In the Flesh: Stories
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Average customer review:Product Description
A graphic novel for the twenty-first-century featuring tales of tortured souls and tormented passion—brilliantly etched in words and striking visuals
Some people fall in love, get married, and thrive in happy relationships—and then there are others. From Israeli enfant terrible Koren Shadmi comes a wickedly literate, darkly poetic, beautifully illustrated story collection that exposes with nightmarish clarity the sorrows of love and desire. Read in these pages such tales as:
Satisfaction Av.: The terrifying depths to which an unloved child once sank return to haunt her.
Radioactive Girlfriend: A student embarks on a torrid love affair with a young woman whose powerful allure is literally nuclear.
Pastry Paradise: A near-death experience takes away a woman's will to live and love…but awakens in her a dark and insatiable appetite.
Antoinette: A young man becomes obsessed with the girl of his dreams: a gorgeous—but headless—sylph.
…and another six tales of alienation and angst.
With brutal strokes and lacerating wit, Shadmi introduces a haunting gallery of lost souls that will both repel and captivate.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #779919 in Books
- Published on: 2009-02-03
- Released on: 2009-02-03
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 160 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780345508713
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In his debut collection of graphic short stories, Israel-born Shadmi tries to have the last word in sexual malevolence in angst-ridden tales of couplings that go horrendously awry. Alienation reigns in pieces like The Fun Lawn, where a man with an underage online porn habit who works in a giant dog suit on a children's TV show is flummoxed when a beautiful young woman comes on to him, but may just like him for the dog suit. Most of the more effective stories go straight for David Cronenberg–style issues of bodily invasion, such as Radioactive Girlfriend, in which a man's proximity to his lover proves potentially fatal. Surrealist pieces like Pastry Paradise and A Lavish Affair not so subtly conflate issues of sexual desire, hunger and disgust to fairly little effect. The more simply constructed stories tend to have more punch, like What Is Wrong with Me? which humorously contrasts what happens after a late-night hookup separates in the morning; the man pines in agonized love while the woman ignores his calls and watches TV. Shadmi's art is expressive and simple, focusing on entwined limbs and eyes pinned open with worry, but it's his sharp writing (shades of Etgar Keret's violent whimsy) that really brings this collection together. (Feb.)
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From Booklist
Israeli American Shadmi’s 10 stories mostly feature young men and women, though some characters are as young as preadolescent, and a few are middle-aged or older. In more than half the stories, faces and even heads are disguised by elaborate masks or plain paper bags. This isn’t incidental to what they’re about, which is sometimes ennui (“A Date”) and occasionally kinky (“Fun Lawn”) or ominous (“Grandpa Minolta”). One story of a lover and his muse, who is seen on a large screen as he tries and fails to paint below her running monologue, has a nearly perfect musical quality, while “Radioactive Girlfriend” twists together the personal and the political. “Pastry” is a nightmare riff on consumption, of books as well as food. The black-and-white artwork is realistic, as are the scenes of clinching but not those of the headless date in “Antoinette.” The figures express as much with posture as with their sometimes cutting, sometimes purposefully miserly utterances. Good stuff, especially if you like Kafka or comics creators Rutu Modan and Mark Murphy. --Francisca Goldsmith
Review
“Shadmi's art is expressive and simple…but it's his sharp writing (shades of Etgar Keret's violent whimsy) that really brings this collection together.” —Publishers Weekly
“Good stuff, especially if you like Kafka or comics creators Rutu Modan and Mark Murphy.”—Booklist
Customer Reviews
I'm definitely re-reading this one
Of the sundry graphic novels I've read in the past year during my rediscovery of illustrated writing, this is the first that I can definitely say I'll be reading again. Urban, hip, funny, outre, surreal, poignant, sad . . . many of the men, bearing a physical resemblance to the author's self-portrait, are sensitive (needy?) intellectuals involved with beautiful Jewish girls--I presume. Of course, there' more to this collection than that, accurately conveyed by the Publisher's Weekly and Booklist reviews. Visually, I really enjoyed the black and white art, the clean style, and some creative paneling, especially when characters are depicted multiple times in a larger spread, creating different moments in one visual space.
Twisted, In A Very Good Way
The first word that comes to mind when thinking of In The Flesh is "twisted." These stories start off making the reader think that they might be sexy, might be something to spark the erotic imagination, and just when they start to, boom! Something happens that makes you reconsider what exactly is going on in the story. What could be the familiar when it comes to dating is turned on its head, literally, by characters without heads, who are radioactive, who are alien in some way. There's a growing sense of dread, of caution, of uncertainty that Shadmi masters perfectly.
These stories and their accompanying images will stop you in your tracks, make you look again, to be certain that you just saw what you think you saw. From the title, I was expecting one thing, and what I got was completely different, yet I wasn't disappointed in the least, but rather fascinated at the bizarre twists and turns the stories, and Shadmi's art and creativity, took. Don't go into In The Flesh with any expectations, but rather open it to find a world where nothing is at is seems, and characters have to react to madness as if it were normal.
Strong start, but a weak finish
"In the Flesh" is a graphic novel that is a collection of short stories about the darker side of love and desire. All the stories have a dark, depressing and at times, a twisted tone. The book feels heavy to take in at one sitting, and the stories are either hit or miss. The true gems emerge about midway through, and are the stories which will likely leave a lasting effect. Still, "In the Flesh" was an enjoyable read. If nothing else, "Radioactive Girlfriend" and "What is Wrong with Me?" are nothing short of amazing and shouldn't be missed. The ending for "Girlfriend" is something that really hits you were it counts, but I won`t dare ruin it here, and in "What is Wrong with Me?", the style of storytelling is worth muddling through the beginning and the end.
Reviewed by Alex Barry





