The Reddest Rose bookcover

The Reddest Rose

Romantic Love from the Ancient Greeks to Reality TV

Melissa Bowers 

(Translator)
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Description

The deceptively simple through-line for Swedish media personality and activist Liv Strömquist's The Reddest Rose is the question: Why does Leonardo DiCaprio date an endless string of 20-something models? Her answer -- in the form of this collection of well-researched, humorous comics essays -- tracks how philosophers and artists, from the Ancient Greeks to Beyoncé, conceptualized romantic love. Strömquist's signature characters, drawn in a flat, blocky style, ask each other questions and offer sharp commentary as they guide readers throughout history and the change in societies' values, from showing love/loving to getting love/being loved. (Poet Hilda "H.D." Doolittle -- who was so love-stricken by a man taking off his glasses that she believed they viewed dolphins together in another dimension -- lends the book its title.) Lord Byron, Socrates, Byung-Chul Han, Ezra Pound, Slavoj Zizek, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Ariadne, and many others have cameos. For the first time in English, in The Reddest Rose, Strömquist wonders: in a rationalist, consumerist world, can romantic love survive?

Product Details

PublisherFantagraphics Books
Publish DateJanuary 31, 2023
Pages184
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781683964599
Dimensions9.5 X 6.8 X 0.7 inches | 1.1 pounds

About the Author

Liv Strömquist was born in Sweden and lives in Malmö. She is a radio host with a degree in political science. An activist, her left-leaning, award-winning comics have been published in zines and magazines. Fruit of Knowledge has sold 40,000 copies in Sweden, been adapted for the stage, and has been published worldwide.
Melissa Bowers is a translator and editor. She lives in Seattle, WA.

Reviews

A nervy application of social theory that makes for an invigorating primer and a jarring riposte to present-day assumptions on dating, attachment, and the nuclear family.-- "Publishers Weekly"
In her feminist, irreverent comics, Strömquist delights in tackling massive (even titanic) topics from surprising angles, educating readers while making them laugh and blush.-- "Words Without Borders"
Stromquist didn't make a comic book; she made a journalistic examination with a cartoonist's eye.-- "AIPT Comics"
[On Fruit of Knowledge]: Veers from the educational to the whimsical...--Hillary Chute "The New York Times"
If her strips are clever, angry, funny and righteous, they're also informative to an eye-popping degree.-- "The Guardian"

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