Twitter Facebook Tumblr Pinterest Instagram

« older | Main Largehearted Boy Page | newer »

April 26, 2019

Librairie Drawn & Quarterly Books of the Week - April 26, 2019

In the weekly Librairie Drawn & Quarterly Books of the Week, the Montreal bookstore recommends several new works of fiction, art books, periodicals, and comics.

Librairie Drawn & Quarterly is one of Montreal's premiere independent bookstores.


When I Arrived at the Castle

When I Arrived at the Castle by Emily Carroll

Emily Carroll’s Through the Woods was a breakout horror comic hit, and her latest is another masterfully creepy, sexy gothic tale of fanged-femme body horror. Carroll’s unique sensibility evokes classic fairy-tale and vampire tropes only to rip them to shreds, with gorgeous black-and-white (and red!) art and a savage-yet-tender narrative sensibility that will thrill, surprise, and arouse.


Alienation

Alienation by Ines Estrada

This dystopian near-future sci-fi comic mixes the punk-feminist raunch of Julie Doucet with the visceral psychedelia of Suehiro Maruo and a distinctly millennial whirlwind of pop-culture absurdism. The story follows Elizabeth, a cyberspace exotic dancer, and Carlos, just fired from the last human-staffed oil rig, as they attempt to keep their romance alive. Living in a VR-enhanced corporate monopoly in which fossil fuels have run dry and global climate and wildlife are decimated, the couple is anxious about dangerous cyber-stalkers and faulty brain implants, but mainly, they have to contend with their own boredom.


Walking: One Step at a Time

Walking: One Step at a Time by Erling Kagge

Erling Kagge is the type of renaissance man who seems to have stepped out of an earlier era: as a gentleman explorer, he is the first person to set foot on both the North and South Poles and the summit of Mount Everest. He has written six books on exploration, philosophy, and art collecting, and runs the publishing company Kagge Forlag in his native Oslo. His latest book, Walking, explores the universal appeal of pedestrian ambulation as a spur to thought and creativity.


Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl

Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl by Andrea Lawlor

Andrea Lawlor’s debut novel is a queer coming-of-age tale set in the Midwest of the early 90s and it arrives studded with lavish praise from luminaries like Eileen Myles, Maggie Nelson, Michelle Tea, and Danez Smith. Paul Polydoris studies queer theory, makes zines, and tends bar at the only gay club in his university town, but Paul has a secret: he’s also a (riot) girl. As Paul’s horizons expand, s/he crosses the country, shifting their body and gender at will in a bildungsroman that may well become a touchstone for a new generation of queer readers.


Machines Like Me

Machines Like Me by Ian McEwan

The latest novel from master storyteller Ian McEwan is set in a version of 1980s London in which it’s possible to design and purchase synthetic humans. When Charlie, a semi-employed layabout and amateur robotics buff, comes into money, he buys one of these cyborgs, a near-perfect being named Adam...which leads to certain complications with his lover, Miranda, who is hiding a secret of her own. It’s a subversive tale of love, technology, and humanity by a major contemporary writer venturing (for the first time) into sci-fi and alternate history.


Librairie Drawn & Quarterly links:

Librairie Drawn & Quarterly's website
Librairie Drawn & Quarterly's blog
Librairie Drawn & Quarterly Facebook page
Librairie Drawn & Quarterly Tumblr
Librairie Drawn & Quarterly on Twitter


also at Largehearted Boy:

Support the Largehearted Boy website

other Librairie Drawn & Quarterly Books of the Week

Antiheroines (interviews with up and coming female comics artists)
Atomic Books Comics Preview (weekly new comics and graphic novel highlights)
Book Notes (authors create music playlists for their book)
guest book reviews
musician/author interviews
Note Books (musicians discuss literature)
Short Cuts (writers pair a song with their short story or essay)
WORD Bookstores Books of the Week (weekly new book highlights)


permalink






Google
  Web largeheartedboy.com