This beautiful, ridiculous city A graphic memoir

Kay Sohini

Book - 2025

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographical comics
Bandes dessinées autobiographiques
Published
New York, NY : Ten Speed Graphic 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Kay Sohini (author)
Edition
First US edition
Item Description
"On her first night in New York City, Kay Sohini sits on the tarmac of JFK Airport making an inventory of everything she's left behind in India: her family, friends, home, and gaslighting ex-boyfriend. In the wake of that untethering she realizes two things: she's finally made it to the city of her literary heroes--Kerouac, Plath, Bechdel--and the trauma she's endured has created gaping holes in her memory. As Kay begins the work of piecing herself back together she discovers the deep sense of belonging that can only be found on the streets of New York City. In the process she falls beautifully, ridiculously in love with the bustling landscape, and realizes that the places we love do not always love us back but can still somehow save us in weird, unexpected ways. At once heartbreaking and uplifting, This Beautiful, Ridiculous City explores the relationship between trauma and truth, displacement and belonging, and what it means to forge a life of one's own."--Amazon.
Physical Description
127 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780593836156
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Sohini's author-illustrator debut is an intimate graphic memoir centering New York City as the source of her personal healing and creative birth. She moves back and forth between her ("outermost") suburban Calcutta upbringing with its colonial education to her immigration eight years ago that saved her very life. After devastating losses, an abusive relationship, and three suicide attempts, she fled to New York (with which she was already long familiar), fueled by an enthralled obsession with "any depiction of the city in celluloid or prose." Sylvia Plath, Jack Kerouac, Colson Whitehead, and Alison Bechdel all enticed her to their NYC, creating "a homecoming in reverse." Enabled by a "full ride" PhD to SUNY Stony Brook, she becomes "a full-fledged, living, breathing manifestation of the impossible dream [she] had been fostering for years." Sohini's art--drawn over "twelve or more hours a day for six months straight"--electrifyingly bursts in full color with architecturally meticulous details throughout. Her love letter to "this beautiful, ridiculous city" proves to be a vivid celebration of survival and belonging.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Everyone writes about New York with so much tenderness, even when they are sick of it," Sohini observes in the opening pages of her reflective, rambling debut. Born in a suburb of Calcutta, Sohini grows up immersed in a heady blend of Indian and Western culture but is particularly fascinated by New York City as depicted in American novels and films. As a young adult escaping an abusive relationship, she takes the plunge and moves to the Big Apple. Though her account is peppered with quotations from writers who lived in New York, including Joan Didion, Fran Liebowitz, and Dylan Thomas, it's just as much about India and the ways Sohini balances her homeland with her chosen home. She draws luscious spreads of food to contrast her favorite family dishes with the international cuisine she encounters in America, and cutaway diagrams detail the pros and cons of living in a busy multigenerational house versus a two-person apartment. Much of the story is told in bold full-page compositions anchored by symbolic imagery: Sohini entering a door in the spine of a book, windows opening to reveal moments in time. The narrative builds to no great revelations, but those equally entranced by the mythology of New York will enjoy themselves. Agent: Leah Pierre, Ladderbird Literary Agency. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Finding solace in the big city. Growing up in the outskirts of Calcutta in an era of unprecedented economic liberalization, Sohini obsessively read books about New York City. Her romanticization of the city that had produced writers like Sylvia Plath, Alison Bechdel, and Colson Whitehead led to her decision to immigrate to the city of her dreams to pursue her Ph.D., a choice that was also propelled by her need to escape an abusive romantic relationship plagued by betrayal and deception. While living in Calcutta, Sohini struggled with intense mental health issues as well as grief about her grandfather's sudden death. New York, however, felt like a place that suited her intensively introverted personality and her emotional connection with both cooking and consuming food, which she'd forged growing up in her intergenerational Indian home. Something about the city broke her depressive patterns, providing her with a life force that she hoped to maintain despite the economic threat of gentrification. Sohini's gorgeous illustrations are in and of themselves marvels of bright colors and elegant compositions. Unfortunately, much of the accompanying text lacks the coherence of the artwork, partly because the narration lingers on historical context and other topics that abruptly shift the tone of the story. The author also has a tendency to allude to past trauma without giving readers details. While her healing relationship with New York is inspiring, the underlying reasons for her sudden ability to cope with her mental illness and her traumatic past are never fully explained. A beautifully illustrated memoir that is hampered by uneven narration. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.