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Simplicity

A Novel

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Hardcover (Graphic Novel - HC)
$29.00 US
6.79"W x 9.32"H x 0.94"D   | 30 oz | 12 per carton
On sale Jul 29, 2025 | 272 Pages | 9780593701126

From the acclaimed author of horror sensation Boys Weekend, a vibrant new graphic novel about a timid academic sent out from the walled dystopian security territory of New York City to investigate a cult in the wilds of the Catskill Mountains

In 1977, a group called The Spiritual Association of Peers decamps to the woods of the Catskills, taking over an abandoned summer camp. They name their new home Simplicity.

In 2081, scholar Lucius Pasternak, a fastidiously organized trans man, tries to keep his head down living in the New York City Administrative and Security Territory, which was founded after the formal dissolution of the United States in 2041. Then, he's offered a job by the mayor, billionaire real estate developer Dennis Van Wervel, to complete an anthropological survey of the people of Simplicity for a history museum he's financing. A wary Lucius is nevertheless drawn in by the people of the small wooded community, intrigued by its strange rituals and in particular by the charming acolyte Amity Crown-Shy. Born and raised on the compound, Amity is comfortable in their own skin, a striking contrast to Lucius' repressed reserve. But Lucius' control starts to slip when he begins to suffer visions both terrifying and sensual—visits from beautiful but nightmarish creatures.

Then, just as Lucius discovers that Van Wervel's project is more sinister than it seemed, members of the community begin to disappear, leaving behind grisly signs of struggle. The denizens of Simplicity believe that a being they call “The Lamentation” is responsible for the attacks. Amity and Lucius set out to hunt for the creature in the dangerous Exurb Zones, a wild wood full of libertarian doomsday preppers, wealthy isolationists, and worse. There, they'll finally discover the true threat to their way of life—and what they're willing to do to stop it.
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: COMIC BOOK HERALD

MOST ANTICIPATED: THE WASHINGTON POST • VULTURE • BUSTLE • THE RUMPUS • PUBLISHERS WEEKLY • COMICS BEAT • AUTOSTRADDLE • LITERARY HUB • BOOK RIOT • WE ARE BOOKISH


“Lubchansky’s cartoonishly dynamic visual style belies a growing sense of dread as Pasternak tries to make sense of the people he’s come to study and the world beyond their sanctuary.”
—The Washington Post, “30 Books to Read This Summer”

“The first thing that stands out about Mattie Lubchansky’s illustrations is the disconcerting humanity in every image, how it captures something both real and surreal about moving through the world.”
Isle McElroy, Vulture, “28 Books We Can’t Wait to Read This Summer”

“This graphic novel is the rare work that manages to impart a clear message — change is possible! — without ever seeming saccharine or trite.”
Chloe Joe, Bustle, “The Most Anticipated Books of Summer 2025”

“Lubchansky’s graphic novel is as gorgeous a work of visual art as it is a work of writing, as hilarious as it is heartbreaking.”
Eric Vachon, The Rumpus

“Imagine an unapologetically trans/genderqueer Futurama and you’re about a third of the way to the dystopian future satire of Mattie Lubchansky. . . . Lubchansky’s an excellent cartoonist, crafting instantly compelling world design with an economy of line, and able to sell a character’s look of desire with tremendous ease. . . . It’s an eye-opening balancing act as Lubchansky alternates between erotica, supernatural thriller, and laugh-or-you’ll-cry satire. . . . Emotional and powerful . . . another stellar work from Lubchansky.”
—Comic Book Herald, “The Best Comics of 2025 (So Far!)”

“Mattie Lubchansky is a shining voice with a signature style in the queer and trans graphic narrative space, and you’re not going to want to miss her latest. . . . Expect sharp socio-political commentary wrapped up in eerie dystopian-horror imagery. And humor of course!”
Kayla Upadhyaya, Autostraddle

“[The] dystopian future setting allows Lubchansky to incorporate sci-fi elements that enhance the scope of the story and create new design opportunities for the characters and environments, but the ideas surrounding individuality, groupthink, and oppression speak directly to the current moment.”
Oliver Sava, The A.V. Club

“My favorite thing I read all year.”
—Patricia Lockwood, author of Priestdaddy and No One is Talking About This

