Reviews
Harari melds academia, obsession, and mysticism in this eerie graphic novel … This is a stylish, atmospheric book whose deliberate pacing deliciously builds tension and mystery. –Publishers Weekly
Harari incorporates local legend with the history of architecture, particularly the idea of secret rooms, and wraps these all around Zumthor’s conundrum of a structure and the stylistic forms of noir … Compelling. –Comics Beat
This noirish modern of mysterious architectures, strange geometries and people drowning in obsession is eerily unsettling and completely mesmerising. -Warren Ellis
A compelling mystery/suspense thriller that will keep audiences riveted. Imagine a stylish and brooding psychological thriller without a corpse, and you’ll get the gorgeously drawn Swimming in Darkness … Cinematically stylish, Swimming in Darkness has quite a steady hand when it comes to suspense and mystery. You will be completely engrossed by this reading experience. –Villain Media
Harari’s tale is pulpy noir by way of Hitchcock, with a strong, Lynchian hint of the uncanny. -NPR’s Best Books of the Year list
Beautifully rendered, this should appeal to discerning readers who favor the artwork as much as the story in graphic novels. –Booklist (STARRED REVIEW)
Much like the mountain in Swimming In Darkness, Harari’s intricate, puzzle-like grid will pull you in, and swallow you whole. -Elsa Charretier, author of November Vol. 1
Swimming in Darkness is a beautifully rendered mystery. Its pages teem with secret passages, showing us that Earth has an architecture beyond our recognition. -Samuel Sattin, author of Legend
Praise for this book cannot be overstated … From the opening pages, Swimming in Darkness grabs the reader and refuses to let go, creeping slowly through an uncanny realm where fiction and reality dance together in a haunting and unforgettable waltz. –Comic Watch
Swiss architect Peter Zumthor’s work on the Therme Vals – a hotel and spa built over the only thermal springs in the Graubunden Canton in Switzerland – is intentionally overwhelming. It’s built into a mountain and devoid of clocks, so that visitors surrender entirely to the experience. There is, however, a myth that the mountain has been known to swallow people whole from time to time. The new graphic novel Swimming in Darkness lives in the space between those two facts. –Hollywood Reporter