The Best American Comics 2008
eldavojohn writes "The Best American Comics of 2008 was a book I purchased on impulse. Not being a graphic novel or even political cartoon fan, I read the introduction at a bookstore (which was, itself, a comic strip) and decided to give it a try. I expected to find humor. What I found was not only humor but sadness, anxiety, insight, happiness, remorse and a gamut of human emotions. I expected black ink on white paper. What I found was water color, wood cuts, cubism and even a comic about the start of cubism. In short, I was pleasantly surprised to find the Americana here that I had previously relegated only to historical novels." Read on for the rest of eldavojohn's review.
The Best American Comics 2008
author
Lynda Barry
pages
352
publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
rating
7/10
reviewer
eldavojohn
ISBN
9780618989768
summary
Collection of the best American comics of 2008.
The name of this book is going to be hard to digest as your best DC, Marvel and Image comics are nowhere to be found in this book. If you claim it's because there's no way the price of this book could cover these big name titles, you may be on to something. But I found this to be a refreshing and complex addition to what I knew comic books to be. Nowhere would I find the black and white world of Superman or the Gotham City of Batman but in their places stories more akin to Maus and Persepolis.
The book itself is a collection of clippings from comics released in 2008. Some are more complete than others. Prior to this book, I had never heard of any of these names. But several of these comics gave me reason to look up the authors and actually purchase more of their works.
Instead of reviewing each comic, I will relate what I recall a week after reading it and the permanent impressions it left on me. The first comic, Burden caught me off guard as it starts out as an endearing story about a brother making amends for his no-good dead-beat brother Charlie. Charlie seems to have led a less than desirable life dodging rent, stealing from loved ones and leaving his father to rot in a home. This beautiful story crumbles away to a horrific end in the final page as Charlie's brother says goodbye to him.
There were a few comics related to the war in Iraq. The first (David Axe's autobiographical War-Fix) being a reporter who seems to go to Iraq out of boredom or some strange driving force despite his clear inability to cope with the nature of war. Another comic dealt with the political debate here and the Left's political views.
Some of the comics had a more timeless folklore aspect to them. One was a reincarnation of an old Japanese proverb called The Crab and the Monkey but had a sobering ending that I did not recall from the original proverb. Another entitled Turtle Keep It Steady by Joseph Lambert had little to no text and retold the fable of The Tortoise and the Hare. It also explored the merits of consistency in friends and those around you in a very simple way. Seven Sacks left me confused and concerned that I had missed some myth or fable allusion through the whole story. The story is well illustrated and may cause one to wonder what responsibility this boatman has in delivering unsavory characters across a river to possibly carry out devious acts while holding bags that make noises.
Several comics were purely historical. The Saga of the Bloody Benders is one part homicide case and one part legend. The story takes a historical account of a family of settlers that brutally murdered and waylaid dozens of innocent people in 1870s Kansas. The story recalls a simpler time and notes how peculiar all the signs pointed to the Bender family yet no one implicated them. Another comic Berlin recalled a German viewpoint of the May Day Massacre of 1928 and the Reichstag elections of 1930. So rarely is a story told from the unpopular side of a historical conflict.
One of the comics took a look at Picasso's beginning as an artist discovering cubism. I do not know enough of the true to story to know if it is historically accurate but it certainly cast Picasso in a ... different light.
One of my least favorite parts of the books was a set of Matt Groening's "Life in Hell." Some of it is cute and childishly funny. Most of it is inane and a bit tedious to read. While this repetition may be humorous, it pales in comparison to the other emotions displayed in the book.
Eric Haven's Mammology is humorous on several different levels and is layered to include evolutionary commentary on mammals versus reptiles. Cathy Malkasian's Percy Gloom is an interesting commentary on a group of people called "Funnelheads" that clearly become an analogy for a cult of worshipers.
One of my favorite comics was a woodcut done in cubism by a Bronx art teacher named John Mejias. I showed this comic to a friend who teaches ESL in the Bronx and she laughed at several panes discussing the inside jokes of "what you should do" in each of the situations that Mejias was lampooning. Personally I found the clipping from Mejias The Teachers Edition to be heart touching asking in the end how he is to teach students art when every assignment is graded to a standard with no room for individuality or self expression.
I omitted more than a few comics that didn't strike me as that great. There are lengthy comics about the life an older TV show host, a few selections from The New Yorker, a comic about an ostracized Chinese student in America and I'm certain I'm missing many others in this 352 page hardcover book.
This comic spans so many different kinds and styles that it seems like it would be a great addition to any collection for the $15 it costs.
