Ismael Loutfi
14.03.1991
Sobre el còmic
Ismael Loutfi’s Sound It Out runs on the quiet panic of trying to be legible in America while everyone else is busy being loud. It circles identity, names people can’t be bothered to pronounce, and the everyday suspicion that “belonging” is just paperwork with vibes. The mood is dry, tired, and sharply observational: Muslim-Arab life filtered through cultural expectations, judgment, and the kind of national chaos that makes basic normalcy feel like a luxury item. Strongest idea: modern life doesn’t just demand a label—it demands the “correct” performance of it, nonstop, while the country’s leadership rotates between creepy and exhausting.
