<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>From the Harvey and Lulu award-winning creator of <i>Artbabe</i> comes this riveting story of a young woman's misadventures in Mexico City. Carla, an American estranged from her Mexican father, heads to Mexico City to "find herself." She crashes with a former fling, Harry, who has been drinking his way through the capital in the great tradition of his heroes, William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac. Harry is good--humored about Carla's reappearance on his doorstep--until he realizes that Carla, who spends her days soaking in the city, exploring Frida Kahlo's house, and learning Spanish, has no intention of leaving. <p/>When Harry and Carla's relationship of mutual tolerance reaches its inevitable end, she rejects his world of Anglo expats for her own set of friends: pretty-boy Oscar, who sells pot and dreams of being a DJ, and charismatic Memo, a left-wing, pseudo-intellectual ladies' man. Determined to experience the real Mexico, Carla turns a blind eye to her new friends' inconsistencies. But then she catches the eye of a drug don, el Gordo, and from that moment on her life gets a lot more complicated, and she is forced to confront the irreparable consequences of her willful innocence. <p/>Jessica Abel's evocative black-and-white drawings and creative mix of English and Spanish bring Mexico City's past and present to life, unfurling Carla's dark history against the legacies of Burroughs and Kahlo. A story about the youthful desire to live an authentic life and the consequences of trusting easy answers, <i>La Perdida</i>-at once grounded in the particulars of life in Mexico and resonantly universal-is a story about finding oneself by getting lost.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Jessica Abel's La Perdida is rich, engrossing, and memorable--a true graphic novel." <br>--Scott McCloud, author of <i>Understanding Comics</i> <p/>"Put down your dog-eared Love and Rockets and read this. Fans of <i>Los Bros</i> will recognize a kindred spirit, but Abel is every inch her own artist. Her tale of Carla's catastrophic folly is fierce and unforgettable." <br>--Susan Choi, author of <i>American Woman</i> and <i>The Foreign Student</i> <p/>"Jessica Abel is brilliant. She's created amazing work for years, and <i>La Perdida</i> is her classic. It's funny, politically astute, and heartbreaking. It's graphic novel poetry."<br>--Sherman Alexie, author of <i>The Toughest Indian in the World</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Jessica Abel</b> is the author of <i>Soundtrack</i> and <i>Mirror, Window, </i> two collections that gather stories and drawings from her comic book <i>Artbabe, </i> which she published between 1992 and 1999. She also collaborated with Ira Glass on <i>Radio: An Illustrated Guide, </i> a nonfiction comic about how the public radio program This American Life is made. Abel won both the Harvey and Lulu awards for Best New Talent in 1997; <i>La Perdida</i> won the 2002 Harvey Award for Best New Series. Abel's young adult novel, <i>Carmina, </i> is forthcoming in 2007, and she is currently collaborating on another graphic novel, <i>Life Sucks, </i> and a textbook about making comics.
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