|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewPoppies of Iraq is Brigitte Findakly s nuanced tender chronicle of her relationship with her homeland Iraq, co-written and drawn by her husband, the acclaimed cartoonist Lewis Trondheim. In spare and elegant detail, they share memories of her middle class childhood touching on cultural practices, the education system, Saddam Hussein s state control, and her family s history as Orthodox Christians in the arab world. Poppies of Iraq is intimate and wide-ranging; the story of how one can become separated from one s homeland and still feel intimately connected yet ultimately estranged. Signs of an oppressive regime permeate a seemingly normal life: magazines arrive edited by customs; the color red is banned after the execution of General Kassim; Baathist militiamen are publicly hanged and school kids are bussed past them to bear witness. As conditions in Mosul worsen over her childhood, Brigitte s father is always hopeful that life in Iraq will return to being secular and prosperous. The family eventually feels compelled to move to Paris, however, where Brigitte finds herself not quite belonging to either culture. Trondheim brings to life Findakly s memories to create a poignant family portrait that covers loss, tragedy, love, and the loneliness of exile. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Brigitte Findakly , Lewis TrondheimPublisher: Drawn and Quarterly Imprint: Drawn and Quarterly ISBN: 9781770462939ISBN 10: 1770462937 Pages: 120 Publication Date: 05 September 2017 Recommended Age: From 14 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsNominated for YALSA's 2018 Great Graphic Novels for Teens list!Nominated for the Kirkus Prize! Poignant and powerful... a meditation on the ache and longing for a place you can no longer return. --Boston Globe Small in size but large in impact, this intimate memoir is a highly relevant and compassionate story of family, community, prejudice, and the struggle to love when the forces of the world push groups apart. --Kirkus, Best Teen Non-fiction of 2017 [Poppies of Iraq's] power lies in the contrast between the matter-of-fact nature of the text and visuals, and the dread and horror of the backdrop... there is also hope to be found here -- the hope that, no matter what befalls a nation, there will always be individuals who can craft something beautiful by virtue of their survival. --Vulture, Best Comics of 2017 The rich effect of Poppies of Iraq... comes from the manner in which the sweet and domestic rests alongside horror. --Los Angeles Review of Books A plainly stated, emotionally devastating memoir... Throughout this bittersweet book, Findakly and Trondheim interweave the political and personal in a way that mirrors and heightens real life. Poppies of Iraq is about big events as seen through small eyes: there's a universalness underneath the specificity. Anyone, even with a boring childhood, should find something to relate to here... an unforgettable, devastating, sweet book. --Salon Wise, touching and wonderfully vivid... Findakly's memoir covers an extended period in Iraq's recent history... yet the half century ticks by with amazing ease, its author managing to tell both the story of a (complicated, fearful) nation, and that of one family of exiles coping with a new life in Paris. --Guardian, Graphic Novel of the Month An Iraqi childhood is cherished, examined, and let go in this tender look at youth amid upheaval... an ode to a lost era, to be sure, but one with its feet planted securely in the present. --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review [Poppies of Iraq describes] a childhood caught between cultures [and] vividly capture[s] an oppressive regime as seen from a kid's guileless point of view. --Reader's Digest The personal and political interweave in this sad yet charming memoir... Like snapshots, -Findakly's story toggles back and forth in time, depicting memories mixed with historical background and In Iraq vignettes about customs in that country. --Library Journal This absorbing graphic memoir offers an insider's view of the rapid cultural changes that beset Iraq in the latter half of the 20th century... Short vignettes about her family, school, and local customs are alternately bittersweet, funny, and affecting as a series of military and political coups impact her family's life in Iraq... A moving, thought-provoking title for all collections. --School Library Journal, Starred Review Poppies of Iraq is a beautiful portrait of a life lived in cultural translation, its pages filled with humor and a nostalgia made complicated with age. --Bomb Magazine What is it like to grow up in Iraq? That's the question at the heart of Poppies of Iraq... a beautifully drawn graphic novel that shows how growing up in Iraq is more complicated than it seems. --Bitch Magazine An Iraqi childhood is cherished, examined, and let go in this tender look at youth amid upheaval... an ode to a lost era, to be sure, but one with its feet planted securely in the present. --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review [Poppies of Iraq describes] a childhood caught between cultures [and] vividly capture[s] an oppressive regime as seen from a kid's guileless point of view. --Reader's Digest Poppies of Iraq is a beautiful portrait of a life lived in cultural translation, its pages filled with humor and a nostalgia made complicated with age. --Bomb Magazine What is it like to grow up in Iraq? That's the question at the heart of Poppies of Iraq... Although [Brigitte Findakly's] childhood seems normal, it's peppered by the remnants of a dictatorship [and] after her family moves to Paris, Findakly finds that exile is as devastating as state-sanctioned violence. Poppies of Iraq is a beautifully drawn graphic novel that shows how growing up in Iraq is more complicated than it seems. --Bitch Magazine Expressive and poetic, this nuanced book brings to the fore memories of an Iraqi childhood, the country's culture and its wisdom, in face of the barbarism of current events. ...An essential read. -Le Figaro This very personal graphic narrative shows, better than reporting could, how a society gradually loses its freedoms. -L'Actualite Brigitte Findakly takes us on an extraordinary journey - often funny, sometimes poignant, always thoughtful - to the country of her memories. A chronicle, charmingly and simply illustrated by Lewis Trondheim... -Le Parisien "Nominated for YALSA's 2018 Great Graphic Novels for Teens list! Nominated for the Kirkus Prize! ""Poignant and powerful... a meditation on the ache and longing for a place you can no longer return.""