You can purchase The Best American Comics 2008 from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
The book itself is a collection of clippings from comics released in 2008. Some are more complete than others. Prior to this book, I had never heard of any of these names. But several of these comics gave me reason to look up the authors and actually purchase more of their works.
Instead of reviewing each comic, I will relate what I recall a week after reading it and the permanent impressions it left on me. The first comic, Burden caught me off guard as it starts out as an endearing story about a brother making amends for his no-good dead-beat brother Charlie. Charlie seems to have led a less than desirable life dodging rent, stealing from loved ones and leaving his father to rot in a home. This beautiful story crumbles away to a horrific end in the final page as Charlie's brother says goodbye to him.
There were a few comics related to the war in Iraq. The first (David Axe's autobiographical War-Fix) being a reporter who seems to go to Iraq out of boredom or some strange driving force despite his clear inability to cope with the nature of war. Another comic dealt with the political debate here and the Left's political views.
Some of the comics had a more timeless folklore aspect to them. One was a reincarnation of an old Japanese proverb called The Crab and the Monkey but had a sobering ending that I did not recall from the original proverb. Another entitled Turtle Keep It Steady by Joseph Lambert had little to no text and retold the fable of The Tortoise and the Hare. It also explored the merits of consistency in friends and those around you in a very simple way. Seven Sacks left me confused and concerned that I had missed some myth or fable allusion through the whole story. The story is well illustrated and may cause one to wonder what responsibility this boatman has in delivering unsavory characters across a river to possibly carry out devious acts while holding bags that make noises.
Several comics were purely historical. The Saga of the Bloody Benders is one part homicide case and one part legend. The story takes a historical account of a family of settlers that brutally murdered and waylaid dozens of innocent people in 1870s Kansas. The story recalls a simpler time and notes how peculiar all the signs pointed to the Bender family yet no one implicated them. Another comic Berlin recalled a German viewpoint of the May Day Massacre of 1928 and the Reichstag elections of 1930. So rarely is a story told from the unpopular side of a historical conflict.
One of the comics took a look at Picasso's beginning as an artist discovering cubism. I do not know enough of the true to story to know if it is historically accurate but it certainly cast Picasso in a ... different light.
One of my least favorite parts of the books was a set of Matt Groening's "Life in Hell." Some of it is cute and childishly funny. Most of it is inane and a bit tedious to read. While this repetition may be humorous, it pales in comparison to the other emotions displayed in the book.
Eric Haven's Mammology is humorous on several different levels and is layered to include evolutionary commentary on mammals versus reptiles. Cathy Malkasian's Percy Gloom is an interesting commentary on a group of people called "Funnelheads" that clearly become an analogy for a cult of worshipers.
One of my favorite comics was a woodcut done in cubism by a Bronx art teacher named John Mejias. I showed this comic to a friend who teaches ESL in the Bronx and she laughed at several panes discussing the inside jokes of "what you should do" in each of the situations that Mejias was lampooning. Personally I found the clipping from Mejias The Teachers Edition to be heart touching asking in the end how he is to teach students art when every assignment is graded to a standard with no room for individuality or self expression.
I omitted more than a few comics that didn't strike me as that great. There are lengthy comics about the life an older TV show host, a few selections from The New Yorker, a comic about an ostracized Chinese student in America and I'm certain I'm missing many others in this 352 page hardcover book.
This comic spans so many different kinds and styles that it seems like it would be a great addition to any collection for the $15 it costs.
You can purchase The Best American Comics 2008 from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
however it came off a little edgy.
Is it clobberin' time?
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
When I was a kid, I could buy comics at the grocery store, drug store, and just about anywhere. Now that I have kids, I wanted to go get them comics and I could not find comics anywhere though eventually, I found a small rack at Borders.
So where have all the comics gone?
You'd never heard of Matt Groening, yet you post stories on slashdot?
This post climbed Mt. Washington.
Unlike the submitter, I've heard of at least half of the authors on the list: Jaime Hernandez, Rick Geary, Matt Groening, Alison Bechdel, Mark Kupperberg, Derf, Jason Lutes, Paul Pope, Kaz, Seth, Chris Ware ... anyone who has followed "indie" comics for any length of time will find these names all too familiar.
It makes me wonder: Are these really the "best" that American comics has to offer? The submitter hits on the fact that the bulk of the comics that reach U.S. readers are superhero stories from two or three big publishers. The list of authors represented in this book reads like a roster of the exceptions to the rule -- the people who have made names for themselves by getting their offbeat comics published, usually by one or two or three of the better-funded "indie" publishers (Fantagraphics, Top Shelf, Last Gasp). What about the comics that simply aren't reaching an audience because they weren't created by a known "name"? Was any attempt made to hunt them down and represent them in this book? Or is this just the same old club, getting together and congratulating themselves yet again?
