176 pages
English language
Published 2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
176 pages
English language
Published 2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
"Ariel Schrag, a critically-acclaimed memoirist and screenwriter, takes us on a painfully funny tour of her formative years, from her childhood in Berkeley to her mid-twenties in Brooklyn, exploring what it means to connect to others when you don't yet know who you are--when you want to be "part of it" but the "it" changes daily. We meet hippie babysitters, mean girls, best friends, former friends, prom dates, girlfriends, sex ed students, and far too many LensCrafters sales associates. These frank, irreverent, and honest comics revel in the uncomfortable--occasionally cringe-inducing--moments from our early years that end up wiring us as people. Part of It further cements Ariel Schrag as "one of the best pure storytellers ... in any medium" (Comics Journal)"--
"From a writer whose confessional style is "part Robert Crumb and part Judy Blume" comes a graphic memoir of growing up that is sometimes shocking, often tender, but more …
"Ariel Schrag, a critically-acclaimed memoirist and screenwriter, takes us on a painfully funny tour of her formative years, from her childhood in Berkeley to her mid-twenties in Brooklyn, exploring what it means to connect to others when you don't yet know who you are--when you want to be "part of it" but the "it" changes daily. We meet hippie babysitters, mean girls, best friends, former friends, prom dates, girlfriends, sex ed students, and far too many LensCrafters sales associates. These frank, irreverent, and honest comics revel in the uncomfortable--occasionally cringe-inducing--moments from our early years that end up wiring us as people. Part of It further cements Ariel Schrag as "one of the best pure storytellers ... in any medium" (Comics Journal)"--
"From a writer whose confessional style is "part Robert Crumb and part Judy Blume" comes a graphic memoir of growing up that is sometimes shocking, often tender, but more than anything: real."--