"A masterpiece in black and white." — L'Humanité
"Haunting and dreamlike, Reviati's tome threads together the coming-of-age story of Guido, a teenage slacker who struggles to express himself, and the saga of the Stançiçs, a Roma family living on the margins of their small Italian town… Throughout, Reviati probes the intersection of history and memory, composing in fragments that double back on themselves. Reviati's pen-and-ink lines are confident: shadows heavy, faces half blank but elegantly realized… [T]hose willing to slip into the town's mysteries will be rewarded by Reviati's stylish, brooding art, which captures the ache of losses small and large." — Publishers Weekly
"Reviati's depiction of the life and cultural realities of the Roma, and the idea of a non-territorial nation, is a healthy corrective to the 21st century's obsession with national borders and their military enforcement. His drawings and text evoke a palpable sense of nature, weather and a spatial freedom that crosses all borders." –Ben Katchor, author and illustrator of Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer
" Spit Three Times is a fairy tale/fable both ancient and modern at the same time. It sucks you in with its raw reality and then launches you into dreams, nightmares, and fantasies that have been embedded in our collective unconscious for ages upon ages. And above all, I believed every moment…every image…every word." –Michael Imperioli, actor, screenwriter and author of the novel The Perfume Burned His Eyes
"In Davide Reviati's Italian graphic novel violence and vulnerability magnificently coexist." –Le Monde
"Reviati, by allowing himself a large canvas, gives his characters all the room they need to bare their souls. … this is authentic and passionate work." –Comics Grinder
"More than 500 pages and they read like they were less than half as many. Thanks to the impressive fluidity of the montage and the lightness of the writing." — Internazionale
"Light on text, the story is balanced by the extraordinary illustrations. I for one am so accustomed to polished, finely detailed penmanship that at first glance the book's illustrations look hurried and unfinished. In fact, they are simply free and loose, capturing a palpable buzzing energy that makes every page feel like it's in motion. Although sometimes stark, it's striking, and although sometimes bleak, it's vibrant. Spit Three Times is, perhaps, unlike any graphic novel you've ever read, and for that reason alone it deserves your attention." –The Cartoonist's Club of Great Britain
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.