I've heard comics artists lament that every time someone writes an article in the newspaper about the "new comics," they choose a headline that's some variation on, "ZAP! POW! ZING! Comics aren't for kids anymore!" But when every single anthology of "outstanding new comics" contains work by the same two dozen people, aren't the artists in effect doing the same thing to themselves?
Breakfast served all day!
OK - I realize that this post was an off-topic attempt at humor. But I just grabbed this book at my local library (I love working close to the library - I had this book in my hands within 30 minutes of this review being posted 'cuz it sounded cool and I was bored.)
Family Circus actually makes up about half of the first three pages of the comic introduction (pages xi-xiii). I always considered Family Circus a stain on the comic page of our paper growing up but, although she acknowledges that Keane isn't actually very funny, she treats the strip with a nice kind of respect that reminded me that FC did actually leave an impression on me. Even if I thought it sucked...
He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
I have nothing against comic books, and it is possible that I have been unfairly dismissing them as childish. But why is there a review of a comic book in slashdot?
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I have seen this before at a local book store. I am not a big comic guy myself but I like some of the styles in some very odd comics. This book does have several strips that have very interesting styles and some of them are not too bad to read either. What is the harm in looking at something new? The worst thing that can happen is you kill some brain cells and you lose 15 minutes of your life. ;)
Just my 2 pennies.
Trial 1:
Action: Post a review of a book entitled "The Best American Comic Books 2008"
Result: Very few comments, lots of Slashdotters sitting at home with their fingers in their ears and their eyes closed really really tight, humming the theme to their favorite anime as hard as they possibly can to drown out the notion that their bias against American comic books may be flawed.
Trial 2:
Action: Post a review of a book entitled "The Best Manga 2008"
Result: Within a time scale generally reserved for particle physics discussions, Slashdot is DoSed by a deadly cocktail of squeeing otaku, rabid fans of the mangas (mangae?) mentioned within giving gigs upon gigs (if not teras) of background story text on each, and the rabid fans of mangae not listed giving teras upon teras (if not petas) of background story text on each to explain why the previous group are some pseudo-derogatory Japanese noun they probably don't really understand themselves but will keep using to describe them because it sounds cool.
Welcome to mainline nerdcadia!
I love the way the author seems surprised by his reactions. Comics ain't for kids no more, and they haven't been for years and years. I never understood why top-notch text was called "prose" and top-notch drawing were called "art", but putting the two together was always deemed "crap".
Are these really the "best" that American comics has to offer? The submitter hits on the fact that the bulk of the comics that reach U.S. readers are superhero stories from two or three big publishers. The list of authors represented in this book reads like a roster of the exceptions to the rule -- the people who have made names for themselves by getting their offbeat comics published, usually by one or two or three of the better-funded "indie" publishers (Fantagraphics, Top Shelf, Last Gasp). What about the comics that simply aren't reaching an audience because they weren't created by a known "name"? Was any attempt made to hunt them down and represent them in this book? Or is this just the same old club, getting together and congratulating themselves yet again?
Disclaimer: I'm the submitter.
I'm sorry you feel that way about this book. I thoroughly enjoyed it, perhaps it was made for me and not for you. But I will cherish it and probably look for 2006, 2007 and 2009 when it comes out.
If you know of such truly indie unheard of comics, the link on the summary has a submission page for suggestions of Lynda Barry and Co. to consider.
Also for the people tagging this article XKCD and Sinfest, webcomics are eligible:
Are Web comics eligible?
Yes, Web comics are eligible, if they were first posted within the eligibility dates (September 1, 2007, through August 31, 2008, for this next edition). Send hard copy, carefully labeled as to date of first posting and URL, to us at the Houghton Mifflin address.
Nothing would make me happier than to see a mom and pop printing press featured in one of these books. I ordered two things from Paping on the cheap and their website gave me reason to believe they do all the woodcuts by hand.
I love that.
My work here is dung.
Jessica Abel
For a second, I thought you said Jessica Alba...
Then I was disappointed. :(
Convert FLACs to a portable format with FlacSquisher
The title of 'the Family Circus' is the only bit of humor in the strip. Beyond that it is nether serious nor comical, and is devoid of entertainment value. Too bad it wasn't even originally called The Family Circus, the title is almost an accident and certainly the first and last attempt at humor it ever made.
