Work-life balance

Aisha Franz, 1984-

Book - 2023

"To achieve the proper work-life balance perhaps we just need the right therapist to coach us through our day-to-day. Anita, Sandra, and Dex have ambitions. Anita wants to move from making utility ceramics to fine-art sculpture but her pent-up dissatisfaction results in an outburst that puts her studio mate's work at risk. Sandra juggles her practical administrative day job at a startup with her wellness-influencer channel, finding both in jeopardy when a messy affair with a coworker comes to light. In another corner of the same startup, Dex's innovative ideas are rejected, leading him to spend his days hacking and working as a bike courier. All three are disillusioned with the daily grind. As the pressure for self-improvemen...t builds, they end up looking to the same therapist for answers"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Comics Show me where

GRAPHIC NOVEL/Franz
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics GRAPHIC NOVEL/Franz Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Psychological comics
Humorous comics
Graphic novels
Published
[Montréal, Québec] : Drawn & Quarterly [2023]
Language
English
German
Main Author
Aisha Franz, 1984- (author)
Other Authors
Nicholas Houde (translator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Chiefly illustrations.
Physical Description
252 pages : color illustrations ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781770466333
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Berlin-based cartoonist Franz follows her L.A. Times Book Prize finalist Shit Is Real with a caustic comedy about the ways young people try (and often fail) to reconcile their online lives with time IRL. A trio of protagonists are all patients of the same self-absorbed, scatterbrained therapist. There's Anita, a sculptor making ceramics for Instagram and Etsy, whose professional jealousy becomes destructive; Rex, a food delivery messenger and freelance programmer whose code is essentially stolen by a successful wellness startup called Agileal; and the sex-obsessed, wannabe influencer Sandra, who gets fired from her administrative job at Agileal after her unhealthy need for intimacy and attention turns into harassment. Franz sports a subtly surreal illustration style, recalling Heinz Edelmann's album art from Yellow Submarine, which augments both the humor and mundane horror of the internet's "everything everywhere all at once" nature. The story highlights the lack of separation between digital and analog, as hobbies become jobs, humans become brands, and constant connectivity becomes isolation. Franz's mordant and melancholy graphic novel reveals the irony of "social" media. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved