Reviews
Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Each story in this boldly playful collection pulls open a portal into an eerie miniature dreamworld--full of insects, animals, and inanimate objects sprung to life. Schluter serves as an ideal tour guide through these whimsical visions, his curiosity and offbeat sense ofhumor providing a shock of light to perfectly balance the psychological depth and darkness that underscores many of these tales. Consistently strange and oddly affecting, it's one of the most transporting andflat-out fun reads of the year."--Bryan Seitz, Literati Bookstore, Ann Arbor, MI "I read Cartoons with an excitement I've found impossible to muster for most contemporary fiction. Here, at last, a long-promised new thing!"--Stephen Sparks, Point Reyes Books, Pt Reyes, CA " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "One of the best story collections of this young century." --Sebastian Castillo, author of SALMON "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit Schluter's Cartoons broadcast body horror with the precociousness of a child. It's like he recruited Aesop, Glen Baxter, David Cronenberg, and Tintin to guest star on The Simpsons. Whether through fable or illustration, archetypes are shaped from our collective dreamlife and waking mundanity into a hateful microwave, lovesick parrot, girl of paper, numerous sentient household objects, even the perfect translator, the latter of which suggests this book has more to confess about its author than you'd guess. We wake and grow up watching Cartoons."--Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as amajor intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by anotherliving American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique andexciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, MarcelSchwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit Schluter's Cartoons broadcast body horror with the precociousness of a child. It's like he recruited Aesop, Glen Baxter, David Cronenberg, and Tintin to guest star on The Simpsons. Whether through fable or illustration, archetypes are shaped from our collective dreamlife and waking mundanity into a hateful microwave, lovesick parrot, girl of paper, numerous sentient household objects, even the perfect translator, the latter of which suggests this book has more to confess about its author than you'd guess. We wake and grow up watching Cartoons."--Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights, Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Each story in this boldly playful collection pulls open a portal into an eerie miniature dreamworld--full of insects, animals, and inanimate objects sprung to life. Schluter serves as an ideal tour guide through these whimsical visions, his curiosity and offbeat sense of humor providing a shock of light to perfectly balance the psychological depth and darkness that underscores many of these tales. Consistently strange and oddly affecting, it's one of the most transporting andflat-out fun reads of the year."--Bryan Seitz, Literati Bookstore, Ann Arbor, MI "I read Cartoons with an excitement I've found impossible to muster for most contemporary fiction. Here, at last, a long-promised new thing!"--Stephen Sparks, Point Reyes Books, Pt Reyes, CA " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "One of the best story collections of this young century." --Sebastian Castillo, author of SALMON "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit Schluter's Cartoons broadcast body horror with the precociousness of a child. It's like he recruited Aesop, Glen Baxter, David Cronenberg, and Tintin to guest star on The Simpsons. Whether through fable or illustration, archetypes are shaped from our collective dreamlife and waking mundanity into a hateful microwave, lovesick parrot, girl of paper, numerous sentient household objects, even the perfect translator, the latter of which suggests this book has more to confess about its author than you'd guess. We wake and grow up watching Cartoons."--Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "The true surrealist is unblinking, convulsive, and cheerfully open to the mysterious flow, into their texts, of mythic and archetypal elements operating beyond their conscious control. In Cartoons , Kit Schluter vaults into the zone of Julio Cortazar, Richard Brautigan, and late Giorgio di Chirico, where the reader breaths the air of pure freedom attained rattling inside the chains of self." --Jonathan Lethem, author of Brooklyn Crime Novel "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as amajor intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by anotherliving American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique andexciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, MarcelSchwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "A fantastic assortment of tall tales that look for little miracles in the mundane."--Kirkus Reviews "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Each story in this boldly playful collection pulls open a portal into an eerie miniature dreamworld--full of insects, animals, and inanimate objects sprung to life. Schluter serves as an ideal tour guide through these whimsical visions, his curiosity and offbeat sense of humor providing a shock of light to perfectly balance the psychological depth and darkness that underscores many of these tales. Consistently strange and oddly affecting, it's one of the most transporting andflat-out fun reads of the year."--Bryan Seitz, Literati Bookstore, Ann Arbor, MI "I read Cartoons with an excitement I've found impossible to muster for most contemporary fiction. Here, at last, a long-promised new thing!"