Forget my name /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Zerocalcare, 1983- author, illustrator.
Imprint:Portland, OR : Ablaze Publishing, 2022.
©2022
Description:1 volume (unpaged) : chiefly illustrations ; 27 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12920070
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Zerocalcare : forget my name
Other authors / contributors:Roncalli di Montorio, Carla, translator.
Bottaini, Sara, letterer.
ISBN:9781950912728
1950912728
Summary:"When the last vestiges of his childhood are taken from him, Zerocalcare discovers unsuspected secrets about his family. Torn between the soothing numbness of the innocence of youth and the impossibility to elude society's ever expanding control over people's lives, he'll have to understand where he really comes from, before he understands where he is going"--
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Employing fantasy, metaphor, and absurdist comedy, Zerocalcare (Kobane Calling) tells a deeply personal, wholly unexpected family story in his freewheeling graphic memoir. His skinny, bug-eyed cartoon avatar copes with a grandmother's death by cleaning out her house and searching for a missing ring. In the process, Zerocalcare uncovers startling revelations about her tumultuous life as a Frenchwoman raised by Russian aristocrats, along with deeper, darker, sometimes fantastical family secrets. The meticulously loopy artwork ricochets between the slapstick and the solemn, with equal parts snarky pop-culture references and delicate visual symbolism. Zerocalcare inhabits a world of anthropomorphic animals, talks with anarchic foxes, contends with a conscience that takes the form of a chatty armadillo, dodges shadowy trench-coated figures, and processes the problems of adulthood in terms of anime and video games. His grandmother's story becomes a springboard into memories, emotions, family history, international politics, and the geography of his Italian hometown. Ultimately, he's forced to confront his own weaknesses and reflect that "fear's actually the most contagious of all illnesses." This work from one of Italy's rising comics stars surprises and charms at every hairpin turn. (Mar.)

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review