Book cover for Night Bus

Night Bus

Zuo Ma

Translated by Orion Martin

Age 16 +
Paperback

Synopsis

Details

24 August 2021
412 pages
9781770464650
Imprint: Drawn and Quarterly

Reviews

“A highlight.” —The New York Times

“[Night Bus explores] memories of a vanishing China and track[s] the dramatic changes wrought on the landscape by industrialization.” —The New Yorker

“Deftly translated by Orion Martin, Zuo Ma's tales are literally eye-opening trips... By scrutinizing the world through 'the eyes of another,' Zuo Ma explores the porous and surreal boundary between fiction and autobiography, familiar and otherness, human and animal, untamed nature and rampant development.” —Thuy Dinh, NPR

“Readers will awe at Ma’s transporting visions.” —Publishers Weekly

“Layered, poetic, deeply personal stories about a young artist and a country in transition. The dream-like, sometimes uncomfortable stories and highly rendered environments feel like echoes of Tsuge or Tatsumi updated for a new generation.” —Matt Forsythe, Pokko and the Drum

Night Bus depicts sleepy, starry, bug swarmed countrysides, far away from the turmoil I currently experience. The book sparked far off memories of catching bugs and chance encounters with strange kids and adults doing things I found puzzling and objectionable. These memories make me want to fall into a coma and escape the oppressive stress of city life. The depictions of mundane existence, concerns about the elderly, and Zuo Ma’s own career path drift seamlessly into moody creature fantasies that at times escalate into full-on kaiju sequences. The darkened, cinematic faces linger.” —Jesse Moynihan, Forming, Midnight Gospel, Adventure Time

“The directness with which [Ma] addresses grief through these hazy narratives is remarkable, and Night Bus resonates as a necessary elegy to his grandmother, his former hometown and his younger self.” —Winnipeg Free Press

“Ma—a leader in China’s alternative comics scene—thoughtfully annotates each story with provenance and original publication, layering context and personal experience into his graphic memories. In this homage to familial storytelling, Ma—translated into English by small comics publisher Martin—succeeds in creating an intriguing portrait of an artistic young man showcasing his well-earned individuality.” —Booklist

“The best way to describe Zuo Ma’s Night Bus is that it’s a dreamlike tale highlighting the rural and urban divide in modern China.” —London Free Press