Mothballs

Sole Otero

Book - 2024

"In this moving family saga, a teenage woman uncovers the hushed history of sexual violence that shattered her grandmother's life. San Martín, Argentina, 2001. Upon her estranged grandmother Vilma's death, 19-year-old Rocío moves into a house haunted by memories. Seeking a deeper understanding, Ro delves into her family history and uncovers the episodes of violence and betrayal that shattered Vilma's dreams. All the while, the familiar scent of mothballs permeating the estate serves to remind Ro of the ineluctable spell of the past that she must break in order to forge her own path in life. Tender, heartrending, and leavened with biting humor, Mothballs is at once a moving family saga and a poignant reflection on the n...eed to hold fast to one's identity, despite how painful it can be."--Publisher.

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GRAPHIC NOVEL/Otero
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics New GRAPHIC NOVEL/Otero (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 17, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
History
Domestic comics
Published
Seattle, WA : Fantagraphics 2024.
Language
English
Spanish
Main Author
Sole Otero (author)
Other Authors
Andrea Rosenberg (translator)
Edition
First Fantagraphics Books edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Spain as Naftalina, copyright ©2020 Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial and Sole Otero... Translation copyright ©2023 Andrea Rosenberg"--Colophon.
Physical Description
330 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781683969617
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With an immersive multigenerational story line and distinctive artwork, Otero's debut graphic novel charts the ripple effects of wartime decisions. In the words of Ro, an Argentinean college student living in her late grandmother's house, on "the chain of happenstances that led to my existence... Mussolini's persecutions are at the top of that list." In a series of flashbacks, Ro narrates her grandmother's story: after Vilma's communist parents flee fascist Italy for Argentina, Vilma and her brother Antonio form a close bond; she even keeps his cross-dressing a secret. When her parents force Vilma to work in a factory at age 12 to put Antonio through school, he promises to return the favor. After he chooses marriage to a woman for whom he must provide instead, Vilma becomes the bitter grudge-holder Ro knew as a child. Vilma dislikes most things, but especially politics--they upended her life once, and she wants nothing to do with "the wrong crowd" again. As Ro comes to resent her friends for ditching her for guys, and shrugs off present-day political unrest, she fears that she's "going to end up alone," like Vilma. But with help from her grandmother's ghost--a shape-shifting portrait drawn in shimmering rainbow pencil marks--Ro realizes she can take charge of her life in ways Vilma couldn't or wouldn't. Otero's brightly colored characters are doll-like yet full of passion, outrage, and schemes, and her storytelling is just as bold and memorable as the drawings. It's an impressive achievement. (Aug.)

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