-tempered vegetables and walls that are surprisingly easy to fall through, lands in which the very air seems alive and capable of telling you a dirty joke (or the meaning of life). In the title story, a new houseplant becomes the first step in an epic journey of self-discovery and a witty fable of modern romance--complete with talking shrubbery, infantile gourmands, a wised-up genie, and one very depressed bird. This new selection is the perfect introduction to the work of an unforgettable, unjustly neglected master of French comics"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member rivkat
French comics from the 60s, about fantastical happenings to ordinary people. Not enough narrative payoff for me.

Awards

Prix Artémisia (Winner — Matrimoine - 2020)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

108 p.; 11.29 inches

ISBN

1681371073 / 9781681371078

Local notes

Claveloux s short stories originally published in the late 1970s and never before collected in English are among the most beautiful comics ever created: whimsical, intoxicating, with the freshness and splendor of dreams. In hallucinatory color or elegant black-and-white, she brings us into lands that are very different from our own but oddly recognizable. They are lands filled with murderous grandmothers and lonely city dwellers, bad-tempered vegetables and walls that are surprisingly easy to fall through, lands in which the very air seems alive and capable of telling you a dirty joke (or the meaning of life).
In the title story, a new houseplant becomes the first step in an epic journey of self-discovery and a witty fable of modern romance complete with talking shrubbery, infantile gourmands, a wised-up genie, and one very depressed bird. This new selection is the perfect introduction to the work of an unforgettable, unjustly neglected master of French comics.

Similar in this library

Page: 0.2316 seconds