Synopses & Reviews
Fresh out of college in the summer of 1961, Happy lands his first job as a graphic designer (okay, art assistant) at a small Connecticut advertising agency populated by a cast of endearing eccentrics. Life for Happy seems to be -- well, happy. But when he's assigned to design a newspaper ad recruiting participants for an experiment in the Yale Psychology Department, Happy can't resist responding to the ad himself. Little does he know that the experience will devastate him, forcing a reexamination of his past, his soul, and the nature of human cruelty -- chiefly, his own. Written in sharp, witty prose and peppered with absorbing ruminations on graphic design, The Learners again shows that Chip Kidd's writing is every bit as original, stunning, and memorable as his celebrated book jackets.
Review
“Like “The Cheese Monkeys,” “The Learners” is about learning--again under duress--to see everything, including oneself, differently....[In] Kidds attempt to blend the satirical and serious...he modulates the mix just right in the novels redemptive climax, which is both wild and winning, funny and moving.” San Francisco Chronicle
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“The novel stays firmly comic: quick and droll and sly. And, like Kidds previous novel, the most sparkling pages are when Happy and his colleagues discuss how to draw a straight line, or the ironically invisible power of typography.” St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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“Arresting and hip....captivating.” Christian Science Monitor
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“The book as an object is beautiful, a testament to its subject matter...charming, heart-wrenching and funny....An enjoyable read.” Lincoln Star Journal (Nebraska)
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“Kidd shares his deep knowledge of graphic design with his readers in inventive and generally delightful ways....His wit, astute observation, and compassion make The Learners that rarest of offerings--[an] immensely enjoyable novel.” Boston Globe
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“Kidd uses his narrative to investigate the relationships between form and content, authority and advertising....pointed observations on design and mass culture make this short novel a compelling read.” Chicago Reader
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“The advertising business and the [Milgram psychology] experiment are linked in this swift, often funny and always intelligent book.” Hartford Courant
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‘The Learners is witty and well observed as an office comedy, as a meditation on art and as a story of self-discovery...the book is packed with sharp insights....Kidd ultimately is a brilliant, self-aware designer and a clever writer.” New York Times Book Review
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“A fascinating study of the shape and texture of words....Kidds transition from artist to author is natural and seamless....[The Learners is] humorous and insightful and full of amusingly accurate scenes from the early 1960s--right down to the three-martini lunches and pillbox hats.” The Sunday Oregonian
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“Funny, insightful and even educational...quite witty.” The Daily Yomiuri (Tokyo)
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“Kidds novel is slyly funny as well as starkly emotional, and never overwritten or melodramatic. He has a Dickensian flair for giving his characters names that somehow suit them, and yet gives them a depth and poignancy that resonates long after the last page.” Wichita Eagle
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“Always intriguing, this is a strange mixture of the frivolous and the disturbing.” Financial Times (London)
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“Ingenious....The Learners seduces the reader through a deceptive manipulation of form and content: Its a matryoshka, or stacking doll, that hides a startling, dark content. By the time we get to the end of the first of its three parts, we are dropped into a creepy, disturbing, sociopolitical satire.” Philadelphia Inquirer
Review
“Kidd smoothly mixes the reality of Milgrams rather sinister work with the fiction of Happys new life in advertising....Even more impressive than the blend of fiction and fact is the way that “The Learners” shifts from raucous ad office comedy to the tragic repercussions of the Yale experiments.” Connecticut Post Online
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“Kidd captures the predigital art department just right....[He] seamlessly weaves real-world detail into his fiction--brushed-aluminum office furniture, Jackie O. ensembles--while offering primers in typography and design tools.” Newsweek
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“[Chip Kidds] fiction is just as smart and lively as the covers, typography and layout of the books he designs, which include this one.” Newport News Daily Press
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“Kidd uses his fiction to explore the roots and broader implications of his work in the modern industry of persuasion....Kidd has held up an engrossing, distorting mirror to a time when marketplace language we all now speak was only just being coined.” Calgary Herald (Alberta)
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“Snappy....Kidd invents a banter-filled workplace worthy of Howard Hawks, gleefully tweaks the old-guard panic of the Mad Men-era ad world, and even throws in a few typographic bells and whistles...A-” Entertainment Weekly
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“[The Learners] offers an enjoyable introduction to another world and a major writing talent....genuinely interesting...sympathetic characters, funny lines, a firm grasp of time and place, and a plot that makes surprising shifts without ever losing its way....[Chip Kidd is] an author to watch.” USA Today
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“Iconic graphic designer Kidd coins a new genrestylized sentimentalism (think AMCs Mad Men without the bile)to tell this tale of a creative naifs aesthetic and emotional coming of age. . . .
Review
“Chip Kidd, in his second novel, The Learners, repeats and evolves the typographical high jinks he gave us in The Cheese Monkeys....Kidds quirky approach to life is endearingly recognizable in its expression.” Los Angeles Times
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“Amusing and thought-provoking.” New York Newsday
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“Required reading.” New York Post
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“[Chip Kidds] fiction is just as smart and lively as the covers, typography and layout of the books he designs...swift, often funny and always intelligent.” Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
About the Author
Chip Kidd was born in Reading, PA in 1964. He lives in New York City and Stonington, CT.