The Night Eaters: She Eats the Night (Book 1)

£9.995
FREE Shipping

The Night Eaters: She Eats the Night (Book 1)

The Night Eaters: She Eats the Night (Book 1)

RRP: £19.99
Price: £9.995
£9.995 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

Researchers have studied morning bright light therapy and found that it helps to improve mood, insomnia, and night eating symptoms, potentially by increasing serotonin levels. Progressive Muscle Relaxation The Night Eaters: She Eats The Night isn’t the book that you think that it is, in the best way imaginable.”— Popverse Four months ago, the Ting twins learned the truth about who (what) they are. Naturally, they both found different ways to cope with the news. That is until a mystery landed right in their laps. A mystery that is drawn to them. The volume covers a lot of ground and does it very well. I loved watching the twins try to figure out their new powers and fumble around in this new supernatural world. It was also intriguing to watch Ipo and Keon visit demons from their past to try and figure out what was happening in the supernatural world. Things are going very wrong in the supernatural world and to protect the twins, Ipo and Keon, have to figure out why. I've been wondering how Her Little Reapers would go for months now. I was not disappointed. I loved watching the twins try and figure things out on their own. More than that, I loved seeing how differently they handled the same situation/information.

In 1991 she temporarily moved to Paris and exhibited in Geneve and New York; in 1994 she received a fellowship by the Japanese publishing house Kodansha and lived in Japan for three months. I am afraid that She Eats the Night was not the kind of horror graphic novel I was hoping it would be. The dialogues are clunky, the art style didn’t really grab me, and the story is trying too hard for this ambiguous vibe that ultimately comes across as trying too hard to be mysterious. At its core, this is also a story about immigrant identity, told through a supernatural lens. If you have ever struggled with your cultural identity or cultural disconnect from your wider family, I am sure that the story of Milly and Billy will resonate with you. La presencia de la casa del frente, con un jardín sobrecrecido y abandonado, que parece una casa embrujada y no puede venderse lleva a su madre a querer intervenir, y a ellos a darles una pequeña lección. Refreshing… Takeda smoothly steers Liu’s narrative from scenes of everyday life to supernatural dread. Forces of Geek

Better Sleep for a Better You.

Magical… A beautifully nuanced story, with careful sketched characters, all brought to life with stunningly immersive artwork.”— Boing Boing Milly and Billy are pretty average twenty somethings. They're Chinese American twins with an overbearing, frankly cold mother and an utterly adoring, utterly adorable father. Life hasn't quite worked out the way they'd planned. Milly dropped out of med school and can't seem to move on from her exboyfriend and Billy spends an obsessive amount of time shooting things on a computer but even in the midst of Covid they've managed to start an increasingly successful restaurant all on their own (with some occasional help from their parents who spend part of the year in Hong Kong and part of the year harassing/helping their kids). It’s not a subtle scene, nor is it meant to be. You can practically hear Liu and Takeda screaming, “All manner of sinister shit is happening out there in the real world, people – pay attention!” Sure, it’s not necessarily the same kind of ghoulish threats that the Ting family is faced with, however, it’s still big enough and serious enough to demand we stop scrolling or hit pause on our favorite podcast. Excellently crafted.. Liu’s writing pulls together all the various themes and concepts presented in The Night Eaters: She Eats The Night Book 1 into one harmonious whole in a way that I never would’ve thought possible. … The cloudy, ethereal nature of Takeda’s style lends itself perfectly to a horror story. … The blending of family and classic haunted house horror comes together to create something truly unique.”— But Why Tho?

Expect to hear Liu and Takeda’s names ring out prominently in the next award season and add The Night Eaters to the strong roster of original graphic novels produced so far in the 2020s.”— Forbes Certainly, the ethics of a character like Ipo have evolved over time. She might not be called "good" by some who know her, but her actions reveal a desire to do no harm, to make the world a safer, better place. horror heaven… A book about family, demons, and expectations that’s as disturbing as it is funny. She Eats the Night is an achievement.”— Comics Beat When author Marjorie Liu and illustrator Sana Takeda team up, you know your eyes and imagination will be feasting.”— The Mary Sue

‘X-Men Unlimited’ #59 is a Halloween special only on Marvel Unlimited

The Night Eater (a soft pink creature with a fat body, a big smile, a long whimsical hat, and a long orange nose reminiscent of a commedia dell arte character) eats the night each pre-dawn to make way for the sun and day. The night is delicious, and the Night Eater loves eating it, but one day the Moon fat-shames him, and the Night Eater decides to stop eating entirely in response. The Night Eater's starvation "diet" results in never-ending night, which means people are cold, plants can't grow, etc., until finally the children look up at the sky and call out for the Night Eater. Opening his month to respond, a delicious star slips into his mouth and "It was so good, and so tasty, he forgot why he had refused to nibble." So, though the Night Eater doesn't explicitly express that he knows his body is perfect just the way it is, he does end his starvation then and there, which I take as a rejection of diet-culture in and of itself. The first volume in a new graphic novel horror trilogy from Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda—the creative team behind the New York Times bestselling series Monstress When Ipo forces them to help her clean up the house next door - a hellish and run-down ruin that was the scene of a grisly murder - the twins are in for a nasty surprise. A night of terror, gore, and supernatural mayhem reveals that there is much more to Ipo and her children than meets the eye. Every so often, a graphic novel comes along, rips through your psyche, and leaves a nice, little mark, ensuring you’ll never forget it. The Night Eaters: She Eats the Night (Book 1) is that for me. A beautiful, horrific tale of love, parental guidance, and a family learning to come together under the strangest of circumstances. Fanbase Press

Another method that can be used to diagnose night eating syndrome is the Night Eating Symptom History and Inventory (NESHI), conducted through a structured interview with a health care professional. Physicians may use another questionnaire, the Night Eating Symptom Scale, to measure progress for someone who already has a diagnosis of night eating syndrome. A diagnosis of night eating syndrome does not require that a person’s body weight be lower or higher than average. Liu: Life is already a horror show that’s made tolerable only because of love — romantic love, familial love, love of the world, love for a hobby, work, a dream — and self-love, of course — all the endless expressions of love, even the ones we overlook as small and insignificant. Get ready to be terrified… This is a sharply written, gorgeously illustrated graphic novel that you probably shouldn’t read right before bed.”— BuzzfeedRiccobono, G., Iannitelli, A., Pompili, A., Iorio, C., Stratta, P., Rossi, R., Bersani, G., & Pacitti, F. (2020). Night eating syndrome, circadian rhythms and seasonality: A study in a population of Italian university students. Rivista di Psichiatria, 55(1), 47–52.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop