Showing posts with label Pantheon Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pantheon Books. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Review: Charles Burns' SUGAR SKULL

SUGAR SKULL
PANTHEON BOOKS – @PantheonBooks @AAKnopf @doubledaypub

CARTOONIST: Charles Burns
ISBN: 978-0-307-90790-5; hardcover (September 16, 2014)
64pp, Color, $23.00 U.S.

Charles Burns is the American cartoonist and illustrator best known for his graphic novel, Black Hole, which was originally published as a comic book series, first by Kitchen Sink Press, and finally by Fantagraphics Books.  His comics short stories have been collected in such book collections as Big Baby and Skin Deep.

His most recent comics work is a graphic novel trilogy that began in X'ed Out and continued in The Hive and now, comes to an end in Sugar Skull.  The long strange trip of a guy named Doug comes to an end that is both mind-bending and heart-wrenching (or pathetic, depending on how you look at it).

In X’ed Out, Burns introduces Doug, a photographic artist who has a head injury of some kind.  One night, he awakens and sees his cat, Inky, who is supposed to be dead.  Doug follows Inky through a hole torn in a brick wall, where he discovers a place called The Hive.  This place is likely an alternate reality that has been induced by the trauma Doug experienced and by the prescription medications he uses.  In the Hive, Doug's persona becomes that of “Johnny,” a version of Nitnit, his performance art alter-ego.

In The Hive, Doug begins working in that nightmarish alternate world as a lowly employee who carts supplies around the Hive.  He also strikes up a friendship with a breeder named Suzy, and that new relationship is almost like another Doug previously had.  Meanwhile, back in reality, Doug slowly transforms from an ambitious young artist into a guy who merely drifts through life, bereft of his hopes and dreams.

As Sugar Skull begins, Doug-as-Johnny is back in the the Hive.  After a troubling encounter with a sow-life creature and her thing-lets, he reunites with a his Hive-chick, Suzy.  However, she is about to undergo a bodily function that disturbs and freaks-out Johnny.  Meanwhile, back in reality, Doug is now fully a lost and ambivalent man, but he lives with Sally, a woman who clearly loves him

Doug has regrets and questions.  What does the Hive represent?  What happened to him? Where is his former girlfriend, Sarah?  As he digs for answers, he seeks out Sarah, who has a surprise for him.  We also finally learn how Doug received the head injury that has put his reality into a crazy, mind-bending, dream/nightmare loop.

I have enjoyed Charles Burns' trilogy of graphic novels.  [I don't know whether to call this “The Hive trilogy” or the “X'ed Out trilogy” or even the “Nitnit trilogy.”]  I like the publishing format for these comic books:  hardcover, large-sized at 8.9 x 11.8 (which is similar to a French album or graphic novel), with a cloth-covered spine and beautifully illustrated end papers.

I found X'ed Out to be especially intriguing and captivating; I could not help but be taken in by the mystery and reality-warping, which seemed straight out of a David Lynch movie.  The Hive was vague and sometimes seemed like filler material, which can be a problem with the middle installment of a trilogy.  I was somewhat frustrated with it.

Four years after I read X'ed Out, Sugar Skull rewards my patience.  Suddenly, the answers pour forth, and they will break your heart.  For all the surrealism of much of story prior to the final volume, this ending is surprisingly human.  Burns depicts the melancholy nature of a promising life that has decided to settle for the mundane.

This trilogy operates on so many levels and layers, and Doug and perhaps a few other characters exist in different persona.  Time, symbolism, and metaphor exist in multiple layers.  Sugar Skull is more grounded than the other books.  It forces reality and consequence, even in the alternate reality.  A “sugar skull” or calavera is a representation of the human skull made out of clay or sugar and is used in the Mexican celebration, Day of the Dead (which takes place over three days beginning on October 31st).

Is Doug dead?  Is he an unreliable narrator?  I don't think that Doug is a deceased character, who is narrating the last of his life.  Rather, he is forced to confront the truth about himself, and that can be more painful than a blow to the head.  Sugar Skull justifies this entire enterprise undertaken by Charles Burns, and it proves that Burns' stories may be strange and intense, but they are not impersonal.  They are unique depictions of the human condition, and, as Sugar Skull shows, they are deeply personal.

