The pages of the" New Yorker "are hallowed ground for
cartoonists, and for the last thirty years, Roz Chast has helped
set the magazine's cartooning standard, while creating work that is
unmistakably her own- characterized by her shaggy lines, an
ecstatic way with words, and her characters' histrionic masks of
urban and suburban anxiety, bedragglement, and elation.
"What I Hate" is an A to Z of epic horrors and daily
unpleasantries, including but by no means limited to rabies,
abduction, tunnels, and the triple-layered terror of Jell-O 1-2-3.
With never-before-published, full-page cartoons for every letter,
and supplemental text to make sure the proper fear is instilled in
every heart, Chast's alphabetical compendium will resonate with
anyone well-versed in the art of avoidance- and make an instructive
gift for anyone who might be approaching life with unhealthy
unconcern.
Praise for Roz Chast:
"The wacky world Roz Chast has created in her cartoons is a
parallel universe to ours, utterly recognizable in all its
banalities and weirdnesses, but slightly askew."-Michiko Kakutani,
"New York Times"
"The wryest pen since Dorothy Parker's."-"O, the Oprah
Magazine"
"Where would we be without Roz Chast?...Chast's magnificent
career-spanning collection...highlights her position as master of
the deep interior, of the obsessions, the baseless fears and the
weird proverbs to which we cling in our desperation not to leave
the house."-Susan Salter Reynolds, "Los Angeles Times," on
"Theories of Everything"