The Cardboard Valise
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Random House, Inc.
Ben Katchor (“The creator of the last great American comic strip.”—Michael Chabon) gives us his first book in more than ten years: the story of the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus and the three people who, in some way or another, inhabit its shores.
… More »
Ben Katchor (“The creator of the last great American comic strip.”—Michael Chabon) gives us his first book in more than ten years: the story of the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus and the three people who, in some way or another, inhabit its shores.
… More »
Random House, Inc.
Ben Katchor (“The creator of the last great American comic strip.”—Michael Chabon) gives us his first book in more than ten years: the story of the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus and the three people who, in some way or another, inhabit its shores.
Emile Delilah is a young xenophile (lover of foreign nations) so addicted to traveling to the exotic regions of Outer Canthus that the government pays him a monthly stipend just so he can continue his visits. Living in the same tenement as Emile are Boreal Rince, the exiled king of Outer Canthus, and Elijah Salamis, a supranationalist determined to erase the cultural and geographic boundaries that separate the citizens of the Earth. Although they rarely meet, their lives intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct and inhabit: a vast panorama of humane hamburger stands, exquisitely ethereal ethnic restaurants, ancient restroom ruins, and wild tracts of land that fit neatly next to high-rise hotels. The Cardboard Valise is a graphic novel as travelogue; a canvas of semi-surrealism; and a poetic, whimsical, beguiling work of Ben Katchor’s dazzling imagination.
Baker & Taylor
The lives of three acquaintances in the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct, from Emile Delilah, who happily spends his traveling stipend; to Boreal Rince, an exiled king; to Elijah Salamis, a supranationalist dedicated to erasing cultural boundaries.
Baker
& Taylor
The lives of three acquaintances in the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct.
« Less
Ben Katchor (“The creator of the last great American comic strip.”—Michael Chabon) gives us his first book in more than ten years: the story of the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus and the three people who, in some way or another, inhabit its shores.
Emile Delilah is a young xenophile (lover of foreign nations) so addicted to traveling to the exotic regions of Outer Canthus that the government pays him a monthly stipend just so he can continue his visits. Living in the same tenement as Emile are Boreal Rince, the exiled king of Outer Canthus, and Elijah Salamis, a supranationalist determined to erase the cultural and geographic boundaries that separate the citizens of the Earth. Although they rarely meet, their lives intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct and inhabit: a vast panorama of humane hamburger stands, exquisitely ethereal ethnic restaurants, ancient restroom ruins, and wild tracts of land that fit neatly next to high-rise hotels. The Cardboard Valise is a graphic novel as travelogue; a canvas of semi-surrealism; and a poetic, whimsical, beguiling work of Ben Katchor’s dazzling imagination.
Baker & Taylor
The lives of three acquaintances in the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct, from Emile Delilah, who happily spends his traveling stipend; to Boreal Rince, an exiled king; to Elijah Salamis, a supranationalist dedicated to erasing cultural boundaries.
Baker
& Taylor
The lives of three acquaintances in the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus intertwine through the elaborate fictions they construct.
« Less
Imprint:
New York - Pantheon Books
Pages:
1
ISBN:
9780375421143, 0375421149
Language:
English
Statement of responsibility:
Ben Katchor
Characteristics:
1 v. (unpaged) :,ill. ;,23 cm.
Author (Original Script):
Katchor, Ben
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Add a CommentI like the drawing, and the individual weird and darkly comical ideas are good, but it doesn't flow that well as a story. There is a very choppy feel to it. Much preferred his earlier works.
"I should come clean right up front. Ben Katchor is possibly my favourite cartoonist. He’s certainly in the top five. It has been eight years since his last book collection and, barring a dramatic change in his work, I was convinced that I would like this new volume as well. I did. Like all of Katchor’s comics, it is a work of great beauty and eccentricity. Eccentricity being the key word." Review by Seth Globe & Mail March 11 2011