Into the Wild: A Journey Through Simplicity’s Dystopian Vision

‘Simplicity: A Novel’ by Mattie Luchansky will be released on July 29, 2025. Photo: Penguin Random Books

Simplicity by Mattie Lubchansky: A Graphic Novel Review

From the acclaimed author of the horror sensation Boys Weekend, Mattie Lubchansky returns with Simplicity—a vibrant and biting new graphic novel. Set in a dystopian future, Simplicity follows a timid academic sent beyond the fortified walls of New York City to investigate a mysterious cult in the wilds of the Catskill Mountains. It will be released on July 29 and is available for pre-order. (Penguin Random House, 2025)


📚 Synopsis

In 1977, a group known as the Spiritual Association of Peers takes over an abandoned summer camp in the Catskills, founding a secluded community they call Simplicity.

Fast forward to 2081: scholar Lucius Pasternak, a trans man, lives in the authoritarian New York City Administrative and Security Territory, established after the U.S. dissolves in 2041. When billionaire real estate mogul and current mayor Dennis Van Wervel offers Lucius a job documenting Simplicity for a new museum, Lucius reluctantly agrees.

What begins as an anthropological assignment quickly evolves into something deeper. Lucius is captivated by the community’s strange rituals and by Amity Crown-Shy, a charismatic acolyte born and raised in Simplicity. But soon, terrifying visions—sensual and surreal—begin to haunt Lucius. When members of the cult start to vanish, leaving signs of violence behind, Lucius and Amity are forced to confront an otherworldly presence: a creature the community calls The Lamentation.

Together, they journey into the lawless Exurb Zones, home to prepper enclaves and reclusive elites, to uncover the truth—and face the real threat to Simplicity’s survival.


🖋️ Review

In this bold and satirical graphic novel, Lubchansky explores the themes of power, identity, and ideology. Set in a fragmented and fortified America, Simplicity questions what happens when utopian dreams meet dystopian realities.

Lubchansky’s artwork is electric—balancing cartoonish expressiveness with detailed, immersive environments. The contrast between Lucius’ internal repression and Amity’s easy confidence adds emotional depth, while the narrative dives into authoritarian control, cult psychology, and queer identity with nuance and intelligence.

What begins as a critique of surveillance culture and elitism becomes a layered, often unsettling story about the seduction of simple answers in a complex world. The horror elements—hallucinatory creatures and violent disappearances—are matched by dark humor and emotional insight. The language is clear and expressive: “Are my dreams seeping into the real world? They persist.”

This is a must-read for fans of graphic novels that blend science fiction, horror, and political commentary. Provocative, beautifully drawn, and deeply thought-provoking, Simplicity stands out as one of the year’s most original graphic novels.

⚠️ Note: Contains nudity and sexual content.

“There’s no such thing as leaving the world, is there? We’re in the world. The choice has already been made for us.”

Rating: 4 out of 5.

*Thank you to Demetris Papadimitropoulos/Pantheon Books for the gifted ARC for review consideration. I have not been compensated for this review and all views and opinions expressed are my own.

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‘The Shadow of the Mammoth’: Inside Fabio Morábito’s New Story Collection

Famed Mexican literary treasure Fabio Morábito’s ‘The Shadow of the Mammoth: Stories.’ Photo: Other Press

📚Book Spotlight: The Shadow of the Mammoth: Stories by Fabio Morábito

Translated by Curtis Bauer
On Sale: September 2, 2025

The Shadow of the Mammoth: Stories, the vibrant new collection from acclaimed Mexican writer Fabio Morábito, offers 18 thought-provoking tales in the spirit of Mariana Enriquez and Yuri Herrera. Morábito explores the subtle intricacies of deception, translation, loneliness, and human connection—unearthing fresh perspectives on the world around us. (Other Press, 2025)

Peeling back the layers of the everyday, Morábito reveals the strange and profound within the mundane. His stories are emotionally resonant, filled with understated humor and unexpected flashes of hope. These are quiet yet powerful meditations on modern life, where the fleeting becomes magnified and meaning is found in the smallest details.

Through questions that seem almost absurd—Why is grass in airports so important? Can you be an extraordinary copyist without knowing how to read or write? Are there successful musicians who only play a single note in their life?—Morábito challenges us to see imagination not as a luxury, but as a vital way to stay connected to reality.

With prose stripped of excess and a trust in the reader’s curiosity, The Shadow of the Mammoth continues Morábito’s legacy of fiction that is as radical in form as it is humane in insight. Each story takes unpredictable turns, yet all share the unmistakable pleasure of storytelling that defines his work.


About the Author

Fabio Morábito was born in Egypt to Italian parents. At fifteen, he moved with his family from Milan to Mexico City, where he has lived ever since—and where he began writing exclusively in Spanish. He is the author of five poetry collections, five short-story collections, two novels, and a book of essays. He has also translated major Italian poets such as Eugenio Montale and Patrizia Cavalli into Spanish. Among his many honors is Mexico’s prestigious Xavier Villaurrutia Prize, awarded for his novel Home Reading Service (Other Press, 2021). His most recent collection, Mothers and Dogs, was published by Other Press in 2023.


About the Translator

Curtis Bauer is a poet and award-winning translator of Spanish-language prose and poetry. He has received the PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grant and a fellowship from the Banff International Literary Translation Centre. His translation of Jeannette Clariond’s Image of Absence won the International Latino Book Award for Best Nonfiction Book Translation. Bauer teaches creative writing and comparative literature at Texas Tech University.


Pre-order The Shadow of the Mammoth wherever books are sold.


Advance Praise for Fabio Morábito (The Shadow of the Mammoth):

The Shadow of the Mammoth is a masterful book, a singular collection focused on singularities. In a world intent on consuming mass quantities of media, Morábito has instead chosen to narrow his scope to one nail, one piccolo note, one patch of grass abutting an airport runway, and turn these small circumstances into worlds unto themselves.”
—Elizabeth Gonzalez James, author of The Bullet Swallower

“The stories in The Shadow of the Mammoth are beautiful and sardonic snapshots of humans at their extremes: their oddest, their loneliest, their most neurotic. Simple, precise, but endlessly inventive, Morábito delights and surprises at every turn.”
—Ruben Reyes Jr., author of Archive of Unknown Universes and There is a Rio Grande in Heaven

“The stories in Morábito’s The Shadow of the Mammoth are full of intrigue. Captivating and nuanced, they explore the intimate, the mundane, and the extraordinary with unique insight. Morábito’s sharp, crystalline, and voice-driven prose lands with undeniable authority. A great collection.”
—Annell López, PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize Finalist and author of I’ll Give You a Reason

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