"A story to put fire in your belly and strength in your arms. Lubchansky combines a thrilling dystopian story with razor-sharp satire and heartbreaking clarity of vision. The best graphic novel I'd read in years."
—Gretchen Felker-Martin, author of Cuckoo and Manhunt

"Mattie Lubchansky is a crucial voice, and we should all sit up and listen."
—James Tynion IV, author of Something Is Killing the Children


“Mattie Lubchansky is a psychedelic clairvoyant, a cross between Philip K. Dick and R. Crumb, only with much better gender politics. Simplicity filled me with hope and wonder even in the ruins of civilization, and I’m so glad I went on this wild journey. The future is going to be weird no matter what, but Mattie Lubchansky shows us how beautiful and full of life weirdness can be. I love Simplicity in all its deceptive complexity.”
—Charlie Jane Anders, bestselling author of The City in the Middle of the Night

"Truly superb! Simplicity is a marvel, a perfect look into the ways that people can either fool themselves into accepting complicity or take the harder road that supports community; one that requires us all to make incredibly tough choices. It's funny, heartbreaking, spellbinding, sexy, horrifying, and legitimately brilliant. Mattie Lubchansky is a genius."
—Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth

"Mattie Lubchansky's work is essential—a horny, Boschian vision of paranoia and deliverance. There is more comedy and emotion in their characters' black punctuation-mark pupils than most cartoonists can put in a whole face. In Simplicity, they tackle extremes of bravery and cowardice, of closed-mindedness and freedom, of gender liberation, that Ursula Le Guin should have lived to see. It is a book to savor and ponder and live with until you've finally forgotten enough to read it again."
—Isaac Fellman, author of Dead Collections

“The hottest, most satirically dazzling, heart-wrenchingly brilliant ecosexual call to action you’ll ever read. Simplicity’s futurelens puts desperately needed present-day hope in our sights.”
—Alissa Nutting, author of Tampa and Made for Love

“As our future looks more like a boot stomping on a human face forever, Mattie Lubchansky asks us to rid ourselves of repression and complacency in this sensual, savage satire.”
Matt Bors, author of
Justice Warriors

"Simplicity by Mattie Lubchansky blends dystopian science fiction and folk horror into a queer, trans story of hard-won hope in a future as terrifying–and as ridiculous–as our present. Sexy, insightful, and darkly funny, Simplicity could be an exhibit in a future museum–one that might bear the plaque 'We Won,' or at least 'They Went Down Swinging.'"
—Lindsay King-Miller, author of The Z Word

"Simplicity has it all, from eroticism and ecohorror to cyberpunk dystopia and punk-rock rebellion—all illustrated in Lubchansky's luscious and emotive style. It's a wild ride, but also a thoughtful meditation on questions that only grow more pressing each year: How do we live, love, and stand together in a world that's falling apart? You'll tear through it, and immediately want to read again."
Lincoln Michel, author of The Body Scout and Metallic Realms

“An ambitious, weird spectacle. Simplicity plays with a lot of our big ideas about an ending world, while maintaining an intense, engaging focus on character motion and emotion.”
—Evan Dahm, author of
The Last Delivery

“Explores the limits of utopian separatism, the downsides to trying to work against an oppressive system from the inside, and how communities can defend themselves and win.”
—Calvin Kasulke,
Literary Hub

“The future is hauntingly familiar and hilariously horrific in the ambitious latest from Lubchansky. . . . An audacious story about 20th-century utopian dreams meeting 21st-century cynicism. It’s a sharp addition to the canon of socially relevant science fiction.”
—Publishers Weekly

“Razor-sharp. . . . Lubchansky’s latest offering is a timely and compelling meditation on identity and the dangers of surrendering too much personal and societal control in the name of safety and stability.”
—Jerry Stephens,
Library Journal

“Intense, imaginative visuals pair well with the futuristic fight between idealism and oppression.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Lubchansky presents her riotous, fantastical dystopia in vibrant full-color illustrations that often cleverly show more than text bubbles might tell.”
—Terry Hong, Booklist
MATTIE LUBCHANSKY is a cartoonist and illustrator and the Associate Editor of Ignatz award-winning magazine and website The Nib (thenib.com). She is also an Ignatz winner, a Herblock Prize finalist, and the author of The Antifa Super-Soldier Cookbook. She lives in beautiful Queens, NY, with her wife. View titles by Mattie Lubchansky

About

From the acclaimed author of horror sensation Boys Weekend, a vibrant new graphic novel about a timid academic sent out from the walled dystopian security territory of New York City to investigate a cult in the wilds of the Catskill Mountains

In 1977, a group called The Spiritual Association of Peers decamps to the woods of the Catskills, taking over an abandoned summer camp. They name their new home Simplicity.

