Totem /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Pérez Granell, Laura, 1983- author, artist.
Uniform title:Tótem. English
Edition:First Fantagraphics Books edition.
Imprint:Seattle, WA : Fantagraphics Books, Inc., 2023.
©2023
Description:137 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 27 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13468989
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Rosenberg, Andrea, translator.
Fantagraphics Books, publisher.
ISBN:9781683968979
1683968972
Notes:Translation of: Tótem.
In English, translated from the Spanish.
Summary:"Two young women road trip through the Arizona desert in search of a spiritual awakening. Crowds gather to see the village wise woman commune with the dead. Strange bright lights flash across the night sky, provoking all manner of interpretations. A mosaic of experiences, Totem offers tantalizing glimpses of characters on their own journeys connected by some ethereal thread. The narrative slips through time and space, delicately drifting from reality to different states of consciousness. Like a vivid dream, this story is rendered through eerie settings and potent symbols, a spiritual puzzle inviting the reader to piece together. With Totem, this self-assured graphic novel by Spanish illustrator and comics artist Laura Pérez is presented in English for the first time. Pérez presents an entrancing, contemporary vision of magic and mystery, aptly rendered through her wispy, atmospheric pencil lines."--
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Reality is a half-remembered dream in Spanish cartoonist Pérez's macabre, visually mesmerizing, and occasionally confusing English-language debut, a mash-up of vignettes about love, death, and the spiritual realm. At the center of the various narrative threads is a road trip shared by two beautiful young women in love. They seek adventure, swap ancestral tales and metaphysical musings, encounter strangers, and drop in on a mysterious communal gathering with sinister undertones in the Arizona desert. Rendered in clean, delicate lines that harbor loads of emotional import, the art is reminiscent of Adrian Tomine's more expansive drawing. Vibrant portraits of people hanging out in diners, motel rooms, and apartments weave through black-and-white snippets of tall trees or looming ghosts. The meager plot serves to move the women through these atmospheric environs. Though at times the wordless sequences, particularly in the second half of the book, can be hard to follow, they add to the relentless otherworldly vibes. "In some places, everyday life is extraordinary," one of the characters narrates. Perez immerses readers in the intermingled realms of the living and dead. Despite some uneven execution, this layered work blossoms with nuance for close readers. (Sept.)

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review