--Stephen Sparks, Point Reyes Books, Pt Reyes, CA " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "One of the best story collections of this young century." --Sebastian Castillo, author of SALMON "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit Schluter's Cartoons broadcast body horror with the precociousness of a child. It's like he recruited Aesop, Glen Baxter, David Cronenberg, and Tintin to guest star on The Simpsons. Whether through fable or illustration, archetypes are shaped from our collective dreamlife and waking mundanity into a hateful microwave, lovesick parrot, girl of paper, numerous sentient household objects, even the perfect translator, the latter of which suggests this book has more to confess about its author than you'd guess. We wake and grow up watching Cartoons."--Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as amajor intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by anotherliving American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique andexciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, MarcelSchwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights, Praise for Cartoons : "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "The true surrealist is unblinking, convulsive, and cheerfully open to the mysterious flow, into their texts, of mythic and archetypal elements operating beyond their conscious control. In Cartoons , Kit Schluter vaults into the zone of Julio Cortazar, Richard Brautigan, and late Giorgio di Chirico, where the reader breaths the air of pure freedom attained rattling inside the chains of self." --Jonathan Lethem, author of Brooklyn Crime Novel "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a majorintellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by anotherliving American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique andexciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, MarcelSchwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "One of the best story collections of this young century." --Sebastian Castillo, author of SALMON "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit Schluter's Cartoons broadcast body horror with the precociousness of a child. It's like he recruited Aesop, Glen Baxter, David Cronenberg, and Tintin to guest star on The Simpsons. Whether through fable or illustration, archetypes are shaped from our collective dreamlife and waking mundanity into a hateful microwave, lovesick parrot, girl of paper, numerous sentient household objects, even the perfect translator, the latter of which suggests this book has more to confess about its author than you'd guess. We wake and grow up watching Cartoons."--Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "Cartoons is just so charming; it's somehow already a classic. Like Wycliffe's Bible, which gave us the words 'crime' and 'frying pan'and 'birthday,' here is a language clear and fresh enough to give a fairy tale the eerie force of law. Like Shklovsky's Zoo, or Letters Not About Love, these erudite and lucid reveries weave zigzag webs of silly string around a wound we don't quite dare look in the eye. Kit Schluter is the sort of magician who makes children go very still. We're too busy having our belly buttons tickled to notice he's touching our heart."-- Yasmine Seale, poet and translator of The Thousand and One Nights "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "The true surrealist is unblinking, convulsive, and cheerfully open to the mysterious flow, into their texts, of mythic and archetypal elements operating beyond their conscious control. In Cartoons , Kit Schluter vaults into the zone of Julio Cortazar, Richard Brautigan, and late Giorgio di Chirico, where the reader breaths the air of pure freedom attained rattling inside the chains of self." --Jonathan Lethem, author of Brooklyn Crime Novel "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London, Praise for Cartoons : " Cartoons is hardly a literary book--as Kit Schluter himself notes in his preface--and yet it's also supremely literary, as if 'literature' here were more of a unique power than simply a mode of writing: the power to do whatever you want--whatever you truly require--free of shame. And the result is liberatory and riveting." --Pablo Katchadjian, author of Thanks "Hilarious and extravagant, Kit Schluter's Cartoons had me laughing out loud within moments. A fantastical collection." --Rikki Ducornet, author of The Plotinus "Kit Schluter's translations have already established him as a major intellect . . . His fictions, which are unlike anything by another living American writer, are sure to establish him as a unique and exciting new talent, for fans of Japanese folktales, Max Porter, Marcel Schwob, and The Simpsons ." --Catherine Lacey, author of Biography of X: A Novel "As if the world were a great Glass Snowball, Billy the Kit transforms reality with a single flick of the wrist. With a simple Shake, he brings objects to life and calls up voices from the void, chronicling their impossible adventures that lead us to the absurdity we'll have to confront if we want to be able to stomach our lives." --Mario Bellatin, author of Beauty Salon "Kit's current project, Cartoons , is made up of absurd fables that foreground the grotesque and the maudlin, very French, which makes me think as much of Tin-Tin as it does of 'cartoon' in the art historical context, meaning a full-scale preparatory drawing for a fresco, oil painting, or tapestry, a symbolist artwork colliding Aesop and Les fleurs du mal and their gossip about love and sex and scraping together from such discharge a life and living it. His cast comprises the morose white-faced clown Pierrot, an antagonistic microwave, a lovesick parrot, and most grippingly, a character who is the perfect translator, which convinces me that Kit's cartoons are, indeed, confessional." --Evan Kennedy, author of Metamorphoses "I haven't been so excited about a piece of prose since falling in love with Boris Vian a long time ago." --Klara Kofen, Bookartbookshop, London