- Published: 6 October 2016
- ISBN: 9781473557512
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 184
Notes on a Thesis
- Published: 6 October 2016
- ISBN: 9781473557512
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 184
It is not unusual to hear of doctoral students who feel abandoned and, often as a result, abandon their PhDs halfway, just as Rivière did. It’s great to have the issue raised so eloquently in such an amusing book
Matthew Reisz, Times Higher Education
A hilariously accurate satire of academia, and a wrenching portrait of obsession.
Stephen Collins, author of 'The Gigantic Beard That Was Evil'
If you like comics, if you have a PhD, then we would say this book is very definitely for you.
Bookmunch
Funny, troubling and close to the bone for anyone with a life in academia... Rivière is a master of humour and heart-breaking honesty.
Roma Havers, Mancunion
In a similar vein to Posy Simmond's Tamara Drewe, Rivière uses a classic text to illustrate the modern world. The gates of Kafka's imagination become her own.
Mollie Davidson, Forge Press
A tale of procrastination, played for laughs both visually and narratively. Paris - both exterior and interior - is drawn beautifully... The book demonstrates an amusing honesty about the world of education from both sides.
Peter Redrup, Quietus
Caveat: do not read this wry and ever so well observed graphic novel if you have just this second committed yourself to a three-year PhD. The rest of us lucky pups who left academia behind decades ago - or never moored there in the first place - will have a whale of a time, but you will probably cry.
Stephen Holland, Page 45
Quite possibly the funniest book about academic life since David Lodge’s Changing Places. How brilliantly she captures its veiled bitchiness; how expertly – yet lovingly too – she sends up the silly cul-de-sacs of scholarship… This is a book for anyone who has ever laboured under a deadline… Put off what you intended to do today and go out and buy it, right now.
Rachel Cooke, Observer
In a genre still dominated by boys/men with super-exciting lives, this tale of an intense, anxious young woman pulling her hair out over the credibility of her labyrinth-motif angle on Kafka makes for an unusual, but very funny and satisfying read. If you're looking for the female Woody Allen of graphic novels...this could be the answer.
Jane Graham, Big Issue
A sharp new graphic novel exploring the perils of postgraduate life… [A] darkly comic book.
Matthew Reisz, Times Higher Education
I credit this book with helping me to drag myself out of a recent PhD-related slump and I think that it deserves to be widely read... it is the most enjoyable – and the most painfully accurate – book on academia that I have read.
Krystina Osborne, Postgraduate Contemporary Women's Writing Network
A hilarious, consistently clever account of the author’s struggle to complete her PHD.
Rachel Cooke, Observer, Book of the Year
Rivière’s gags are all visual, using her artwork to give impressions of what characters are thinking and feeling, in a way that is both recognisable and inventive... a witty and intelligent book.
Steff Humm, Ink
[A] delightfully expressive graphic novel... laced with dark, self-deprecating humour... Rivière’s languid linework transforms Jeanne’s daily grind into spot-on visual metaphors... What could be a rambling plunge into misery instead unfolds as a truthful, witty tale, relatable whether readers are Ph.D., ABD, or neither.
Publishers Weekly