In 2081, scholar Lucius Pasternak, a fastidiously organized trans man, tries to keep his head down living in the New York City Administrative and Security Territory, which was founded after the formal dissolution of the United States in 2041. Then, he's offered a job by the mayor, billionaire real estate developer Dennis Van Wervel, to complete an anthropological survey of the people of Simplicity for a history museum he's financing. A wary Lucius is nevertheless drawn in by the people of the small wooded community, intrigued by its strange rituals and in particular by the charming acolyte Amity Crown-Shy. Born and raised on the compound, Amity is comfortable in their own skin, a striking contrast to Lucius' repressed reserve. But Lucius' control starts to slip when he begins to suffer visions both terrifying and sensual—visits from beautiful but nightmarish creatures.

Then, just as Lucius discovers that Van Wervel's project is more sinister than it seemed, members of the community begin to disappear, leaving behind grisly signs of struggle. The denizens of Simplicity believe that a being they call “The Lamentation” is responsible for the attacks. Amity and Lucius set out to hunt for the creature in the dangerous Exurb Zones, a wild wood full of libertarian doomsday preppers, wealthy isolationists, and worse. There, they'll finally discover the true threat to their way of life—and what they're willing to do to stop it.

Praise

A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: COMIC BOOK HERALD

MOST ANTICIPATED: THE WASHINGTON POST • VULTURE • BUSTLE • THE RUMPUS • PUBLISHERS WEEKLY • COMICS BEAT • AUTOSTRADDLE • LITERARY HUB • BOOK RIOT • WE ARE BOOKISH


“Lubchansky’s cartoonishly dynamic visual style belies a growing sense of dread as Pasternak tries to make sense of the people he’s come to study and the world beyond their sanctuary.”
—The Washington Post, “30 Books to Read This Summer”

“The first thing that stands out about Mattie Lubchansky’s illustrations is the disconcerting humanity in every image, how it captures something both real and surreal about moving through the world.”
Isle McElroy, Vulture, “28 Books We Can’t Wait to Read This Summer”

“This graphic novel is the rare work that manages to impart a clear message — change is possible! — without ever seeming saccharine or trite.”
Chloe Joe, Bustle, “The Most Anticipated Books of Summer 2025”

“Lubchansky’s graphic novel is as gorgeous a work of visual art as it is a work of writing, as hilarious as it is heartbreaking.”
Eric Vachon, The Rumpus

“Imagine an unapologetically trans/genderqueer Futurama and you’re about a third of the way to the dystopian future satire of Mattie Lubchansky. . . . Lubchansky’s an excellent cartoonist, crafting instantly compelling world design with an economy of line, and able to sell a character’s look of desire with tremendous ease. . . . It’s an eye-opening balancing act as Lubchansky alternates between erotica, supernatural thriller, and laugh-or-you’ll-cry satire. . . . Emotional and powerful . . . another stellar work from Lubchansky.”
—Comic Book Herald, “The Best Comics of 2025 (So Far!)”

“Mattie Lubchansky is a shining voice with a signature style in the queer and trans graphic narrative space, and you’re not going to want to miss her latest. . . . Expect sharp socio-political commentary wrapped up in eerie dystopian-horror imagery. And humor of course!”
Kayla Upadhyaya, Autostraddle

“[The] dystopian future setting allows Lubchansky to incorporate sci-fi elements that enhance the scope of the story and create new design opportunities for the characters and environments, but the ideas surrounding individuality, groupthink, and oppression speak directly to the current moment.”
Oliver Sava, The A.V. Club

“My favorite thing I read all year.”
—Patricia Lockwood, author of Priestdaddy and No One is Talking About This

"A story to put fire in your belly and strength in your arms. Lubchansky combines a thrilling dystopian story with razor-sharp satire and heartbreaking clarity of vision. The best graphic novel I'd read in years."
—Gretchen Felker-Martin, author of Cuckoo and Manhunt

