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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Aneurin WrightPublisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Volume: 4 Dimensions: Width: 19.70cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 24.90cm Weight: 1.043kg ISBN: 9780271071121ISBN 10: 0271071125 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 15 November 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsThis original and devastating memoir of love and loss illustrates the value of hospice and presents caring for others as a sort of tragicomic Olympic sport. Highly valuable for those facing illness in the family, caregivers, and anyone aspiring to live with empathy. starred review, Library Journal A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the golden moments, the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright s Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of graphic medicine by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph! --Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds There's what you expect from a graphic novel and then there's what Nye Wright has delivered. Instead of good versus evil or superheroes saving the world, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park inspires the comic form to attack themes of mortality, free will, and responsibility. It is a gut-wrenchingly brave revelation that will endure because of the epic originality Wright achieves in his portrait of a family dealing with the most universal of all issues. --Judd Trichter, author of Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Nye Wright is a once-in-a-generation talent whose storytelling has the perfect mix of smarts and heart. There have been a lot of big 'serious' works in the graphic novel form of late, but nothing matches the big heart of Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park. It's a fantastic, inspiring work that will touch everyone who reads it. Wright is one to watch. --Chip Mosher, editor of the Eisner Award-winning graphic novel I Thought You Would Be Funnier by Shannon Wheeler Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park is a deeply powerful, emotive, and ultimately redemptive tale of responsibility and maturation. Simultaneously heartbreaking and healing, it demands to be read by anyone with older relatives--and all care workers. Ironically, Nye Wright's 'funny animal' story reminds us, once again, of what it means to be human. --Tim Pilcher, coauthor of The Essential Guide to World Comics and chair of the Comic Book Alliance A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the 'golden moments, ' the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright's Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. --Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of 'graphic medicine' by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. --Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement Wright gives mythical resonance to the gritty everyday realities, memories, and charged fantasies he depicts, not the least of which is the strained relationship between father and son. --Booklist A powerful debut with a deeply resonant story about living with the seemingly impossible. --Publishers Weekly Aneurin Wright's debut graphic novel, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park . . . When You're 29 and Unemployed, is a shape-shifting chimera stuffed between book covers; a comic that explains the nuances of emphysema and elder care, a meta-meditation on death, loss and coping mechanisms, a tale of father-and-son reconciliation in which the father is a curmudgeonly rhino and the son a headstrong--and totally ripped--spectacle-wearing Minotaur. It's all at once heart-breakingly sad, visually arresting and, for anyone who has helped a parent navigate the end-of-life process, strangely comforting. --Adam Tschorn, Los Angeles Times This original and devastating memoir of love and loss illustrates the value of hospice and presents caring for others as a sort of tragicomic 'Olympic sport.' Highly valuable for those facing illness in the family, caregivers, and anyone aspiring to live with empathy. --starred review, Library Journal In the end, a serious joy pervades Things to Do. In my decades of reading the hospice and palliative care literature, I cannot think of a single book that would be a better companion for family members beginning on this particular work of caring. The book is equally valuable for homecare health workers, whom Wright depicts as vivid characters, each doing his or her work with dedication and expertise. --Arthur W. Frank, Science Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph! Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds There s what you expect from a graphic novel and then there s what Nye Wright has delivered. Instead of good versus evil or superheroes saving the world, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park inspires the comic form to attack themes of mortality, free will, and responsibility. It is a gut-wrenchingly brave revelation that will endure because of the epic originality Wright achieves in his portrait of a family dealing with the most universal of all issues. Judd Trichter, author of Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Nye Wright is a once-in-a-generation talent whose storytelling has the perfect mix of smarts and heart. There have been a lot of big serious works in the graphic novel form of late, but nothing matches the big heart of Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park. It s a fantastic, inspiring work that will touch everyone who reads it. Wright is one to watch. Chip Mosher, editor of the Eisner Award winning graphic novel I Thought You Would Be Funnier by Shannon Wheeler Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park is a deeply powerful, emotive, and ultimately redemptive tale of responsibility and maturation. Simultaneously heartbreaking and healing, it demands to be read by anyone with older relatives and all care workers. Ironically, Nye Wright s funny animal story reminds us, once again, of what it means to be human. Tim Pilcher, coauthor of The Essential Guide to World Comics and chair of the Comic Book Alliance A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the golden moments, the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright s Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of graphic medicine by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement Wright gives mythical resonance to the gritty everyday realities, memories, and charged fantasies he depicts, not the least of which is the strained relationship between father and son. Booklist A powerful debut with a deeply resonant story about living with the seemingly impossible. Publishers Weekly Aneurin Wright's debut graphic novel, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park . . . When You're 29 and Unemployed, is a shape-shifting chimera stuffed between book covers; a comic that explains the nuances of emphysema and elder care, a meta-meditation on death, loss and coping mechanisms, a tale of father-and-son reconciliation in which the father is a curmudgeonly rhino and the son a headstrong and totally ripped spectacle-wearing Minotaur. It's all at once heart-breakingly sad, visually arresting and, for anyone who has helped a parent navigate the end-of-life process, strangely comforting. Adam Tschorn, Los Angeles Times This original and devastating memoir of love and loss illustrates the value of hospice and presents caring for others as a sort of tragicomic Olympic sport. Highly valuable for those facing illness in the family, caregivers, and anyone aspiring to live with empathy. starred review, Library Journal In the end, a serious joy pervades Things to Do. In my decades of reading the hospice and palliative care literature, I cannot think of a single book that would be a better companion for family members beginning on this particular work of caring. The book is equally valuable for homecare health workers, whom Wright depicts as vivid characters, each doing his or her work with dedication and expertise. Arthur W. Frank, Science This original and devastating memoir of love and loss illustrates the value of hospice and presents caring for others as a sort of tragicomic Olympic sport. Highly valuable for those facing illness in the family, caregivers, and anyone aspiring to live with empathy. starred review, Library Journal Aneurin Wright's debut graphic novel, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park . . . When You're 29 and Unemployed, is a shape-shifting chimera stuffed between book covers; a comic that explains the nuances of emphysema and elder care, a meta-meditation on death, loss and coping mechanisms, a tale of father-and-son reconciliation in which the father is a curmudgeonly rhino and the son a headstrong and totally ripped spectacle-wearing Minotaur. It's all at once heart-breakingly sad, visually arresting and, for anyone who has helped a parent navigate the end-of-life process, strangely comforting. Adam Tschorn, Los Angeles Times In the end, a serious joy pervades Things to Do. In my decades of reading the hospice and palliative care literature, I cannot think of a single book that would be a better companion for family members beginning on this particular work of caring. The book is equally valuable for homecare health workers, whom Wright depicts as vivid characters, each doing his or her work with dedication and expertise. Arthur W. Frank, Science Wright gives mythical resonance to the gritty everyday realities, memories, and charged fantasies he depicts, not the least of which is the strained relationship between father and son. Booklist A powerful debut with a deeply resonant story about living with the seemingly impossible. Publishers Weekly Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph! Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds There s what you expect from a graphic novel and then there s what Nye Wright has delivered. Instead of good versus evil or superheroes saving the world, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park inspires the comic form to attack themes of mortality, free will, and responsibility. It is a gut-wrenchingly brave revelation that will endure because of the epic originality Wright achieves in his portrait of a family dealing with the most universal of all issues. Judd Trichter, author of Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Nye Wright is a once-in-a-generation talent whose storytelling has the perfect mix of smarts and heart. There have been a lot of big serious works in the graphic novel form of late, but nothing matches the big heart of Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park. It s a fantastic, inspiring work that will touch everyone who reads it. Wright is one to watch. Chip Mosher, editor of the Eisner Award winning graphic novel I Thought You Would Be Funnier by Shannon Wheeler Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park is a deeply powerful, emotive, and ultimately redemptive tale of responsibility and maturation. Simultaneously heartbreaking and healing, it demands to be read by anyone with older relatives and all care workers. Ironically, Nye Wright s funny animal story reminds us, once again, of what it means to be human. Tim Pilcher, coauthor of The Essential Guide to World Comics and chair of the Comic Book Alliance A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the golden moments, the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright s Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of graphic medicine by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph! --Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds There's what you expect from a graphic novel and then there's what Nye Wright has delivered. Instead of good versus evil or superheroes saving the world, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park inspires the comic form to attack themes of mortality, free will, and responsibility. It is a gut-wrenchingly brave revelation that will endure because of the epic originality Wright achieves in his portrait of a family dealing with the most universal of all issues. --Judd Trichter, author of Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Nye Wright is a once-in-a-generation talent whose storytelling has the perfect mix of smarts and heart. There have been a lot of big 'serious' works in the graphic novel form of late, but nothing matches the big heart of Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park. It's a fantastic, inspiring work that will touch everyone who reads it. Wright is one to watch. --Chip