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The Cardboard Valise
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

The Cardboard Valise Hardcover - 2011

by Katchor, Ben

  • Used
  • Fine
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
  • first

Katchor delivers his first book in more than 10 years: the story of the fantastical nation of Outer Canthus and the three people who, in some way or another, inhabit its shores.

Description

Pantheon, 2011. First edition. Hardcover. Fine. Signed first edition with drawing by Katchor of a hand holding the "maw", with the inscription "The Voracious Maw" which of course is a reference to the text . Dedication reads "To Joe, from Ben Katchor, 4/12/2014, L.A." As new copy with no flaws. Illustrated boards with cardboard valise handles folded inside. Oblong 8vo, bookseller #003723. Peristalsis, anyone?
Used - Fine
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Details

  • Title The Cardboard Valise
  • Author Katchor, Ben
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First edition
  • Condition Used - Fine
  • Pages 128
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Pantheon, New York
  • Date 2011
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Illustrated, Price on Product - Canadian
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 003723
  • ISBN 9780375421143 / 0375421149
  • Weight 1.79 lbs (0.81 kg)
  • Dimensions 8.7 x 11.06 x 0.8 in (22.10 x 28.09 x 2.03 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Fantasy comic books, strips, etc, Graphic novels
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2010022967
  • Dewey Decimal Code 741.597

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From the publisher

BEN KATCHOR is the author of The Jew of New York; Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: The Beauty Supply District; and several works of musical theater in collabora­tion with the composer Mark Mulcahy. He teaches at Par­sons The New School for Design and has contributed to The New Yorker, The Forward, and Metropolis. The first car­toonist to receive a MacArthur Fellowship, he is the subject of a documentary titled The Pleasures of Urban Decay. He lives in New York.

Categories

Media reviews

“Wonderful…a pleasantly flimsy repository for an inexhaustible imagination. Open to any page and you'll be surprised anew.” –The Washington Post

“It’s in those spaces where understanding eludes the reader and where meaning nonetheless makes itself felt, that Katchor’s signature poetry lies.” –Publishers Weekly Comics Weekly
 
“Defies narrative convention…creatively charged.” –Kirkus

“Winsomely haunting…rarely have books that made this little sense made so much sense.” –Publishers Weekly, starred review

Gloriously eccentric…the reader is befuddled, though in the most enjoyable manner.” –Booklist, starred review

“Artist and storyteller Katchor has achieved the goal Borges only imagined. Exiting this oneiric, shamanic, yet utterly naturalistic and sensual masterpiece, the reader steps out into a revitalized continuum richer and more exotic than the one he or she inhabited prior to the reading, a realm full of strange, alluring and bewildering lands, populated by oddball folks with odder customs.  Never again will our common globe seem like a small, homogenous, boring place…The Cardboard Valise is worldbuilding on the order of Jan Morris's Hav, Austin Tappan Wright's Islandia, Brian Aldiss's Malacia, and Ursula Le Guin's Orsinia: places that are attached to our world by extradimensional roads, down which only the sharpest and most sensitive of literary guides can lead one.  Get your ticket immediately!” –Barnes and Noble Review   

“A surreal travelogue…a vast panorama of humane hamburger stands, exquisitely ethereal ethnic restaurants, ancient restroom ruins and wilds tracts of land that fit neatly next to high-rise hotels.” –Brooklyn Daily Eagle

“History, humor, and a generous dose of surrealness combine to make you think you’re walking down the back streets of Oz…Katchor is plainly steeped in the tropes of his craft, but ultimately he is uncategorizable, a man apart.”–Culture Books

“Katchor is the best world-builder in comics today…The Cardboard Valise feels like something you can open up, fall into, and stroll around in. It’s fascinating and funny and endlessly enveloping to look at, but its delights and distortions alike are ultimately a reflection of ourselves.” –The Comics Journal

“Anyone familiar with [Katchor’s] work will recognize his grotesque eccentrics (or maybe his eccentric grotesques), the off-kilter angles and depths of field in every panel, not to mention the banal objects granted strange value and the wonderful prose…There is an exhilaration and freedom here—a license to invent and destroy.” –Tablet Magazine

“Katchor’s work has the unusual distinction of being known…for its startling poetry, dreamily familiar urban landscapes, and revelations about the arcane systems and inner workings of city life…provocative, moving work.” –CriticalMob.com   

“Katchor has made an entire world out of his narrow domain, and it’s as rich and vast (and sad and hilarious) a world as any writer or artist working today has concocted.” –Shelfari

“The appearance of a new Katchor collection is always reason to celebrate… Katchor is a true, rare, untarnished New York treasure — the kind of artist who can concoct a fantastical made-up world, but one that ensures you’ll never see the real world in quite the same way again.” –The 6th Floor blog

“His whimsical, mournful metaphysical verbal gags and scratchy visual poems are at once the most conceptual and conversational comics being made, and for my taste the best ever made…it’s only March, but surely Katchor is the automatic writer-artist of the year.” –ComicCritique Blog 

“Katchor's magically whimsical vision is sui generis… a collection of richly imagined, lovingly detailed individual strips. Each is best lingered over one at a time, an invitingly exotic world unto itself.” –Philadelphia Inquirer

“The Cardboard Valise begins in typically batty fashion…memorable.” –The New York Times Comics Roundup     

“Katchor is the Joseph Mitchell of contemporary comics…He remains the master of the ineffable, an artist who can bring to life ideas and experiences that exist at the sub-atomic level of consciousness. The Cardboard Valise is a worthy addition to Katchor’s already distinguished oeuvre, but it’s also a sign of an accomplished artist deepening and developing his core themes.” –Jeet Heer, The Ceiling Worker  

“Katchor is one of America’s great prose stylists, a writer possessed of an almost unequalled mastery of word choice and the rhythm and pacing of the American language…What finally elevates Katchor above not only all cartoonists, but above most prose writers, is the sheer beauty of his prose. In his finest tales, each panel, removed from its context, creates its own context, a world of its own; each is so evocative that the single panel, removed from its fellows, explodes with melancholy. The texts are gems, and when combined with Katchor’s drawings, with their washed shadows, their chiaroscuro streets, the result is a body of work of an almost unbearable sadness, of an almost unbearable beauty.” –Jewish Currents 

“[Katchor] could have not one by two MacArthur grants, given all the value he produces…Your gullet strangles in irrepressible laughter before you are halfway through one of his riffs, and you can barely make it to the end, only to find there is another on the next page, or the next panel,” –Boston Review

“Part surrealistic travelogue and part satirical treatise on the very notion of culture, The Cardboard Valise is a book about imaginary places with enough heart to make its very real social commentary easily digestible.” –Straight.com’s best graphic novels of 2011

Citations

  • Booklist, 03/15/2011, Page 33
  • Kirkus Reviews, 12/15/2010, Page 1234
  • Library Journal Prepub Alert, 09/15/2010, Page 46
  • Publishers Weekly, 01/03/2011, Page 0

About the author

BEN KATCHOR is the author of The Jew of New York; Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: The Beauty Supply District; and several works of musical theater in collabora­tion with the composer Mark Mulcahy. He teaches at Par­sons The New School for Design and has contributed to The New Yorker, The Forward, and Metropolis. The first car­toonist to receive a MacArthur Fellowship, he is the subject of a documentary titled The Pleasures of Urban Decay. He lives in New York.