A

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Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.



Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Review: SHOPLIFTER (Graphic Novel)

SHOPLIFTER
PANTHEON BOOKS – @PantheonBooks

CARTOONIST: Michael Cho
ISBN: 978-0-307-91173-5; hardcover (September 2, 2014)
96pp, 2-color, $19.95 U.S.

Pantheon Books recently published the hardcover original, Shoplifter, a new graphic novel from cartoonist and illustrator, Michael Cho.  This is a 2-color, hardcover book with the dimensions 5.80 (w) x 8.10 (h) x 0.60 (d), and it is Cho's debut graphic novel.  Shoplifter features some of the most beautifully-drawn comic book art that I have seen this year, if not in awhile.

Shoplifter focuses on Corrina Park.  She is a mid-20-something, college graduate who used to have big plans.  She studied English literature in college, and she imagined writing a hit novel and leading the idealized life of a beloved author.  Corrina thought that she would already have that or at least be close to achieving it.

Instead, Corrina lives in an unnamed big city that could be New York City or Toronto.  [Wherever it is, there are no black people to be seen... anywhere.]  She has been working at the same advertising agency where she began working five years ago after she graduated, and the only thing she has written is advertising copy.  Corrina knows that she should be writing fiction and that there should be more to life.  However, she does not know how to find the “more” that she should have.

In its writing, Shoplifter shows that it is a debut graphic novel.  Neither Corrina nor her situation in life are particularly interesting, and Cho doesn't seem to know how to grab the readers and make them care.  Shoplifter may be a generational thing, and I, your humble reviewer, am not a millennial.  Still, the malaise that besets Corrina is universal and is practically timeless; Cho writes this story as if he does not understand that.

On the other side of that:  Wow!  This book has some gorgeous art.  Cho's drawing style in Shoplifter recalls Dan Clowes, Adrian Tomine, and even the classic “New York slick” line of John Romita, Sr.  There is also a touch of Darwyn Cooke and of David Mazzuchelli's art for Batman: Year One.  The draftsmanship on the cityscape, exteriors, and backgrounds are practically flawless.  The tones (rose-colored) give the art texture and tangibleness; it brings the city to life.  The inking and toning delineates people and objects, but also connects everything in an intimate way.

If Michael Cho is interested, I'm sure there is some high-paying Batman hackwork in his future (script by DC Comics superstar Scott Snyder... or Geoff Johns).  Seriously, I am curious to see where this promising comic book and graphic novel talent is headed.  I complained about the storytelling and character writing, but the brilliant art makes this Shoplifter a must-have.  Comic book readers who appreciate comic book artists who can really draw will want to see Shoplifter.

B+

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.



Sunday, October 28, 2012

Book Review: THE FIFTY YEAR SWORD

THE FIFTY YEAR SWORD
PANTHEON BOOKS – @PantheonBooks

AUTHOR: Mark Z. Danielewski
STITCHING: Atelier Z – Regina Gonzales, Claire Kohne, Michele Reverte
ISBN: 978-0-307-90772-1; hardcover (October 2012)
288pp, B&W and Color, $26.00 US, $31.00 CAN

Born in 1966, Mark Z. Danielewski is a novelist and postmodern writer. His debut novel, House of Leaves (2000), was released to some critical acclaim. In 2005, he released The Fifty Year Sword, an illustrated novella, in two limited editions.

Now, the trade edition of The Fifty Year Sword arrives, published in hardcover by Pantheon Books. There are more than 60 pages of illustrations in this edition, but this art isn’t drawn. The illustrations are stitched, rather than drawn. This stitching was executed by Mark Z. Danielewski and three seamstresses: Regina Gonzales, Claire Kohne, and Michele Reverte.

The Fifty Year Sword is set in Upshur County, East Texas, on a cold, windy night. Readers follow the story through Chintana, a local seamstress recently abandoned by her husband, Pravat. Chintana’s activity for the evening is a party thrown by 112-year-old Mose Dettledown, a peculiar woman known for her odd gatherings and get-togethers. This evening, however, Chintana finds herself the guardian of five orphans: two girls – Inieda and Micit, and three boys – Ezade, Sithiss, and Tarff.