Mosher, editor of the Eisner Award-winning graphic novel I Thought You Would Be Funnier by Shannon Wheeler Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park is a deeply powerful, emotive, and ultimately redemptive tale of responsibility and maturation. Simultaneously heartbreaking and healing, it demands to be read by anyone with older relatives--and all care workers. Ironically, Nye Wright's 'funny animal' story reminds us, once again, of what it means to be human. --Tim Pilcher, coauthor of The Essential Guide to World Comics and chair of the Comic Book Alliance A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the 'golden moments, ' the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright's Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. --Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of 'graphic medicine' by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. --Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph! --Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds “In the end, a serious joy pervades Things to Do. In my decades of reading the hospice and palliative care literature, I cannot think of a single book that would be a better companion for family members beginning on this particular work of caring. The book is equally valuable for homecare health workers, whom Wright depicts as vivid characters, each doing his or her work with dedication and expertise.” —Arthur W. Frank Science “This original and devastating memoir of love and loss illustrates the value of hospice and presents caring for others as a sort of tragicomic ‘Olympic sport.’ Highly valuable for those facing illness in the family, caregivers, and anyone aspiring to live with empathy.” —starred review Library Journal “Aneurin Wright's debut graphic novel, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park . . . When You're 29 and Unemployed, is a shape-shifting chimera stuffed between book covers; a comic that explains the nuances of emphysema and elder care, a meta-meditation on death, loss and coping mechanisms, a tale of father-and-son reconciliation in which the father is a curmudgeonly rhino and the son a headstrong—and totally ripped—spectacle-wearing Minotaur. It's all at once heart-breakingly sad, visually arresting and, for anyone who has helped a parent navigate the end-of-life process, strangely comforting.” —Adam Tschorn Los Angeles Times “A powerful debut with a deeply resonant story about living with the seemingly impossible.” —Publishers Weekly “Wright gives mythical resonance to the gritty everyday realities, memories, and charged fantasies he depicts, not the least of which is the strained relationship between father and son.” —Booklist “The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of ‘graphic medicine’ by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family.” —Paul Gravett Times Literary Supplement “A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the ‘golden moments,’ the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright’s Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies.” —Gavin Ritchie Arts Journal “Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park is a deeply powerful, emotive, and ultimately redemptive tale of responsibility and maturation. Simultaneously heartbreaking and healing, it demands to be read by anyone with older relatives—and all care workers. Ironically, Nye Wright’s ‘funny animal’ story reminds us, once again, of what it means to be human.” —Tim Pilcher, coauthor of The Essential Guide to World Comics and chair of the Comic Book Alliance “Nye Wright is a once-in-a-generation talent whose storytelling has the perfect mix of smarts and heart. There have been a lot of big ‘serious’ works in the graphic novel form of late, but nothing matches the big heart of Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park. It’s a fantastic, inspiring work that will touch everyone who reads it. Wright is one to watch.” —Chip Mosher, editor of the Eisner Award–winning graphic novel I Thought You Would Be Funnier by Shannon Wheeler “There’s what you expect from a graphic novel and then there’s what Nye Wright has delivered. Instead of good versus evil or superheroes saving the world, Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park inspires the comic form to attack themes of mortality, free will, and responsibility. It is a gut-wrenchingly brave revelation that will endure because of the epic originality Wright achieves in his portrait of a family dealing with the most universal of all issues.” —Judd Trichter, author of Love in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction “Heartbreaking, gorgeous, with the kind of depth only a son could bring to the story of a dying father, Nye Wright manages to merge the pathos of Art Spiegelman's Maus with the modern world of end-of-life care in America. A triumph!” —Charles Wachter, executive producer, King of the Nerds The inventive symbolism never overwhelms the emotional honesty grounding this compelling memoir, which also contributes to the burgeoning field of graphic medicine by exploring in both frank and funny terms the complex impact of illness and death on a family. Paul Gravett, Times Literary Supplement A work of unflinching reality and subtle beauty. . . . The graphic novel Aneurin Wright has created is beautifully illustrated and poetic in its phrasing. The ellipses are perfectly balanced with what he calls the 'golden moments, ' the beats telling the story. With such a deft touch and the ability to soak so many complex emotions into each page, Wright's Things to Do in a Retirement Home Trailer Park deserves a place next to the richest memoirs as well as the most vibrant fantasies. --Gavin Ritchie, Arts Journal Wright gives mythical resonance to the gritty everyday realities, memories, and charged fantasies he depicts, not the least of which is the strained relationship between father and son. Booklist Author InformationAneurin Wright earned a B.A. in English literature from Yale and a B.F.A. in illustration and communication design from the Pratt Institute. He was the lead animator for the “Short History of the United States” cartoon sequence in Michael Moore’s Academy Award–winning documentary, Bowling for Columbine. He lives in Brighton, England, with his graphic-designer wife, Lyndsay. 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