A gorgeously illustrated debut graphic memoir about belonging, identity, and making a home in the remote American West, by New Yorker cartoonist Navied Madhavian.
Before Navied Mahdavian moved from San Francisco in November 2016 to an off-grid cabin rural Idaho, one of the most remote and wild areas of the American West, he had never fished, gardened, hiked, hunted, or lived in a snowy place. But there, he could own land and start a family - the millennial dream. Over the course of the next three years, he leaned into the wonders of the natural landscape and found himself adjusting to and enjoying a slower pace of living. But beyond the boundaries of his six acres, he was confronted with the realities of America's political shifts and forced to confront the question: Do I belong here?
Funny, deeply perceptive, and attentive to the dynamics of culture, environment, and identity in America, Mahdavian's gorgeously self-illustrated and often hilariously written graphic memoir charts his growth and struggles as an artist, citizen, and new father. It celebrates his love of place and honors the relationships he makes in rural America, even as it articulates the difficult moments of racism and brutality he found there as a Middle Eastern American. With wit and compassion, Mahdavian's insider perspective offers a unique portrait of a place many people hear or know nothing about.
Show moreA gorgeously illustrated debut graphic memoir about belonging, identity, and making a home in the remote American West, by New Yorker cartoonist Navied Madhavian.
Before Navied Mahdavian moved from San Francisco in November 2016 to an off-grid cabin rural Idaho, one of the most remote and wild areas of the American West, he had never fished, gardened, hiked, hunted, or lived in a snowy place. But there, he could own land and start a family - the millennial dream. Over the course of the next three years, he leaned into the wonders of the natural landscape and found himself adjusting to and enjoying a slower pace of living. But beyond the boundaries of his six acres, he was confronted with the realities of America's political shifts and forced to confront the question: Do I belong here?
Funny, deeply perceptive, and attentive to the dynamics of culture, environment, and identity in America, Mahdavian's gorgeously self-illustrated and often hilariously written graphic memoir charts his growth and struggles as an artist, citizen, and new father. It celebrates his love of place and honors the relationships he makes in rural America, even as it articulates the difficult moments of racism and brutality he found there as a Middle Eastern American. With wit and compassion, Mahdavian's insider perspective offers a unique portrait of a place many people hear or know nothing about.
Show moreNavied Mahdavian has been a contributing cartoonist at the New Yorker since 2018. His work has also been published in Reader's Digest, Wired, and Alta Online and the books The Rejection Collection and Send Help!
"A beautifully drawn memoir full of humor, intelligence, and
sensitivity."-Kirkus Reviews, starred
"A charming, meditative graphic memoir... This exceptional debut is
a sublime self-examination."-Publishers Weekly, starred
"A heartfelt new addition to the canon of graphic memoirs, This
Country is both sad and hopeful, a homecoming and a departure."
-Washington Post
"Charming, hilarious."-Booklist, starred
"Poetic and personal, This Country meditates on what it means to
create a home in the pockets of America where not everybody is
wanted... not one to miss for anybody interested in insightful
explorations of America's heartland."-BookPage, starred
A New Yorker Best Book of 2023
An NPR Best Book of 2023
"With light and airy illustrations, Mahdavian tackles these complex
themes with humor and wit."
--NPR, 'Best Books of 2023' "This moving graphic memoir...
beautifully depicts a quest for belonging and the revelation that
it rarely comes in the shape or form that one expects."
--New Yorker "This is a charming, hilarious, and at times
frightening memoir about the years Navied and Emelie (and their
dog, Stanley) Mahdavian spent building a home in remote Idaho after
being pushed out of the San Francisco Bay area...This will appeal
to readers of memoir, social commentary, and, in a minor spoiler,
graphic medicine."
--Booklist, STARRED REVIEW "A beautifully drawn memoir full of
humor, intelligence, and sensitivity."
-- Kirkus Reviews, starred review "A charming, meditative graphic
memoir... This exceptional debut is a sublime
self-examination."
-- Publishers Weekly, starred review "Poetic and personal, This
Country meditates on what it means to create a home in the pockets
of America where not everybody is wanted... not one to miss for
anybody interested in insightful explorations of America's
heartland."
--Bookpage, STARRED REVIEW "A heartfelt new addition to the canon
of graphic memoirs, This Country is both sad and hopeful, a
homecoming and a departure."
--Washington Post "An extraordinary achievement, suffused with love
and humor. One feels not just the rooms but the weather, time of
day, the rhythms of nature."
--Jason Adam Katzenstein, cartoonist and author of Everything Is an
Emergency "Why did urban, vegetarian, gun-wary Navied, of Iranian
descent, have the big, bright idea to move with his wife to the
frigid mountains of Idaho, months before Trump's election?
Riveting, searching, complex and, oh, hilarious, this memoir
ultimately is a quest for strength, wildness, and love, for a
deeper vision of all things Earth. Surely this is my favorite
graphic memoir I've read in years."
--Deb Olin Unferth, author of Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love
and Went to Join the War "Enamored of nature and dazzled by
fantasies of the rugged west, a young mixed--race couple build a
tiny home in the wilds of Idaho--and must confront an America at
odds with itself. In This Country, Mahdavian explores today's
cultural divide with a keen eye and a graceful touch. The resulting
portrait is by turns hilarious and heartbreaking, elegant and
complex, brutal and tender. I dare you not to fall in love."
--Alia Volz, author of Homebaked: Home Baked: Marijuana, My Mother
and the Stoning of San Francisco "This Country is a hilarious and
sometimes harrowing graphic memoir about the Mahdavians' quest to
live self-sufficiently in rural Idaho. Learning how to cut down a
tree to heat your own house and grow your own vegetables is only
one part of it....Wonderful drawings and beautiful writing make
this book a great read."
--Roz Chast, author and cartoonist of Can't We Talk About Something
More Pleasant? "I knew Navied Mahdavian was one of the funniest
cartoonists of his generation; This Country proves he is also one
of its most subtle and sophisticated graphic storytellers. In
Navied's hands, comics feel like poetry. Perfect ink drawings bring
land, beast, and human, with all their delicacy and yearning,
viscerally to life. This Country, a quintessential story of seeking
a home in America and (maybe) finding it, and made me want to grant
my own surroundings the grace, humor, and dignity of Navied's
observant study."
--Amy Kurzweil, cartoonist and author of Flying Couch: A Graphic
Memoir "A charming, wise, and haunting book. [I've known] that town
quite well for the last thirty years, [and Mahdavian has] captured
it in all its complexity."
--Christopher Guest actor, screenwriter, and director (Best in
Show, Waiting for Guffman, This is Spinal Tap) "This Country is
touching, personal, and frequently hilarious. Mahdavian weaves
heavy themes of home and belonging with disarming moments of
silliness and levity. It's a story specific to his experience, yet
relatable to anyone who has ever searched for a place to be."
--Reza Farazmand, writer and illustrator of Poorly Drawn Lines
"Ostensibly, This Country is about a couple finding their place in
the world and learning the true history of the land they're
building a life on--a land that has seen both turmoil and awe--but
amid the harsh truth, blatant racism, and struggles to fit in,
there is so much beauty and humor and compassion. Mahdavian's
drawings are deceptively simple, perfectly capturing the wonder of
little everyday occurrences. Of time moving, a small family growing
and changing, of an entire country still reckoning with past and
present mistakes. This is a very important book for pretty much
everyone."
--Julia Wertz, cartoonist and author of Impossible People and
Tenements, Towers Trash
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