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Jokes and the Unconscious: A Graphic Novel
March 18th, 2010 by Aldouspi

Product Description
Heard the one about the dying father? In this savagely brilliant graphic novel by slam poet Daphne Gottlieb (Final Girl) and Hothead Paisan creator Diane DiMassa, a 19-year-old woman named Sasha loses her father to cancer and takes a job in the hospital where he had worked as a doctor. Moving from room to room with her clipboard of forms, Sasha encounters the insane, the suicidal, and the brave — then returns to her office to look up all her friends’ and enemies… More >>

Jokes and the Unconscious: A Graphic Novel


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5 Responses  
  • Maria Cristina Cid Fernandez writes:
    March 18th, 20105:39 amat

    I liked the story and the graphics a lot. However sometimes it was very difficult to read because the graphics were too small.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  • Robert P. Beveridge writes:
    March 18th, 20107:48 amat

    Daphne Gottlieb, Jokes and the Unconscious (Cleis Press, 2006)

    I’ll start off this review with a bit of unsolicited honesty: I’m not a huge fan of either Daphne Gottlieb’s poetry or Diane DiMassa’s comics. Jokes and the Unconscious, however, once I got the hang of what they were doing, was quite a pleasant surprise.

    Sasha is a student working at a summer job at a medical facility. She spends roughly equal amounts of time attempting (and failing) to avoid her co-workers, flagrantly violating the HIPAA laws, and telling us, the readers, jokes, all as ways of coming to terms with the death of her father.

    Those of you who have already started drawing the Fun Home parallel are on the right track, but the authors approach their similar subject matter from different directions– Bechdel wrote a book that was incisive, tender, and introverted, while Gottlieb and DiMassa approach from the angle of brash, funny, and a little on the gross side. This is a book to have fun with, and then meditate upon afterwards. *** ½

    Rating: 4 / 5

  • Guy M. Gayle writes:
    March 18th, 20109:02 amat

    I stopped reading a book so I could read this one. I’ve never done that before. I don’t regret it.

    This is black humor at its blackest. It’s touching and sad and funny and bold. This is ink from the heart from both the writer and the illustrator. The balance is perfect and the results are incredible.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • Carolyn Turgeon writes:
    March 18th, 201011:47 amat

    I don’t normally read graphic novels, but as a long-time fan of Gottlieb’s searing poetry I was curious about this book and how her voice would translate. It works gorgeously. This is an interesting, stunning collaboration–deeply sad, deeply funny, deeply wise. Each page feels like some sort of revelation. The loose, changing format–coupled with DiMassa’s ingenious art–give Gottlieb free rein to be as raw and transcendant as she is in her best poems. I definitely recommend this book.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • C. Emch writes:
    March 18th, 201011:55 amat

    I have been a fan of the graphic novel as something more than comic strip for a longtime. I also am a big lover of traditional non-graphic literature. This collaboration of DiMassa and Gottlieb couldn’t have happened to a better book. They together created something amazing. A graphic rollercoaster walking through a young womans journey to finding herself while dealing with a father’s terminal illness – never does the material feel overly sentimental or trite. The material is handled in a way that is sensitive, heart-wrenching, and giggle inducing – the way that life love and tradegy often play out in the real world. Surreal, funny and just… perfect. Fans of DiMassa’s Hothead Paisan won’t be disappointed – there is plenty of queer and rockin riot grrl feminism. Fans of Gottlieb’s iconic poetry also will find what they need and more in this book, as she wrenches through the pain and personal discovery with deftness, and a razor sharp eye for detail. Those who are new to both artists, whether you are queer or straight – the humanity of this book – it’s honesty – will touch the heart of anyone who has ever loved a parent. I cannot recommend more wholeheartedly. Don’t wait for a used copy. Buy it and love it. I can’t even tell you in words how good this is. I laughed and cried my way through it, and plan on treasuring this book for a good long time.
    Rating: 5 / 5


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