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| Etgar Keret and Asaf Hanuka |
Pizzeria Kamikaze |
| Comics |
Or Yehuda and Jerusalem, Kinneret/Zmora-Bitan and Keter, 2004. 100 pp.
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Author Etgar Keret and illustrator Asaf Hanuka have again joined forces to present us with a delightful comics version of Keret`s best-selling novella, Kneller`s Happy Campers.
The novella has already been translated into numerous languages (English, French, German, Italian, Dutch, Danish, Polish, Spanish, Norwegian, Czech, Greek, Arabic and Chinese), and in some cases, as here, is entitled Pizzeria Kamikaze.
Pizzeria Kamikaze can be read as a clever parody, full of humor and comic flashes, but it can also be seen as a wistful longing for a better world and perfect love. When the hero, Hayim, commits suicide, he is transported to an afterworld that is the destination of all suicides. This place is remarkably like the world he comes from: there are Jews and Arabs, junk food and Polish food just like Mother`s. Soon he finds a job in a pizzeria and makes friends. But it is also possible to perform small miracles there. For example, Hayim is "dying" to perform a miracle that will help him find his girlfriend, Desiree, who committed suicide not long after he did. His search for Desiree takes him on a colorful, picaresque journey, full of gripping encounters. The book’s climax is the long-awaited meeting with Desirée and the "Messiah", who promises to show his followers the way to a better world. Needless to say, the Messiah goofs and lets them down, causing Hayim to lose Desirée for a second time. An incurable optimist, he keeps longing and hoping.
The comics version of Pizzeria Kamikaze was serialized in English in the United States, in the Bipolar Comics series (2002-2004).
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