Author:Marjane Satrapi
From the bestselling author of Persepolis comes this humorous and enlightening look at the sex lives of Iranian women. Embroideries gathers together Marjane's tough-talking grandmother, stoic mother, glamorous and eccentric aunt and their friends and neighbours for an afternoon of tea-drinking and talk. Naturally, the subject turns to loves, sex and vagaries of men...
This is a book to provoke and entertain
—— Peter Millar , The TimesSatrapi's drawings are sparing and highly stylised; she is able to render nuances of expression with simple, bold strokes... The stories are wittily told and show a side of life in Iran that is unknown to outsiders
—— Lydia Adetunji , Financial TimesA daring and brilliantly calculated illumination of a secret space... Though Embroideries is not a continuation of the Persepolis story, it sits at the heart of the same world - a brutally policed society where an extraordinarily rich and inventive culture still prevails, if only behind closed doors, where women are wildly subversive, funny, free-thinking and sexy
—— Maureen Freely , GuardianThis is Sex and the City, Middle-Eastern style - outrageous, explicit and funny
—— Kelly Knox , Time OutA neat deconstruction of superhero comics and another fascinating, wryly amusing character study by Clowes.
—— Henry Northmore , ListOne of the chief pleasures of this book is how the words and pictures collaborate to gesture at a territory that neither might reach alone.
—— Tim Martin , TelegraphMany of us are living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Alison Bechdel has written a graphic novel about this, sort of like a comic book by Virginia Woolf. You won't believe it until you read it - and you must!
—— Gloria SteinemPure bliss.
—— Lisa Appiganesi , ObserverBechdel’s engaging, original graphic memoir explores her troubled relationship with her distant mother.
—— New York TimesA complex, fascinating and intellectually rich memoir.
—— Larushka Ivan-Zadek , MetroVery original and arresting.
—— Cressida Connelly , SpectatorThroughout, there are magnificent feats of connectivity, startlingly complex internal monologues that unfold with perfect simplicity… I haven’t encountered a book about being an artist, or about the punishing entanglements of mothers and daughters, as engaging, profound or original as this one in a long time.
—— Rev’d Katie Roiphe , ScotsmanLively, fresh and expressive…humane, complex and beautiful.
—— Anna Carey , Irish TimesDon’t let the cartoons fool you, this is an exciting and intelligent book and, at many points, highly moving. It doesn’t just tell Alison’s story, Are You My Mother? allows to you to think about your own.
—— Emerald StreetFind everything this author has written. Every jot she makes on the paper enriches the baroque, painful, exhilarating story she has to tell.
—— Candia McWilliam , ScotsmanIt’s first and foremost funny, using graphical and verbal tricks to express the psychological dramas of an American household.
—— MacUserA tour de force of fine detail.
—— Phil Baker , Sunday TimesThe houses are blocks of black studded with burning orange windows. It’s just a street with buildings on it with normal people living in them. But what Ware has told us about buildings turned each orange window into a frame.
—— Nick Richardson , London Review of BooksBuilding Stories may be the most concerted and apparently counter-intuitive attempt in any graphic novel to take us inside the life, thoughts and emotions of one fictional, unnamed character and make us care. That he succeeds, without the manipulative heartstring-tugging of cinema or theatre but with comics, is all the more remarkable.
—— Paul Gravett , IndependentMasterful, beautifully constructed, beautifully drawn tales of domestic boredom, agony and bliss.
—— Nick Laird , GuardianWare's graphic restraint has impressive emotional force; this is a work to pore over, from an artist like no other.
—— Justine Jordan , GuardianMoving and indescribably accomplished graphic novel...sent my jaw south and my eyebrows north.
—— Sam Leith , SpectatorThe sadness of the narrative is fractured by the fizziness of its construction: a gorgeous book full of overlapping stories.
—— Adam Thirlwell , New StatesmanSo bleak, observant and meticulously crafted that it merits that usually empty old word: masterpiece.
—— Sam Leith , ProspectTen years of intricate, ingenious work captured in one hefty box packed with graphic novels, pamphlets and a cartoon newspaper. Ware brilliantly charts the everyday experiences of the various inhabitants of a three-storey Chicago building in forensic, melancholic detail.
—— Colin Smith , QA big, sturdy box containing hard-bound volumes, pamphlets and a tabloid houses Ware’s demanding, melancholy and magnificent graphic novel about the inhabitants of a Chicago building.
—— New York TimesThis is long worth the wait ... sumptuously printed and lovingly presented.
—— Audrey Niffenegger , Evening Standard (ES Magazine)Both a beautiful object and a work of tremendous power, that sets new standards for the graphic novel form. I can't stop talking about it.
—— FoylesIn both imagination and execution, his artistry is faultless. A song to lettering, line, ink, Chicago, hope, regret and the history of comics, the emotions he arouses will stay with you long after closing the box it came in.
—— Lucy Davies , Sunday Telegraph