This rambunctious quintet is captivated by a strange, shadowy storyteller, perhaps an uninvited guest to the party, who spins a tale of vengeance. He tells them of strange lands (The Valley of Salt and The Forest of Falling Notes) and strange people (The Man with No Arms). Of particular interest is the long black box that the storyteller set before Chintana and the children. As midnight approaches, Chintana and the children prepare to get a full glimpse of the storyteller, his secrets, and the thing in his black box.

The Fifty Year Sword is a novella written in verse. I can’t say that I was happy to discover that fact after I received a review copy from Pantheon. After I read a few pages, however, I started to enjoy the book. Pantheon describes The Fifty Year Sword as “a ghost story for grownup readers.” To me, this is a children’s story and dark fairytale told in a grown-up’s voice with adult idioms, metaphors, symbolism, etc. It’s like Neil Gaiman with splashes of Edgar Allen Poe and Rudyard Kipling.

The most enjoyable thing about The Fifty Year Sword is that’s Danielewski strings his words together in a visually evocative manner. I imagine the world of this novella as sparse, even barren, but I bet that what is on the landscapes and in the environments is unique. Sometimes, it doesn’t take much, in terms of setting, to make a place magical, wonderful, and different.

I think that being written in verse sometimes does not work for the story. It can be awkward in the way it presents some things. The Fifty Year Sword is flawed in some ways, but it still does what good fantasy does. It takes you places filled with magic, mystery, wonder, and even danger.

B+

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Comics, Magazines, and Books from Diamond Distributors for October 17 2012

COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS

AUG121016 AFTER EARTH ONE-SHOT $3.99

MAY120823 AIRBOY DEADEYE #4 $3.50

MAY121379 ALICE IN WONDERLAND HC (MR) $24.99

AUG120798 BETTY & VERONICA #262 [DIG/D+] $2.99

AUG120799 BETTY & VERONICA DOUBLE DIGEST #206 [DIG/D+] $3.99

JUN120768 CAVEWOMAN NATURAL SELECTION #2 $3.75

JUN120769 CAVEWOMAN NATURAL SELECTION #2 DEVON MASSEY SP ED PI

AUG121252 CHARLES BURNS HIVE GN $21.95

AUG121235 COURTNEY CRUMRIN ONGOING #6 $3.99

JUL120816 DICKS $19.99

JUL120877 ELRIC THE BALANCE LOST TP VOL 03 $14.99

JUL121223 FINDING GOSSAMYR #2 $3.99

JUN121036 GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #18 (MR) $3.99

AUG121418 GFT SLEEPY HOLLOW #1 A CVR SEJIC (MR) $2.99

AUG121419 GFT SLEEPY HOLLOW #1 B CVR TRIANO (MR) $2.99

AUG121428 GODSTORM #1 A CVR SPAY (MR) $2.99

AUG121429 GODSTORM #1 B CVR CHA (MR) $2.99

JUL120725 GOLD DIGGER SWIMSUIT ANNUAL #1 $4.99

FEB121063 GRAY MORROWS ORION TP (MR) $39.99

APR121045 GREEN HORNET #29 $3.99

AUG121333 HARBINGER (ONGOING) #5 AJA CVR $3.99

AUG121332 HARBINGER (ONGOING) #5 SUAYAN CVR $3.99

APR120768 HOW TO DRAW ALIEN BABES & PRINCESSES TP $21.95

JUL121227 JAMES BOND OMNIBUS TP VOL 04 $19.95

JUL121204 JUDGE DREDD DIGEST TP DARK JUDGES (MR) $11.00

JUL121133 KITCHEN PRINCESS OMNIBUS TP VOL 02 $14.99

JUN121309 KUZIMU COLL ED TP (MR) $19.99

JUL121297 LIMIT GN VOL 01 $10.95

AUG120970 LOOKOUTS RIDDLE VOL 01 #2 $3.99

JUL120697 LOVECRAFT ANTHOLOGY TP VOL 02 $19.95

JUN121239 MAN OF GOD #3 $3.50

JUL121270 MARCH STORY TP VOL 04 (MR) $12.99

JUN121217 MIKE NORTONS CURSE GN $14.99

JUN121193 MORTENSENS ESCAPADES GN VOL 01 MYSTERIOUS MANUSCRIPT $6.95

AUG121221 NANCY DREW & CLUE CREW GN VOL 01 SMALL VOLCANOES $6.99

AUG121220 NANCY DREW & CLUE CREW HC VOL 01 SMALL VOLCANOES $10.99

AUG120947 PEANUTS VOL 2 #3 [DIG] $3.99

AUG120996 PETER CANNON THUNDERBOLT #2 $3.99

JUN121261 PHAZER #5 $3.99

JUN120761 PINOCCHIO VAMPIRE SLAYER GN VOL 04 WOOD & BLOOD PT 2 $10.95

JUL120967 PROPHECY #4 $3.99

FEB120904 SHADOW BLOOD & JUDGMENT TP (MR) $19.99

AUG120896 SIMPSONS COMICS #195 $2.99

AUG121237 SIXTH GUN #26 $3.99

JUL120774 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #241 HORN CVR $2.99

JUL120773 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #241 REG CVR [D+] $2.99

AUG120810 SONIC UNIVERSE #45 [DIG/D+] $2.99

AUG120872 STITCHED #9 (MR) $3.99

AUG120874 STITCHED #9 GORE CVR (MR) $3.99

AUG120873 STITCHED #9 WRAP CVR (MR) $3.99

JUL120925 TAROT WITCH OF THE BLACK ROSE #76 DLX ED (MR) $19.99

JUL121278 TENJO TENGE GN VOL 09 (MR) $17.99

JUL121013 THE LONE RANGER SNAKE OF IRON #3 $3.99

JUL121163 THREE STOOGES GN VOL 02 EBENEZER STOOGE $6.99

JUL121164 THREE STOOGES HC VOL 02 EBENEZER STOOGE $10.99

AUG121015 THUNDA #3 $3.99

MAY121069 WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #17 (MR) $3.99

JUL120992 WITCHBLADE DEMON REBORN #3 $3.99

JUN121293 WIZARD OF ID HC DAILIES & SUNDAYS 1972 $19.95

JUN120826 WULF #6 (RES) $2.99

AUG121334 X-O MANOWAR (ONGOING) #6 BRAITHWAITE CVR $3.99

AUG121335 X-O MANOWAR (ONGOING) #6 CHAR DESIGN CVR $3.99

JUN121205 ZOMBIES VS CHEERLEADERS MISADV OF BECKY & BOB #1 $3.99

MAGAZINES
AUG121304 ALMOST NAKED ANIMALS MAGAZINE #1 $4.99

AUG120654 CARS MAGAZINE #9 $4.99

JUN121466 CINEFANTASTIQUE PRES ULT GUIDE TO ZOMBIES $9.99

AUG121471 COMIC SHOP NEWS #1322 PI

AUG121537 DOC SAVAGE DOUBLE NOVEL VOL 62 BAMA CVR $14.95

AUG121536 DOC SAVAGE DOUBLE NOVEL VOL 62 REG CVR $14.95

AUG121497 FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND #264 $9.99

JUL121201 JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #328 MOVIE SPEC $13.00

