Pretending is Lying
By (Author) Dominique Goblet
By (author) Sophie Yanow
The New York Review of Books, Inc
The New York Review of Books, Inc
25th October 2022
16th August 2022
United States
General
Fiction
741.59493
Paperback
144
Width 171mm, Height 241mm
Now in paperback, a "tender, affecting" (NYTBR) memoir unlike any other, and the first book to appear in English by the acclaimed Belgian artist Dominique Goblet. In a series of dazzling fragments-skipping through time, and from raw, slashing color to delicate black-and-white-Dominique Goblet examines the most important relationships in her life- with her partner, Guy Marc; with her daughter, Nikita; and with her parents. The result is an unnerving comedy of paternal dysfunction, an achingly ambivalent love story (with asides on Thomas Pynchon and the Beach Boys), and a searing account of childhood trauma-a dizzying, unforgettable view of a life in progress and a tour de force of the art of comics.
It is a rare gift to come across a book as tender, affecting and complete as Pretending is Lying. Sheila Heti, The New York Times Book Review
This beautifully rendered, emotionally intense, and chronologically scattered reminiscence essentially questions the veracity of all autobiography. Publishers Weekly
Heres a terrific example of the current wave of great comics from Europe. Dominique Goblets approach is postmodern, with a scruffy, anything-goes mix of styles and moods, but its marked everywhere by her forays into photography. She intersperses her talean autobiographical account of family, a lover, truth, lies and brutalitywith images that look like photos. Etelka Lehoczky, NPRs Book Concierge, 2017s Great Reads
Primarily pencil-sketched, Goblets art is unbridled and alternately busy and peaceful. She uses lettering to great effect, too, expressing mood, feeling, and, in her fathers case, drunkenness with the appearance of the text. Some pages feature only vague, dimly lit shapes, as if there are ghosts hovering on the periphery of Goblets relationships, her memoirs primary subject. This is an imaginative, nonlinear rendering of an artists life so far. Booklist
A touchstone work of comics autobiography, from one of the genres key innovators, is finally translated, complete with expressive lettering newly handcrafted by the artist. Sean Rogers, The Globe and Mail
Pretending Is Lying is a perceptive and poignant contribution to the fields of both experimental comics and graphic autobiography, and well worth the read. Hans Rollman, Pop Matters
Combining paint, ink, charcoal, and pencil, Goblets mixed-media pages feel wet, textured, bleeding. . . . [Pretending is Lying is] part of a rich tradition of international graphic memoirs from Art Spiegelmans Maus to Marjane Satrapis Persepolis to Riad Sattoufs The Arab of the Future. . . . Were invited to peer into the artists mind. . . . It is a privilege to serve as [her] confidante, if only for a while. Chantal McStay, BOMB
Dominique Goblet spent twelve years putting parts of her life to restexplicit snippets and fragments that condense her entire childhood and sketch a tender portrait of the adult she is today. . . . Goblet hides nothing. And she forgives, weaving together, in gray and black and on yellowing paper, with strokes of her brush, a shocking kind of autobiography. LExpress
Dominique Goblet was born in Brussels, Belgium, and studied illustration at St. Luke's Institute. Involved from the start in the creation of the experimental-comics publisher Fremok, she published several books with them. At the same time she worked with the Parisian publishing house L'Association and published two books with them, including Pretending Is Lying. Artist, comics author, and professor of comics and illustration, she is also certified as an electrician, plumber, and welder. Sophie Yanow is a cartoonist and translator. She is the author of the autobiographical comic books War of Streets and Houses and What Is a Glacier and of the Eisner Award-winning graphic novel The Contradictions.