You can never die A graphic memoir

Harry Bliss, d%1964-

Book - 2025

"Renowned New Yorker cartoonist Harry Bliss loved his sweet dog Penny, a joyful part of his life for 17 years. Every day that he cared for his beloved pet, Harry joked with her, talked to her, and drew the adorable creature--Penny's presence is unmistakably, hilariously incorporated into the iconic cartoons of his career. In one, he gazes up at the night sky, remarking on the vastness of outer space, while she digs into the ground, unbothered, fuzzy tail wagging in the air. Harry grew up in upstate New York to a family of artists, a rowdy and turbulent bunch, and attended art school in Philadelphia. A therapist once suggested that perhaps when he looked at Penny, he saw himself as a child, innocent and facing unanticipated heartbr...eak. As Harry must grieve Penny's loss, he reflects on his parents in their later years, his love for his wife and home, and the colorful artists, friends, and mentors who have shaped him. With humor and gut-wrenching honesty, You Can Never Die is an intimate portrayal of a man making sense of the beautiful and painful world around him. This singular memoir integrates sharply-crafted, witty stories with hundreds of gorgeous cartoons and never-seen-before sketches from Bliss' extraordinary career"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Bliss, Harry
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf BIOGRAPHY/Bliss, Harry (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 10, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
autobiographies (literary genre)
Published
New York : Celadon Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Harry Bliss, d%1964- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
395 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250883681
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

New Yorker cartoonist Bliss (A Wealth of Pigeons) lets it all hang out in this poignant, generously illustrated graphic memoir, which combines prose and comics in mordantly funny and moving vignettes. Confiding at the outset that "intimacy is my intention," Bliss delves into the death of his beloved dog Penny, and springboards from that grief to all manner of life events and transitions. He grew up in a fractious household, and then as an adult had to manage his highly difficult parents as they got older ("My genuine fear is that Mom will burn the house down"). Bliss describes seeking solace in romantic partners, who harbor him from "the kind of sorrow that comes from living with family dysfunction marinated in narcissism." Lighter anecdotes share stories about old jobs and friends, including notables like occasional collaborator Steve Martin and fellow New Yorker artist Edward Koren. Bliss frequently returns to Penny, comparing his human anxieties with her blissful, oblivious contentment--and how he's "still discovering what I learned from loving her." Bliss's candor is easy company, bolstered with his cartoons and sketches--he's adept at realism as well as a skilled caricaturist. Readers won't need to be dog lovers to appreciate Bliss's wit and insights. Agent: Esther Newberg, CAA. (Apr.)

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