AUG121451 JUXTAPOZ #142 NOV 2012 $5.99

AUG121533 LOCUS #621 $6.95

AUG120655 MARVEL SUPER HEROES #4 $4.99

AUG121505 SCREAM MAGAZINE #13 $8.99

AUG121540 SHADOW DOUBLE NOVEL VOL 65 $14.95

BOOKS
JUL121401 ANDREW LOOMIS CREATIVE ILLUSTRATION HC $39.95

JUN120803 ART OF BETTY AND VERONICA HC (RES) $29.99

JUL121284 BELKA WHY DONT YOU BARK NOVEL $25.99

AUG121521 ET EXTRA TERRESTRIAL FROM CONCEPT TO CLASSIC SC $24.99

JUL121383 FEAST UNKNOWN NOVEL $12.95

AUG121532 HELLO CUTIE ADVENTURES IN CUTE CULTURE SC $19.95

JUL121438 STAR WARS GALACTIC POP UP ADVENTURE HC $36.99

JUN121415 TOTALLY MAD 60 YEARS OF HUMOR SATIRE & STUPIDITY HC $34.95

JUL121300 VERY HUNGRY ZOMBIE HC $14.95

JUL122144 WARHAMMER 40K TREACHERIES OF THE SPACE MARINES MMPB $8.99

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Review: Charles Burns' THE HIVE

THE HIVE
PANTHEON BOOKS – @PantheonBooks

CARTOONIST: Charles Burns
ISBN: 978-0-307-90788-2; hardcover (October 2012)
56pp, Color, $21.95 US, $25.95 CAN

Charles Burns is the Philadelphia-based comic book creator, cartoonist, and illustrator known for such works as Black Hole and Big Baby. Burns grew up in Seattle in the 1970s and rose to prominence in the mid-1980s when his comics began to appear in RAW, the avant-garde magazine founded by Art Spiegelman and Françoise Mouly.

Burns’ latest work is The Hive, the second volume of a graphic novel trilogy that began in 2010 with X’ed Out. Both volumes are published as 9x12 hardcover editions, similar to the oversized format Fantagraphics Books used for its “Charles Burns Library.” Apparently, Burns has drawn inspiration for X’ed Out and The Hive from legendary cartoonist Hergé (Tintin) and author William Burroughs (The Naked Lunch), although I think the films of David Lynch could also be an influence.

Like X’ed Out, The Hive is the story of Doug, a photographic artist who has a head injury of some kind. Following his cat, Inky, who is supposed to be dead, through a hole torn in a brick wall, Doug discovers a place called The Hive. As the second volume begins, Doug works in that nightmarish alternate world as a lowly employee who carts supplies around The Hive. He strikes up a friendship with a breeder named Suzy, and that new relationship is almost like another he had.

In fact, in the real world, Doug is talking about his past to an unidentified woman. He struggles to recall a mysterious incident with his now-absent girlfriend, Sarah (who is also a photographer), and her menacing boyfriend. Where are the answers?

I have to admit that by the time I finished reading the first half of The Hive, I was bored with it. Actually, I thought I was bored; I was simply lost in and confused by this narrative, which not only travels between two worlds, but also moves back and forth through time. The hero, Doug, is also unmoored in time. I think he’s an unreliable narrator, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s dead, in a coma, or intellectually disabled.

Once I got my bearings, I realized that Charles Burns had done it to me again. He’d drawn me into another one of his surreal landscapes – infused with a sense of creeping dread and filled with the dreadfully creepy. When he draws a figure, human or humanoid, Burns beats back the ordinary (except for a nude depiction of Doug, who is ordinary), choosing the extraordinary and the bizarre. As Chris Ware just showed with Building Stories, Burns reveals with The Hive that, as a comics creator, he is in a place where few other cartoonists are.

A-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux

www.facebook.com/pantheonbooks
www.pantheoncomics.com


Monday, October 8, 2012

Review: X'ed Out by Charles Burns

X’ED OUT
PANTHEON BOOKS

CARTOONIST: Charles Burns
ISBN: 978-0-307-37913-9; hardcover (October 2010)
56pp, Color, $19.95 US, $22.95 CAN

Cartoonist and illustrator Charles Burns rose to prominence in the mid-1980s when his comics began to appear in RAW, the avant-garde magazine founded by Art Spiegelman and Françoise Mouly. He went on to illustrate album covers, advertisements, and magazine covers. Burns is best known for his comics works, such as the 12-issue series, Black Hole, and graphic novels such as El Borbah and Big Baby.

X’ed Out is the first volume of a graphic novel trilogy from Burns. X’ed Out is published as a 9x12 hardcover, similar to the oversized format Fantagraphics Books used for its “Charles Burns Library.” Apparently, Burns has drawn inspiration for X’ed Out from Hergé (Tintin) and author William Burroughs (although film director David Lynch could also be an influence).

