Stardust Nation
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
Unforgettable, off-kilter graphic fiction from the Booker-shortlisted novelist Deborah Levy
For the high-flying, heavy drinking advertising boss Tom Banbury, the art of persuasion relies on an infiltration of the consumer’s mind. In the case of his colleague and confidante Nikos Gazidis, the overdeveloped sense of empathy that suits him to the business has given rise to a strange psychiatric condition. Nick has unwittingly crashed into the consciousness of his boss.
While Tom drinks to forget the troubles of his earthly life, Nick is forced to confront a past that is not his own: a childhood scarred by the small wars waged by an abusive father – and by the events that brought them to a close. When Nick enters the panicked silence of the Abbey, a fortress for the rich and unstable, his sister guards him from the visiting Tom Banbury. But can this peculiar bond be broken or has Nikos Gazidis taken an empathetic leap too far?
“Stardust Nation leaves a mark, an echo of something unsettling made more unsettling by pinpricks of realism. There is a kind of joy in this slippage, in giving up on realism and delineation” –The Guardian
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A convoluted story that is hindered by awkward artwork and lettering, this shoots for the stars but doesn't make it past the ozone. A young man, Tom Banbury, finds that his boss, Nick, has absorbed Tom's own memories of an abusive father, and acts them out. This interesting premise from novelist Levy her words are evocative and the best part of this graphic novel is bogged down by the stilted pseudoexpressionist art by fine artist Klimowski and the jarringly incongruous lettering by Kate McLaughlin. Tom and Nick's shared histories remain touching at points, but as a package, this graphic novel fails to deliver the enrapturing experience it sometimes hints at.