Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Comics & Graphic Novels Crime & Mystery

What's Fear Got to Do With It?

by (artist) Ivana Filipovich

Publisher
Conundrum Press
Initial publish date
Sep 2023
Category
Crime & Mystery, Contemporary Women, Literary
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781772620887
    Publish Date
    Sep 2023
    List Price
    $18

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

A soapy crime drama unfolds between the stalls of North America's largest night market
Eva and Mia couldn't be more different. Where Mia is insecure and image-obsessed, Eva is quiet and sensible. But the two women have one thing in common: their boyfriend, Max - a highly respected member of the city's criminal underground with a fearsome reputation. Over the course of a single dangerous evening at the night market, it quickly becomes clear that no one is in this relationship for love - instead, Mia, Eva, and Max are motivated by other complex social contracts: power, money, and fear.
Inspired by the work of literary masters Anton Chekhov, Ingmar Bergman, and Tennessee Williams, and created in a style that's reminiscent of black-and-white European artist Blutch, What's Fear Got to Do With It peels back the layers of human relationships and reveals that everything is not as it seems. A stunning debut from a talented artist who is part of the new Balkan Renaissance in comics.

About the author

Contributor Notes

In 1999, Ivana Filipovic, an architect, archaeologist, designer, cartoonist, and occasional procrastinator, became a literal escape artist, selling her beloved black lacquer piano for a one-way ticket to Vancouver.

After a 20-year hiatus, during which she worked in educational media and communications at a Canadian university, she returned to cartooning. In the last few years, her comics were published in Sweden, Slovenia, and Serbia and were exhibited at the French Institute (L'Institut francais) galleries in Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia, and at the NOVA comic arts festival in Serbia.
Deeply interested in psychology, her work aims predominantly to portray complex female characters and other underrepresented persons and groups. Mainly focused on slice-of-life stories, she occasionally ventures into other genres. Stylistically close to French and Italian cartooning, she uses both traditional and digital tools. Most recently, the Canada Council for the Arts has supported her exploration of 3D storyboarding.

Editorial Reviews

"Ivana's line is masterfully fluid, as are her dialogues. This book feels like a mild psychedelic trip - I loved every minute of it!" - Nina Bunjevac, Heartless