X’ed Out opens in the peculiar dream time of an unusual fellow named Doug, a photographic artist who has a head injury of some kind. Doug awakens to find his deceased cat, Inky, standing next to a hole torn in a brick wall. Inky walks through the hole, silently beckoning Doug to follow. Doug follows and finds himself near a putrid stream running through a crumbling badland. That leads to some kind of egg processing plant, full of huge white eggs with splotches of red on them (the Tintin reference?). Then, his journey and the narrative become a shifting reality and landscape of reptilian thugs, pills, fetal pigs, an Interzone-like market, and lots of Polaroid pictures. Will Doug find clarity? Can he?

I first encountered Charles Burns work in RAW, but I avoided reading it (much as I would do when I first saw Richard Sala’s comix). Something about that first story I encountered made me feel uncomfortable. Someone even gave me a copy of Big Baby or El Borbah after Fantagraphics Books published them, and I still didn’t want to read Burns. Somewhere, it happened, but I don’t remember when I first relented or why.

There is something disquieting about Charles Burns’ work. He is cryptic without being oblique, and the reader can always figure out that something wrong or some problem in a story. This must be what is known as creeping dread, and X’ed Out is filled with that.

This slim volume that is X’ed Out, however, merely asks a lot of questions that future volumes will hopefully answer. Only Burns could get away with offering relatively little in an opening salvo. It is the meticulous craftsmanship of his high-contrast art and his ability to make every single element on a page matter that engages the readers’ imaginations, and for the reader, that will have to do, here. Where is X’ed Out going? I don’t know, but I will follow.

A-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Leroy Douresseaux Reviews MISTER WONDERFUL: A Love Story


MISTER WONDERFUL: A LOVE STORY
PANTHEON BOOKS

CARTOONIST: Daniel Clowes
ISBN: 978-0-307-37813-2; hardcover
80pp, Color, $19.95 U.S., $22.95 CAN

The New York Times Magazine is a Sunday magazine supplement included with the Sunday edition of The New York Times. Beginning in September 2005, the magazine began a literary section called “The Funny Pages.” One part of “The Funny Pages” is “the Strip,” which is essentially a comics section. Here, some of the top names in alternative comics, like Jaime Hernandez, Megan Kelso, Seth, and Chris Ware, among others, would offer multi-part stories serialized over several months (thus far, from four to 7 months).

Mister Wonderful is a comics serial created by Daniel Clowes and published from September 2007 to February 2008. Dan Clowes modified and expanded Mister Wonderful, and earlier this year (April 2011), Pantheon Books published it as a hardcover color graphic novel entitled Mister Wonderful: A Love Story (at a size of 6” x 11.2” which is similar to books that reprint newspaper comic strips).

The title, Mister Wonderful, refers to the story’s central character, Marshall, a divorced, middle-aged man out on a blind date. Marshall is a loner and is also in financial distress, neither of which is helped by his occasional flaring temper. As the story opens, Marshall is waiting for his blind date, a 39-year-old woman named Natalie. As the minutes tick by, Marshall imagines himself as being on the date that will change his life. Will this date be the one that lets him be a dashing, heroic type, a “Mister Wonderful?” He may be more right than he imagines, but is this rather unconventional fellow up to the task?

Mister Wonderful is completely about Marshall. Clowes tells the story (except for a few odd moments) as a first-person narrative, so readers who cannot engage Marshall will likely dislike the story. Natalie is really a supporting player, and she isn’t so much a character as she is a caricature, cipher, or type.

Marshall, in a sense, is also a type – a Dan Clowes type. Marshall is the self-absorbed, loser-in-distress. He doesn’t think that he is better than anyone else; he simply thinks that getting to know other people, for the most part, doesn’t add value to the rest of his life. In one way, Marshall is largely an enigma, but Clowes is delving into Marshall’s soul; he’s focusing on the parts of Marshall’s personality that will come forward to address the nerve-racking experience – a date. And Marshall has been dateless for six years or so. I can’t help but think that if we knew if Marshall had engaged in sexual intercourse in the time since his marriage dissolved that it would tell us a lot more about him.