"Mattie Lubchansky is a crucial voice, and we should all sit up and listen."
—James Tynion IV, author of Something Is Killing the Children


“Mattie Lubchansky is a psychedelic clairvoyant, a cross between Philip K. Dick and R. Crumb, only with much better gender politics. Simplicity filled me with hope and wonder even in the ruins of civilization, and I’m so glad I went on this wild journey. The future is going to be weird no matter what, but Mattie Lubchansky shows us how beautiful and full of life weirdness can be. I love Simplicity in all its deceptive complexity.”
—Charlie Jane Anders, bestselling author of The City in the Middle of the Night

"Truly superb! Simplicity is a marvel, a perfect look into the ways that people can either fool themselves into accepting complicity or take the harder road that supports community; one that requires us all to make incredibly tough choices. It's funny, heartbreaking, spellbinding, sexy, horrifying, and legitimately brilliant. Mattie Lubchansky is a genius."
—Kristen Arnett, New York Times bestselling author of Mostly Dead Things and With Teeth

"Mattie Lubchansky's work is essential—a horny, Boschian vision of paranoia and deliverance. There is more comedy and emotion in their characters' black punctuation-mark pupils than most cartoonists can put in a whole face. In Simplicity, they tackle extremes of bravery and cowardice, of closed-mindedness and freedom, of gender liberation, that Ursula Le Guin should have lived to see. It is a book to savor and ponder and live with until you've finally forgotten enough to read it again."
—Isaac Fellman, author of Dead Collections

“The hottest, most satirically dazzling, heart-wrenchingly brilliant ecosexual call to action you’ll ever read. Simplicity’s futurelens puts desperately needed present-day hope in our sights.”
—Alissa Nutting, author of Tampa and Made for Love

“As our future looks more like a boot stomping on a human face forever, Mattie Lubchansky asks us to rid ourselves of repression and complacency in this sensual, savage satire.”
Matt Bors, author of
Justice Warriors

"Simplicity by Mattie Lubchansky blends dystopian science fiction and folk horror into a queer, trans story of hard-won hope in a future as terrifying–and as ridiculous–as our present. Sexy, insightful, and darkly funny, Simplicity could be an exhibit in a future museum–one that might bear the plaque 'We Won,' or at least 'They Went Down Swinging.'"
—Lindsay King-Miller, author of The Z Word

"Simplicity has it all, from eroticism and ecohorror to cyberpunk dystopia and punk-rock rebellion—all illustrated in Lubchansky's luscious and emotive style. It's a wild ride, but also a thoughtful meditation on questions that only grow more pressing each year: How do we live, love, and stand together in a world that's falling apart? You'll tear through it, and immediately want to read again."
Lincoln Michel, author of The Body Scout and Metallic Realms

“An ambitious, weird spectacle. Simplicity plays with a lot of our big ideas about an ending world, while maintaining an intense, engaging focus on character motion and emotion.”
—Evan Dahm, author of
The Last Delivery

“Explores the limits of utopian separatism, the downsides to trying to work against an oppressive system from the inside, and how communities can defend themselves and win.”
—Calvin Kasulke,
Literary Hub

“The future is hauntingly familiar and hilariously horrific in the ambitious latest from Lubchansky. . . . An audacious story about 20th-century utopian dreams meeting 21st-century cynicism. It’s a sharp addition to the canon of socially relevant science fiction.”
—Publishers Weekly

“Razor-sharp. . . . Lubchansky’s latest offering is a timely and compelling meditation on identity and the dangers of surrendering too much personal and societal control in the name of safety and stability.”
—Jerry Stephens,
Library Journal

“Intense, imaginative visuals pair well with the futuristic fight between idealism and oppression.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“Lubchansky presents her riotous, fantastical dystopia in vibrant full-color illustrations that often cleverly show more than text bubbles might tell.”
—Terry Hong, Booklist

Author

MATTIE LUBCHANSKY is a cartoonist and illustrator and the Associate Editor of Ignatz award-winning magazine and website The Nib (thenib.com). She is also an Ignatz winner, a Herblock Prize finalist, and the author of The Antifa Super-Soldier Cookbook. She lives in beautiful Queens, NY, with her wife. View titles by Mattie Lubchansky