Kristen Radtke is a brooder; few would call her a blithe spirit. The result is another resonant, haunting volume of graphic nonfiction written and drawn in the key of Edward Hopper. Radtke is careful to distinguish between being alone (aloneness) and feeling lonely (loneliness), and to make clear that one can feel lonely even when surrounded by loved ones. Loneliness lives in the gap.”In ‘Seek You,’ Radtke is careful to distinguish between being alone (aloneness) and feeling lonely (loneliness). In ‘Seek You,’ Radtke calls technology “an easy scapegoat” for loneliness.
Source: Los Angeles Times July 13, 2021 17:15 UTC