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Mafalda: Book One

by

Translated from by

Published: June 10, 2025

Hardcover ISBN: 9781962770040

SKU: N/A Category: Tags: ,
This item will be released on June 10, 2025.
$18.00

Six-year-old Mafalda loves democracy and hates soup. What democratic sector do cats fall into? she asks, then unfurls a toilet paper red carpet and gives her very own presidential address. Mafalda’s precociousness and passion stump all grown-ups around her. Dissident and rebellious, she refuses to abandon the world to her parents’ generation, who seem so lost.

Alongside the irascible Mafalda, readers will meet her eclectic entourage: dreamy Felipe and gossipy Susanita, young-capitalist Manolito and rebellious Miguelito. You can clearly see Mafalda is small, when she is dreaming in bed or soaring on a swing — “As usual, as soon as you put your feet on the ground, the fun finishes,” Mafalda grumbles — but her hopes for the world and her heart are as huge as can be. Generations of readers have discovered themselves in Mafalda’s boundlessly adventurous spirit, and learned to question, rebel, and hope.

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Praise

Mafalda is a hero of our time.
Umberto Eco
Each Quino book is happiness.
Gabriel García Márquez
Quino’s cartoons made sense of the absurd details of life and society. Each lesson is a wink of silent laughter turned to pure philosophy, social criticism, expressive gestures, and the most refined humor. What a great companion Malfalda has been.
Ana Merino
I can't imagine Mafalda except as the witty girl she was, is, and always will be. Comic characters have that privilege (like Peter Pan) of never aging.
Roberto Fontanarrosa
The real Little Prince was Quino.
Miguel Rep
An acerbic 6-year-old skewers societal foibles . . . With its forthright, articulate, and frequently bickering cast of children, comparisons to Charles Schulz's Peanuts are inevitable . . . Mafalda rails against Argentinian leadership, decries wars and social crises abroad, and stands as a staunch advocate for women's rights . . . A historical comic strip with ongoing relevance and plenty to laugh about.
Kirkus Reviews
Although the concept of universalism has been sneered at for the past 40 years, evidence of its existence can be found in the pages of Mafalda.
Tom Bowden, Book Beat
Mafalda is huge. Think Peanuts but imbued with late 60s/early 70s Argentinian politics. Still, it seemed so odd that I’d never encountered her before. If she truly was so influential, where were the translations? . . . I had a chance to read the new Mafalda [in Frank Wynne's translation] and to my infinite relief it was everything that I’d hoped for and more.
Betsy Bird, School Library Journal's Fuse 8 Blog
Mafalda's blend of visual and verbal wit is sublime.
Peter Dabbene, Foreword Reviews
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