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The Werewolf at Dusk

And Other Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Confronting "the beast within" us all, The Werewolf at Dusk celebrates the singular genius of David Small, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Stitches.

Long celebrated as a modern master of graphic literature, David Small has elicited in his work comparisons to Stan Lee and even Alfred Hitchcock. His internationally acclaimed graphic memoir, Stitches, told the story of a childhood in disarray. Werewolf at Dusk, appearing nearly fifteen years later, turned its attention to the twilight of life and to aging, gracefully or otherwise.

Eerily striking and mesmerizing, the three stories in this collection are linked, as Small writes, by the dread of things internal. In the title story, an adaptation of Lincoln Michel's classic short piece, the dread is that of a man who has reached senility with something repellant in his nature. He—an impotent werewolf, no longer able to hunt—confronts the terror of obsolescence. What do I even look like now, he wonders, when the full moon draws out the wolf inside me? The specter of old age also haunts the semiautobiographical story "A Walk in the Old City." Brain matter cascades and spiders loom as a psychoanalyst, self-assured in his practice, wanders along empty streets, reality warping into the irrational with the insouciance of a dream.

In the final story, a reinterpretation of Jean Ferry's "The Tiger in Vogue," this dreamscape gives way to the ominous environs of Berlin in the 1920s. When a peaceful evening at the music hall is interrupted by a garish surprise act, only the protagonist seems to notice. Yet he, too, is transfixed by the performance, watching as a little man with a moustache, pale skin, and tired eyes wills a tiger into submission. With its sharp lines and vibrant blues and oranges, the artwork recalls Edvard Munch's anguished The Scream, likewise capturing the moment—the dread—before disaster.

As fluid as Japanese manga and rife with unsettling imagery, Werewolf at Dusk is a testament to the singular dark genius of David Small.

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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2023

      Having come to everyone's attention with the No. 1 New York Times best-selling Stitches, multi-awarding-winning graphic novelist Small returns in Werewolf at Dusk with a passel of otherworldly stories about growing older. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2024
      The latest from writer-artist Small is a triptych of short illustrated stories (two adaptations and one original) that explore the idea of lurking monsters. In the first, adapted from Lincoln Michel's short story "The Werewolf at Dusk," an aging lycanthrope laments his lost vitality: The years have rendered his once-fearsome lupine form mangy, stooped, and medicated. The Small original, "A Walk in the Old City," follows a psychotherapist lost and imperiled on strange, circuitous streets who recognizes his surroundings as nothing more than a dream but then must confront the identity of the dreamer--and a pack of dog-sized spiders. The final tale is based on Jean Ferry's "Le Tigre Mondain," in which a theatergoer in 1920s Berlin has his night of frivolity ruined by the surprise performance of a popular farce featuring a tiger behaving like a man, from wearing a suit to not eating a baby, with the salivating beast held in check only by the will of the nearby and increasingly exhausted Adolf Hitler. The collection is more adult picture book than graphic novel and is immensely enjoyable. Small's linework is striking in its expressiveness and energy, figures and forms leaping across the page while eyes and lips simmer with emotion. Broad patches and layers of color imbue the illustrations with a gorgeous painterly quality. An introduction from Smalls connects the three stories thematically and challenges the reader to not fall victim to that most insidious of monsters lurking within so many of us: passivity. From the unceasing and enervating march of time to the uncertainty of our agency to the crass manipulation of the masses by the elite, Small convincingly makes the case that we are beset on all sides (especially inside) by monsters. Surreal and searing.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 22, 2024
      This evocative, sure-handed triptych of short stories from Small (Stitches) showcases his talent to conjure foreboding. The title piece, adapted from a story by Lincoln Michel, depicts an aging werewolf who’s now “lucky overtake an injured squirrel.” As isolated as ever, he’s still fearful of the full moon, but for a different reason: —“It used to mean I’d hurt other people. Now it means I hurt myself.” The dreamlike middle story, “A Walk in the Old City,” portrays a burnt-out psychiatrist as he follows a mysterious old man across a bridge festooned with giant spiders, haunted by the specter of death. In the final entry, “The Tiger in Vogue” (adapted from a story by Jean Ferry), a dilettante in 1920s Germany tries to enjoy the “innocent delights” of a music hall—a Belle Epoque–style pop of color in a dim and rainy city—but despises one particular number, in which a woman courts a tiger dressed like a dapper gentleman. The tiger’s wildness is barely contained by a cat tamer fashioned as Hitler, whose power requires the complacency and complicity of the audience. Small’s elegant, spidery drawings, reminiscent of Jules Feiffer, and limited color palette unite the set. Wisdom does not beget freedom in the sorrowful world of these stories—but it’s still a place well worth visiting. Agent: Brenda Bowen, Book Group.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 1, 2024
      Small is undoubtedly revered as a prodigious picture book creator--a Caldecott Medal and Honor Book, among many other lauds, provide proof--while his graphic novels (Stitches, 2009; Home after Dark, 2018) remain notably rare. His latest comprises three stories, thematically linked by "The Beast Within," as Small titles his introduction. In "The Werewolf at Dusk," a story by Lincoln Michel, an elderly man laments his youth as he (still) considers that strangers could be prey. In "A Walk in the Old City," Small plumbs a decades-old personal dream, featuring an aging psychiatrist who wanders into an arachnoid nightmare. In the third--and most compelling--Small enhances Jean Ferry's "The Tiger in Vogue" as he follows a "Mitl�uffer, one who sees but walks along," in 1920s Berlin, who witnesses violence, crime, animal torture, and even Hitler but chooses to silently return home to his own safety. Undoubtedly, a timely warning against complacent complicity seems contained within. All throughout, Small's fluid, emotive art is consistently wondrous, his characters' expressions particularly, remarkably revealing. Shades of somber blue dominate his illustrations, pointedly enhanced with a haunting red in "Werewolf" and heightened with pastels (but also that warning red) in "Vogue." Beasts indeed populate Small's affecting pages, but most disturbing are the treacherous humans.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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