Guestbook
Ghost Stories
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- £9.99
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- £9.99
Publisher Description
'Shapton has created a mystical territory - a performance, an exhibition, a guestbook - in which I felt the ghost within myself; the thing that will outlive me. A fearless and exquisite book' Miranda July
Guestbook explores the glimmering, unsettling things that haunt us in the midst of life, combining stories, vignettes and an evocative curiosity cabinet of artifacts and images - found photographs, original paintings, Instagram-style portraits - to transform the traditional ghost story into something else entirely.
'Leanne Shapton has a way of making books entirely new, surreal, and uncanny ... Guestbook contains ghost stories for a world of images and captions, in which the ghosts are all of us, and our strange time' Sheila Heti, author of How Should a Person Be?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This clever and evocative volume from Shapton (Women in Clothes; Swimming Studies) collects ghost stories ranging from the eerie to the tender. Through images and captions, "Billy Byron" tells the story of a tennis whiz who seems both helped athletically and damaged physically and mentally by a presence named Walter. "Equalussuaq" juxtaposes passengers' fancy and extensive requests for food and drink aboard a boat ("Complicated cocktail party canap s are not our style"; "Three white wines should be available") alongside images of Greenland sharks and that animal's strange food-related life ("The flesh of the shark when fresh is indigestible and unwholesome: when dried it has a flavor like that of old cheese"; "Copepods cling to and scrape the eye of the Greenland shark"). In "Sinforosa," a girl knows her favorite teacher has died when she wakes up and her bedroom smells like his soap. From the experimental and the visual ("Who Is This Who Is Coming?" is a series of six images of a figure under a sheet) to the more traditionally narrative ("Video" is a one-page story about a dark figure caught in a cellphone video), Shapton inventively explores the space between presence and absence, craftily blending images and text to articulate what cannot be explained, only sensed, making for a uniquely haunting and uncanny work. B&w illus. and photos throughout, 32 pages in full color.