Truthfully, what I like about this book is what I like about Clowes work. It is his ability to take oddball contrarians and make them so interesting, engaging, and even alluring. After reading Mister Wonderful, I realized that I watched the story of a loser who transforms into a lovable loser as he finally won something, in spite of himself and in spite of what others may think of him. Even when it seems like life is beating him down, Marshall is going to win. It’s a wonderful life, indeed.

A

---------------------------


Thursday, October 6, 2011

Leroy Douresseaux on HABIBI (OGN)

"A thousand and one..."

HABIBI
PANTHEON BOOKS

CARTOONIST: Craig Thompson
ISBN: 978-0-375-42414-4; hardcover
672pp, B&W, $35.00 U.S., $40.00 CAN

Craig Thompson is the Michigan-born, Wisconsin-bred graphic novelist who began his comics career as a graphic artist for Dark Horse Comics. However, it was his 1999 semi-autobiographical graphic novel, Good-bye, Chunky Rice, that brought him to readers’ attentions. Four years later, his 600-page, autobiographical graphic novel, Blankets, made him a sensation.

Eight years later, he returns with another 600-plus-page monster of a graphic novel, Habibi. At almost 700 pages in length, Habibi (apparently Arabic for “my beloved”) is a massive tome containing a blockbuster of a comic. It is a sprawling epic that spans time while being surprisingly contemporary in places. It addresses the modern world, but is timeless and is steeped in past times.

At alternate places in the narrative, Habibi is set deep in Arabic deserts, right in the middle of slums and mind-boggling squalor, inside lavish palaces and harems, and finally in modern industrial centers. Habibi is the story of two refugee child slaves that are bound to each other by chance, circumstance, and need, but mostly by love. There is the older one, Dodola, an Arabic girl sold as a child bride and later sold into slavery. The younger is Zam, a black child that Dodola rescues and takes as her own.

Dodola and Zam become like mother and child, but they are eventually ripped apart, when Dodola is kidnapped. She is taken to Wanatolia, where she enters the great estate of the Sultan. He is a fat, lustful man who is always looking for something new in pleasure and gratification. Past the Gates of Felicity, Dodola is carried into the Sultan’s harem, where she becomes his greatest turn-on and most aggravating lover.

Meanwhile, Zam goes on his own journey, one that involves magical desert snakes and drought. His journey takes him from the most depressing slums to a house of sly and conniving eunuchs. Dodola and Zam’s lives will always unfold together, even when they are apart, but will they ever be reunited for good?

Habibi is magical storytelling. Symbolic and metaphoric, Habibi is also a parable and a fairy tale. Craig Thompson does so much in this graphic novel, both literally and figuratively. Habibi tries to bridge the first and third worlds, and in that attempt, it addresses racism in such a bold and blunt way that this graphic novel could find a place on the African and Black interests bookshelves. Thompson also unveils the common heritage of Christianity and Islam share, which is Judaism, in a matter-of-fact way that readers will be either offended or shocked, or perhaps delightfully surprised. Thompson transforms passages from the Koran into exquisite and enchanting graphical storytelling, composed of words, pictures, and graphics that come together like a striking piece of music.

Habibi is certainly a remarkable feat, but it is so big that sometimes I found myself getting lost. It seems to be about everything, but is really a long and winding love story of which the reader must keep track over 600+ pages. Habibi shifts in time so much and offers so many dream sequences and side stories that it is easy to see where one might get lost in all that black ink.

Also, some of the story seems to shift from the Middle East to the American Midwest, which is odd. Still, I could see Habibi being the best comic book of the year simply because it is so ambitious. I look at this whirling dervish of a tale and see it as a book that attempts to capture or to depict the complexity of humanity itself. Habibi is magical in its narrative and beautiful in its breath. Craig Thompson has given those who love the comics medium a treasure.

A

Sunday, November 21, 2010

X-ed Out is Out

I read X'ed Out

I posted a review at the Comic Book Bin.  This is the new Charles Burns graphic novel.