--Boston Globe ""Small in size but large in impact, this intimate memoir is a highly relevant and compassionate story of family, community, prejudice, and the struggle to love when the forces of the world push groups apart.""--Kirkus, Best Teen Non-fiction of 2017 ""[Poppies of Iraq's] power lies in the contrast between the matter-of-fact nature of the text and visuals, and the dread and horror of the backdrop... there is also hope to be found here -- the hope that, no matter what befalls a nation, there will always be individuals who can craft something beautiful by virtue of their survival.""--Vulture, Best Comics of 2017 ""The rich effect of Poppies of Iraq... comes from the manner in which the sweet and domestic rests alongside horror.""--Los Angeles Review of Books ""A plainly stated, emotionally devastating memoir... Throughout this bittersweet book, Findakly and Trondheim interweave the political and personal in a way that mirrors and heightens real life. Poppies of Iraq is about big events as seen through small eyes: there's a universalness underneath the specificity. Anyone, even with a boring childhood, should find something to relate to here... an unforgettable, devastating, sweet book.""--Salon ""Wise, touching and wonderfully vivid... Findakly's memoir covers an extended period in Iraq's recent history... yet the half century ticks by with amazing ease, its author managing to tell both the story of a (complicated, fearful) nation, and that of one family of exiles coping with a new life in Paris.""--Guardian, Graphic Novel of the Month ""An Iraqi childhood is cherished, examined, and let go in this tender look at youth amid upheaval... an ode to a lost era, to be sure, but one with its feet planted securely in the present.""--Publishers Weekly, Starred Review ""[Poppies of Iraq describes] a childhood caught between cultures [and] vividly capture[s] an oppressive regime as seen from a kid's guileless point of view.""--Reader's Digest ""The personal and political interweave in this sad yet charming memoir... Like snapshots, -Findakly's story toggles back and forth in time, depicting memories mixed with historical background and ""In Iraq"" vignettes about customs in that country.""--Library Journal ""This absorbing graphic memoir offers an insider's view of the rapid cultural changes that beset Iraq in the latter half of the 20th century... Short vignettes about her family, school, and local customs are alternately bittersweet, funny, and affecting as a series of military and political coups impact her family's life in Iraq... A moving, thought-provoking title for all collections.""--School Library Journal, Starred Review ""Poppies of Iraq is a beautiful portrait of a life lived in cultural translation, its pages filled with humor and a nostalgia made complicated with age.""--Bomb Magazine ""What is it like to grow up in Iraq? That's the question at the heart of Poppies of Iraq... a beautifully drawn graphic novel that shows how growing up in Iraq is more complicated than it seems.""--Bitch Magazine" An Iraqi childhood is cherished, examined, and let go in this tender look at youth amid upheaval... an ode to a lost era, to be sure, but one with its feet planted securely in the present. --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review [Poppies of Iraq describes] a childhood caught between cultures [and] vividly capture[s] an oppressive regime as seen from a kid's guileless point of view. --Reader's Digest Poppies of Iraq is a beautiful portrait of a life lived in cultural translation, its pages filled with humor and a nostalgia made complicated with age. --Bomb Magazine What is it like to grow up in Iraq? That's the question at the heart of Poppies of Iraq... Although [Brigitte Findakly's] childhood seems normal, it's peppered by the remnants of a dictatorship [and] after her family moves to Paris, Findakly finds that exile is as devastating as state-sanctioned violence. Poppies of Iraq is a beautifully drawn graphic novel that shows how growing up in Iraq is more complicated than it seems. --Bitch Magazine Expressive and poetic, this nuanced book brings to the fore memories of an Iraqi childhood, the country's culture and its wisdom, in face of the barbarism of current events. ...An essential read. -Le Figaro This very personal graphic narrative shows, better than reporting could, how a society gradually loses its freedoms. -L'Actualite Brigitte Findakly takes us on an extraordinary journey - often funny, sometimes poignant, always thoughtful - to the country of her memories. A chronicle, charmingly and simply illustrated by Lewis Trondheim... -Le Parisien Author InformationCo-writer and colourist Brigitte Findakly was born in Mosul, Iraq, in 1959 and lived there until 1973. Cartoonist Lewis Trondheim was born in Fontainebleau, France in 1964. They have two children and live in the south of France. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |