But it’s been months since it’s been published now, and I think it’s way past time that we reappraised this hefty work.
(In the following article, there are spoilers and triggers.)
To sum up the plot: An art dork gets super-powers enabling him to sculpt stone by just thinking hard. The work he produces is terrible. He then meets a magic pixie dream girl who dies to teach him a lesson about life. The work he produces after that is even worse. The end.
Now, many of the earlier reviewers seem to feel that there’s something wonky about this plot. That perhaps that’s not what McCloud had in mind when making the graphic novel. But let’s just look at the evidence.
The dork rails a lot against modern art in general, and Jeff Koons in particular because he’s gimickey and doesn’t make stuff with his own hands. But look!
That the book obviously is an attack on the common philistinism found in some parts of comics fandom should be clear now. The “betcha they can’t draw a hand” crowd. But is it also a sly attack on tropes found in Japanese comics?
Take this “full bleed to the right to signal drama” thing:
It’s a very Japanese thing. The same with the illusion of time not passing. You read many, many pages, and it seems like months have passed in the story, but then the dork notes that a week has passed and you go “NO! IT CANNOT BE! WHEN WILL THIS BE OVER?!”
So, to conclude: The book is a satire, and a sly dig at expectations. Well done, McCloud.
(McCloud’s figure drawing is less stiff now than it used to be, but that’s probably not a critique of anything. Unless somebody can figure out how that’s possible. I’m all ears.)