Imagen del autor

Lilli Carré

Autor de Tales Of Woodsman Pete

18+ Obras 391 Miembros 10 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: Lilli Carré, Lilli Carré

Créditos de la imagen: Stumptown Comics Fest 2006, photo by Joshin Yamada

Series

Obras de Lilli Carré

Obras relacionadas

Less (2017) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones3,860 copias
The Best American Comics 2006 (2006) — Contribuidor — 532 copias
The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2010 (2010) — Contribuidor — 302 copias
The Best American Comics 2008 (2008) — Contribuidor — 296 copias
Adventure Time Vol. 3 (2013) — Ilustrador, algunas ediciones218 copias
The Best American Comics 2010 (2010) — Contribuidor — 215 copias
McSweeney's Issue 50 (McSweeney's Quarterly Concern) (2017) — Contribuidor — 53 copias
Adventure Time #12 (2013) — Artista de Cubierta, algunas ediciones3 copias
Runner Runner (Free Comic Book Day 2012) — Contribuidor — 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Carré, Lilli
Fecha de nacimiento
1983
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Los Angeles, California, USA
Lugares de residencia
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Ocupaciones
interdisciplinary artist

Miembros

Reseñas

Unpredictable, dreamy and surrealistic: what more could be asked from a collection of short graphic novels? Carré knows how to tell stories and use colors to create different moods. A gem.
 
Denunciada
d.v. | otra reseña | May 16, 2023 |
In this graphic novel, Tippy has the strangest thing happen to her. When she falls asleep, she unknowingly sleep walks and gathers many animals throughout the night. This book is great for all level of elementary school children. It could also help children who are nervous about sleep walking or just want a laugh.
 
Denunciada
AshlynWilliams | otra reseña | Apr 21, 2017 |
 
Denunciada
Sullywriter | otra reseña | May 22, 2015 |
I rarely have bad dreams, but when I do it usually revolves around being unprepared or being in an insane time crunch. I might be packing a suitcase and I can't find a piece of clothing. I get stuck in a kind of time loop, frantically digging around drawers and turning up nothing. Meanwhile, the cab is waiting outside or I can see a giant clock or maybe I can see the plane from an airport lounge about to take off without me. I don't know what Freud would say but I can imagine this kind of dream sequence squeezed inside the pages of Heads or Tails.

Heads or Tails by Lilli Carré is an odd collection of short stories that visually strike a light, whimsical tone but are deceptively dark, even bordering on gothic. There is a streak of breathy melancholy in the surreal snippets created by Carré that reminded me of something from a Marc Chagall painting.

Dreams are often thought of as illogical but despite their bizarre topsy-turvyness, there's always an emotional rationale, right? Dream logic. Lilli Carré's stories blur that line between the mundane of waking life and the weird of some alternate reality of that waking life. In "Wishy Washy," a smug art critic who judges flower arrangements for a living wakes up one day and finds he has lost his ability to judge. That one was profound. In "The Thing About Madeleine," a woman encounters her double sleeping in her bed. She lets this other woman take over her life and enjoys watching a 'better' version of herself: “… like watching a movie with the sound turned low.” In "The Flip," a woman tosses a coin…and waits and waits. When the coin never reappears, she is stuck, frozen in her decision-making. The most complex story in the collection is "The Carnival," told in 32 pages, about a man (kind of like the woman in the doppelganger story) who goes through life feeling dull and miserable, and then suddenly wakes up in a kind of alternate world--he is awakened. "The Carnival" ends with ambiguity that makes sense on some dream logic level.

Carré's artwork is quite elegant, if quirky and twee. But what makes it special is how each panel is suffused with those sly, surreal twists and subconscious desires. Kinda cool, kinda creepy. It's creepy for the outward fact that it's not trying to be creepy. It's unsettling for its utter nonchalance. At one point a character happens to start levitating into the air. She says, "These hot winds…what a bother. I suppose I could give in just for a minute or two...." As one critic on NPR put it: "The whole collection has the feel of a dream in which remembering how to fly is as simple as forgetting that you can't."
… (más)
 
Denunciada
gendeg | otra reseña | Jan 18, 2015 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
18
También por
11
Miembros
391
Popularidad
#61,941
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
10
ISBNs
16
Idiomas
3
Favorito
2

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