Twenty-five years on, [Cheap Novelties'] observations of what is
lost as cityscapes evolve and shift due to gentrification and changing
demographics are still fresh and relevant.**--The Guardian
**
Cheap Novelties is an early testament to Ben Katchor's extraordinary
prescience as both a gifted cartoonist and an astute urban chronicler.
Rumpled, middle-aged Julius Knipl photographs a vanishing city--an urban
landscape of low-rent apartment buildings, obsolete industries,
monuments to forgotten people and events, and countless sources of
inexpensive food. In Katchor's signature pen and ink wash style, Cheap
Novelties is a portrait of what we have lost to gentrification,
globalization, and the malling of America that is as moving today as it
was twenty-five years ago.
In 1991, the original Cheap Novelties appeared in an unassuming
paperback from the RAW contributor; it would become one of the first
books of the contemporary graphic novel golden age, and it set the stage
for Katchor to become regarded as a modern-day cartooning genius. Drawn
& Quarterly's twenty-fifth anniversary edition is a deluxe hardcover.