Synopses & Reviews
"What happens when a shoe-crazy, lipstick-obsessed, wine-swilling, pasta-slurping, fashion-fanatic, single-forever, about-to-get-married big-city girl cartoonist with a fabulous life finds...a lump in her breast?" That's the question that sets this powerful, funny, and poignant graphic memoir in motion. In vivid color and with a taboo-breaking sense of humor, Marisa Acocella Marchetto tells the story of her eleven-month, ultimately triumphant bout with breast cancer from diagnosis to cure, and every challenging step in between.
But Cancer Vixen is about more than surviving an illness. It is a portrait of one woman's supercharged life in Manhattan, and a wonderful love story. Marisa, self-described "terminal bachelorette," meets her Prince Charming in Silvano, owner of the chic downtown restaurant Da Silvano. Three weeks before their wedding, she receives her diagnosis. She wonders: How will he react to this news? How will my world change? Will I even survive? And...what about my hair?
From raucous New Yorker staff lunches and the star-studded crowd at Silvano's restaurant to the rainbow pumps Marisa wears to chemotherapy, Cancer Vixen is a total original. Marisa's wit and courage are an inspiration she's a cancer vixen, not its victim.
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"Marchetto's account is not merely vivid and engrossing but also a close-up of what a cancerista could expect, including life-size drawings of the biopsy needle." Library Journal
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"Somehow, the graphic artist has taken the tone of Sex and the City into the cancer ward, with a happy ending that makes her memoir seem all the more life-affirming. Inspirational proof that there's nothing like a death scare to put life into perspective." Kirkus Reviews
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"[An] absorbing and inspiring tale of a woman who knows how to do things even fight cancer in style." Hartford Courant
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"Oddly enough, considering the subject matter, Cancer Vixen is tremendous fun, bubbly and sweet and optimistic." Seattle Times
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"Marchetto's sunny drawings comfort and amuse while providing a beneficial education on cancer's dark details." New York Times
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"[C]ertain to refine the language of breast cancer in its own, quirky way." Cleveland Plain Dealer
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"This is less a book about cancer with a capital C than a highly entertaining one about what day-to-day life is like when cancer throws a wrench in the works." Newsday
About the Author
Marisa Acocella Marchetto lives in New York City and is a cartoonist for The New Yorker and Glamour, and her work has appeared in The New York Times and Modern Bride, among other publications. She is also the author of Just Who the Hell Is She Anyway?