Death Wins a Goldfish: Reflections from a Grim Reaper's Yearlong Sabbatical

Author:   Brian Rea
Publisher:   Chronicle Books
ISBN:  

9781452172552


Pages:   168
Publication Date:   05 February 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Death Wins a Goldfish: Reflections from a Grim Reaper's Yearlong Sabbatical


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Overview

Death never takes a day off. Until he gets a letter from his HR department insisting that he use up his accrued vacation time, that is! In this humorous and quirky gift book from beloved illustrator Brian Rea, we follow the Grim Reaper on his mandatory yearlong sabbatical as he explores the world of the living for the very first time. From skydiving to online dating, Death is determined to do it all. And yet, as much as he enjoys taking long walks with his pet goldfish, drinking piña coladas at the pool, and singing karaoke with his new friends, he can't shake the feeling that something is missing . . .

Full Product Details

Author:   Brian Rea
Publisher:   Chronicle Books
Imprint:   Chronicle Books
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.90cm
Weight:   0.400kg
ISBN:  

9781452172552


ISBN 10:   1452172552
Pages:   168
Publication Date:   05 February 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

Death explores the magic and mundanity of life in this warmhearted vacation story. Having worked nonstop for entirely too long, Death is forced by the reapers' Human Resources department to take an extended holiday. He is intent upon using his time off to grow as a person, so he travels the world, enrolls in college, attends carnivals, and even gives dating apps a try. What he finds ranges from the utterly disappointing to the transcendentally joyous--but it is always and ever a testament to the value of encountering new things and people. Rea's work is rendered in warm, friendly hues: lemon meringue roller coasters and coral-colored speedboats predominate. Undergirding these cheerful shades is an earnest appeal to that most human of questions: how should one live? The answer, Death finds, is by going out there and doing it. --Publishers Weekly


A fast, funny, stylish read. ---Glen Weldon, NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour In Death Wins a Goldfish, Brian Rea illustrates his own story, a cheeky and charming and secretly profound variation on the 'Death Takes a Holiday' motif.... Through it all, Death keeps a journal, and the reader enjoys his increasingly existential musings on the meaning of life, the preciousness of personal time and the fact that this sweet dark comedy is actually a cautionary tale for any human who falls into the rat-race pressure trap of working too hard. --LA Weekly There's a lot of sweetness in Death's global journey, and while the character never speaks, Rea welcomes readers into its thoughts through journal entries, which show how Death gradually becomes more amiable and adventurous as it engages with new people, visits new places, and discovers new passions. A former New York Times art director and illustrator of the newspaper's 'Modern Love' column, Rea has a talent for capturing deep emotions in loose drawings, using bright colors and strong graphic composition to convey the expressions of a character whose face is a gray circle. --The A.V. Club Brian Rea's Death Wins a Goldfish is not a book about death. It's a book about living. --VanityFair.com Death explores the magic and mundanity of life in this warmhearted vacation story. Having worked nonstop for entirely too long, Death is forced by the reapers' Human Resources department to take an extended holiday. He is intent upon using his time off to grow as a person, so he travels the world, enrolls in college, attends carnivals, and even gives dating apps a try. What he finds ranges from the utterly disappointing to the transcendentally joyous--but it is always and ever a testament to the value of encountering new things and people. Rea's work is rendered in warm, friendly hues: lemon meringue roller coasters and coral-colored speedboats predominate. Undergirding these cheerful shades is an earnest appeal to that most human of questions: how should one live? The answer, Death finds, is by going out there and doing it. --Publishers Weekly


A fast, funny, stylish read. --NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour In Death Wins a Goldfish, Brian Rea illustrates his own story, a cheeky and charming and secretly profound variation on the 'Death Takes a Holiday' motif.... Through it all, Death keeps a journal, and the reader enjoys his increasingly existential musings on the meaning of life, the preciousness of personal time and the fact that this sweet dark comedy is actually a cautionary tale for any human who falls into the rat-race pressure trap of working too hard. --LA Weekly Brian Rea's Death Wins a Goldfish is not a book about death. It's a book about living. --VanityFair.com There's a lot of sweetness in Death's global journey, and while the character never speaks, Rea welcomes readers into its thoughts through journal entries, which show how Death gradually becomes more amiable and adventurous as it engages with new people, visits new places, and discovers new passions. A former New York Times art director and illustrator of the newspaper's 'Modern Love' column, Rea has a talent for capturing deep emotions in loose drawings, using bright colors and strong graphic composition to convey the expressions of a character whose face is a gray circle. --The A.V. Club Death explores the magic and mundanity of life in this warmhearted vacation story. Having worked nonstop for entirely too long, Death is forced by the reapers' Human Resources department to take an extended holiday. He is intent upon using his time off to grow as a person, so he travels the world, enrolls in college, attends carnivals, and even gives dating apps a try. What he finds ranges from the utterly disappointing to the transcendentally joyous--but it is always and ever a testament to the value of encountering new things and people. Rea's work is rendered in warm, friendly hues: lemon meringue roller coasters and coral-colored speedboats predominate. Undergirding these cheerful shades is an earnest appeal to that most human of questions: how should one live? The answer, Death finds, is by going out there and doing it. --Publishers Weekly


Author Information

Brian Rea lives in Los Angeles with his wife, his son, and his plants. He is an internationally exhibited artist and the official illustrator of the New York Times column Modern Love.

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