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Book cover of Monster Portraits by Sofia Samatar

Monster Portraits

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Number Of Reads:

47

Language:

English

Category:

literature

Pages:

154

Quality:

excellent

Views:

843

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Book Description

Relentlessly original and brilliantly hybrid, Monster Portraits investigates the concept of the monstrous through a mesmerizing combination of words and images. An uncanny autobiography of otherness, it offers the record of a writer in the realms of the fantastic shot through with the memories of a pair of mixed-race children growing up Somali-American in the 1980s. Operating under the sign of two—texts and drawings, brother and sister, black and white, extraordinary and everyday—Monster Portraits multiplies, disintegrates, and blends, inviting the reader to find the danger in the banal, the beautiful in the grotesque. Accumulating into a breathless journey and groundbreaking study, these brief notes and sketches claim the monster as a fragmentary vastness: not the sum but the derangement of its parts.
Del Samatar's drawings conjure beings who drag worlds in their wake. World Fantasy Award-winning author Sofia Samatar responds with allusive, critical, and ecstatic meditations. Together they have created a secret history of the multi-racial child, a guide to the beasts of an unknown mythos, and a dreamer's iconography. Monster Portraits resonates in a world obsessed with the Other, using captivating nomenclature, art, fiction, and essay to examine society’s damaging desire to define and divide. The monstrous never looked so simultaneously haunting and familiar.
“This is a wondrous book. It reminded me of all the magical and rupturing books I have carried close to my heart, tucked against my body beneath my coat, since childhood. This is not a child’s book, though it could be. The monstrous’ life of ungulates and human-animal compositions, but also ordinary people—the New York City ‘nanny’ perhaps, who snaps one day and does away with the domestic scene before her—proliferate, exit, and enter the world of this book at intervals both soundless and without a visible depth. ‘All monsters,’ writes Sofia Samatar, ‘express relationships: not the ones we dream of, but the ones we have.’ Del Samatar’s drawings, which accompany the brilliant (plainly written yet alchemical) prose of Monster Portraits, are also astonishingly beautiful. I am so excited to hold this book in my hands, like a ‘red bowl.’ And drink from it or eat from it. Again and again. To this end, I am thinking of buying a new coat that fits tightly and has buttons, so that I can indeed hold it very close, in all weathers and at all times!”

Author portrait of Sofia Samatar

Sofia Samatar

Sofia Samatar (born October 24, 1971) is an American poet, novelist and educator from Indiana.Samatar was born in 1971 in northern Indiana, United States.Her father was the Somali scholar, historian and writer Said Sheikh Samatar. Her mother is a Swiss-German Mennonite from North Dakota.Sofia's parents met in 1970 in Mogadishu, Somalia, while her mother was teaching English.Samatar attended a Mennonite high school before studying at Goshen College in Goshen, Indiana, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English. In 1997, Samatar earned a Master's degree in African languages and literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Madison, Wisconsin and a Ph.D. in 2013 in contemporary Arabic literature.She is an Assistant Professor of English at James Madison University. Samatar's first novel A Stranger in Olondria was published in 2013.Samatar has also published qasīdas in English and collaborated with her brother on a book of illustrated prose poems, entitled Monster Portraits, which was published in 2018 by Rose Metal Press. A sequel to A Stranger in Olondria, entitled The Winged Histories, was published by Small Beer Press in 2016.Samatar's main literary influences include: Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, Rainer Maria Rilke, as well as Somali mythology. Samatar served as a nonfiction and poetry editor for Interfictions: A Journal of Interstitial Arts.In 2022, she published her first nonfiction book, The White Mosque, a memoir about a trip to Uzbekistan in search of the followers of fringe religious leader Claas Epp Jr.

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