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Loading... The Three Incestuous Sisterspor Audrey Niffenegger
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adorará Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se gostará deste livro. Best known for her novel The Time Traveller's Wife, Niffenegger's next publication is this unusual, gothic "visual novel". Obviously a labour of love for Niffenegger, Sisters took several years to finish. The images are full-page sepia aquaprints, accompanying her haunting tale of three sisters, Ophile, Clothilde and Bettine, who live together in a "lonely house by the sea". The images are beautiful, showing the sisters with tall lithe figures, long clingy dresses and long colourful hair. When the lighthouse keeper dies, he is replaced by the young Paris, who quickly falls in love with Bettine, the youngest and prettiest sister. The eldest sister, Ophile, is also in love with Paris, and her jealousy of Bettine takes a tragic turn. However, redheaded Clothilde is the most interesting sister, forming a psychic relationship with Bettine's unborn child. Clothilde is the heart and soul of the story, and it is her regret and hope that brings the story to its beautiful conclusion. Though also highly original and melodramatic, Sisters is very, very different from The Time Traveller's Wife. Sisters is a grim yet thoughtful fairy tale whose evocative images will stay with you long after you have finished it. Niffenegger's talents certainly are not limited to her storytelling. Obviously, I didn't get this book. I'm trying to think of redeeming qualities for it and the only thing I can come up with is "unusual." It was definitely not what I expected. This is a picture book, but for some reason I expected more words. This book is about 176 pages long, on the left is a sentence and on the facing page is a picture. And honestly, I didn't think the pictures were very good. They were all done through a process called "aquatint," a process involving metal and acid followed by watercolors, which the author explained in an afterword that was the most interesting part of the book. The pictures were done entirely in black and white except for everyone's hair and the green boy so they were very dark and a bit difficult to make out sometimes. Maybe I just thought they were difficult to make out because I wanted them to have more detail, to compensate for the lack of words, and they just didn't. The story, involving murder, insanity, and deformity (but oddly, no incest), was just creepy. It took the author 14 years to complete this book (meanwhile, "The Time Traveler's Wife" was something she did in her spare time), I hope, for the author's sake, that other people out there appreciate it more than I did. The beautifully sad tale of three sisters told as a visual novel, a story told in pictures. The youngest sister Bettine is blond and thought of as the prettiest, the eldest sister Ophile has blue hair and is the smartest, Clothilde is the middle sister with red hair and is the talented sister of the three. They live in a house by the sea away from the town, near the lighthouse. Each sisters life is changed in different ways when one night there is a storm and the lighthouse keeper is struck by lightening. Sibling rivallry, mistaken identity, love, magic and a blue boy who can fly. Stunning pictures tell the tale with very few words. I think Clothilde was my favourite of the sisters as a lot of the pictures of her caught my imaginiation and attention. There are some of her with a headache, her communicating with an unborn baby, naming things in the world and practising her levitation that stood out in particular. It took the author (she also wrote The Time Travellers Wife) 13 years to create the pictures using aquatints after the project began as an artbook. I am sp glad she took the time and I was fascinated reading the afterwood. I don't want to say much more here as I think the story speaks for itself. It is a short read and is well worth it. Definitely something I hope to revisit soon. I found this book is rather strange. I found the pictures interesting, but I did not understand the true story behind the images. It's a very quick read, most images are accompanied only by a short sentence. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
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(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)
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As you can see by the cover, the art is beautiful. I knew Niffenegger was an artist, but I somehow missed the news that she wrote these two illustrated novels. Before I read it, I thought "illustrated novel" might be semantics to market a graphic novel to those who might not necessarily read them otherwise (and specifically those who read The Time Traveler's Wife.). I was wrong. I enjoy graphic novels, but this book seems closest to a children's picture book in how it tells a story. The pictures are more powerful than the words, but they two elements work together beautifully.
The Three Incestuous Sisters is lushly illustrated. I read it with nomadreaderboy, and we would gladly purchase an additional copy to cut up, frame and hang all over our home. The art is beautiful. The story is fascinating and very Niffenegger. It has hints of the supernatural, but the sisters are flush with humanity. It's a quick read, but I found myself reading it (and gazing at the art) very slowly. I even read it in two sittings to make it last.
I absolutely loved this book. (