I never understood why top-notch text was called "prose" and top-notch drawing were called "art", but putting the two together was always deemed "crap".
Because the people doing the namecalling had a vested interest in their own art establishment?
IMHO graphic novels have precisely the same relation to novels as stage plays and motion pictures have to oral storytelling. Sure there's a Sturgeon's Law fraction of junk out there. But that in no way diminishes the quality of the good stuff.
= = = =
Note that they talked the same trash about Science Fiction, too. But there you can find another reason:
Mainstream Fiction is an artform that serves as a platform for propagandizing the non-technical masses. The central message is "It may be going to hell all around you, but if you try to fix it you'll just make it worse. Let the officials handle it, leave it alone, and suffer in silence."
Science Fiction is an artform for the techies who design, build, operate, and improve the infrastructure, where such a mindset would be a disaster. SF's central message is generally "Your application of intelligence to virtually any problem may solve it, to the benefit of yourself and humanity." (Except for the dystopian variant, which amounts to "If you break it THIS way it will be too broken to fix, so watch it!").
The techies are an isolated part of the population - especially in the institutes of advanced learning - and the "art establishment" is in charge of much of the rest of it. They truly believe that SF is a form of "escapist porn". ("Escapism" being an alleged sin consisting of getting yourself out from under the thumbs of your rulers and the trouble they cause - and in the process no longer "contributing to society" as much as you are expected to do.) So they slam it to try to keep their own charges indoctrinated in their own mind set and away from that of the techies.
Superhero comics ("There is evil and there is virtue in fighting it. You can - at least temporarily - hold it at bay and prevent greater disasters than if it were allowed to run rampant."), graphic novels (which can examine and take virtually any viewpoint but often take empowering ones), and other comic forms have content that deviates from politically-correct conformism. So of course it's "not art" according to that pack of group-thinkers.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
Smidge207 didn't write the above review. It was copied directly from an Amazon review that he had absolutely nothing to do with. He does this regularly and shouldn't be modded up for it.
So what you're really saying is...
[[Citation Needed]]
http://www.chaotickingdoms.com
A comic book IS NOT a graphic novel. I am sick and tired of people trying to 'shine up' what is essentially crap.
1. 'Illustrations' pass for washed-out commercial hackwork more suited for truck stop restrooms, and nothing else.
2. 'Illustrations' do not consist of POW!, BOOM! RATATATATT!, BLAM!, or any other such nonsense.
3. 'Storylines' are shallow, simplistic, cheap, generic, and recycled from comic book to comic book.
4. Sold with the intent to maximize profits and minimize costs.
5. So simple even a 2nd grader could read and follow it.....And they do.
All books are sold as a means of generating revenue. That's why authors bother to take the time to write them, but COMIC BOOKS are sold with the pure motive of gereating profit and are not written for the enlightenment of the reader.
A 'novel' has literary value, and was written to be an enlightnening read, a COMIC BOOK does not. Tru graphic novels are deep, intellectual, mentally stimulating, and complex. Foxtrot, Dilbert, Calvin And Hobbes, and "Bloom County"/"Billy And The Boingers Bootleg" would be good examples of true 'graphic novels'. Call it what you want, but they are complex enough to where you have to think about what you are reading, and characters develop their traits, rather than starting out with everything 'prefabricated'.
Novels are like fine wines, whereas comic books are the literary equivalent of bathtub gin.
Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
...scored 7/10? I can't honestly recall one being scored otherwise.
Why doesn't /. just migrate to a 5 point system so all of the reviews will be 4/5? Then at least they'll be shaking things up a bit.
Random Thoughts From A Diseased Mind (Not For Dummies)
Until I can get affordable reprints of Carl Barks's Scrooge McDuck in the United States (or anywhere else), or until they start making something that rises to that level of quality, who cares about American comics?
I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
should have been
Actually, I *did* write that review on Amazon.
=Smidge=
Is it just my observation, or is eldavojohn an idiot?
Actually, I *did* write that review on Amazon.
On the contrary, GraphicNovelReporter.com wrote the Amazon review. You are not GraphicNovelReporter.com, you are Smidge207.
Even if the two of you are the same person in RL -- which is an assumption that I do not grant -- pretending that the two identities are the same is either arrogant (if you expect people to recognise both of you as representing the same RL physical body) or irresponsible (if you just don't care).
-- a different AC
Sure you do.
I got a copy of the first BAC edition of 2006: http://bestamericancomics.com/2006 for Christmas last year. It was pretty fun. They draw from Canada, the USA, and Mexico, so really it should be "North American" rather than "American".
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