Comics Daze

Hey! Where did this day go? It’s almost four already… OK, so this is going to be a shorter Daze because I think I’ll be falling asleep by midnight. But let’s see.

And for music today: Only albums on the Crammed and Crepuscule labels.

Aksak Maboul: Onze danses pour combattre la migraine

15:36: Starseeds 3 by Charles Glaubitz (Fantagraphics)

As someone who was a summer student at CERN just a couple decades ago, I think I can safely say that all the particle physics stuff in this comic book is codswallop. It has the unfortunate reek of Youtube.

I guess that’s besides the point, because this is one of those “spiritual” books, and you could pretty much just replace the text with “yabber yabber” and get to the same end this book has: “The Soul”, etc.

Anyway, the artwork is pretty attractive — but mostly in the rendering, and not in the actual figures. It’s faux riso — I guess there’s a Photoshop plugin for “faux riso colours” there days?

Er… uhm… OK…

The most annoying thing about this book is the way the narrator keeps declaiming at us, making the illustrations often superfluous. It might be a stylistic choice to go all Kirby on us, but I just found it tedious.

OK, this book really isn’t for me: It’s a druggy, “spiritual” book that’s inspired by video game logic (“Collect All The Seeds”), and I find all those things tedious, so there you are: A perfect trifecta.

Oh, and it’s apparently the third book in a series? Even though it doesn’t seem to say so on the cover.

Various: From Brussels With Love (1)

16:21: Bibi & Peggy by Romane Bourdet & Elsa Klée (Colorama)

From fake riso to real riso — I got a bunch of books from Colorama (a Berlin-based publisher that mostly does riso) in the mail this week.

Getcher riso books here.

I like this book — it’s got a very retro thing going on. It’s like finding a lost comic book from 1973 done by somebody from Wimmen’s Comix? But more ambitious.

It’s funny, it’s a good read and it looks kinda great.

16:37: The Trip by Malwine Stauss (Colorama)

Oh; there were all these postcards and things included…

This is a very brief story about going on a trip to a strange place.

I love the artwork, and the story is charming.

16:43: Sporty Ponni by Ane Barstad Solvang (Colorama)

Hey! This is by a Norwegian.

It’s a kind of poetry/fairy tale/comics hybrid, and it works really well, with some pages that have text accompaniment…

… but most are wordless. It’s a story about going out and having adventures…

… and I love it: It’s such a free-flowing and gleeful book.

17:04: Pédale! by Judovic Prétu & Jika (Afart)

I also got a bunch of comics from Denmark this week, so I guess this is going to be a more European Daze than usual.

This is a strangely old-fashioned book, and I’m not quite sure who the intended audience for this is?

It’s got some really cringe moments — it’s like a collection of all the embarrassing things from growing up, but told without much verve: Just an enumeration, really. So I was thinking this was for children, but..

Various: From Brussels With Love (2)

… things get more grown-up (without the storytelling changing much) later.

And I had no idea that they did hazing rituals in France? I thought they were more cultured, but it’s apparently a thing.

I guess the book is pretty OK, but it’s not very exciting.

Various: The Fruit of the Original Sin

17:49: Okinawa by Susumu Higa (Fantagraphics)

This is in an unusual format — it a bit smaller than how Japanese comics are usually printed. Was it this way originally? Everything just looks a tad too small, making it difficult to immediately make out what we’re looking at.

As usual with modern Japanese comics, the Japanese military are being portrayed as monstrous and moronic — but perhaps unusually, the American soldiers are portrayed as saving angels, sort of.

Susumu Higa is an extremely limited artist. He has very few facial shapes in his repertoire, and his physique is often off spec. He also has basically three angles to draw faces from, so things often look like odd medieval tableux.

His action scenes are also just incredibly stiff, making it difficult to say what’s supposed to be happening. After nine hours of careful studying of this spread, I have now reached a tentative conclusion that there were Japanese soldiers shot in the third panel on the left-hand side (you can tell them apart from the American ones by them having netting on the helmets — their faces are identical, of course).

The figures are in stark contrast with the background, which are sometimes obsessively hatched, and usually look pretty much correct. So I’m going to go ahead and guess that the background here are (as they are with so many Japanese comics) done by unnamed assistants, slaving away for hours and hours.

So kind.

OK, I’ve got one positive thing to say about this book — the binding makes reading this less annoying than most books of this size. Good choice.

The Honeymoon Killers: Les tueurs de la lune de miel

Oh, yeah — lots of supernatural things happen here, too, which brings me to another annoying thing about this book: The translation. Whenever there’s something supernatural going on, the translator chooses not to translate the central concepts… perhaps it just seems to make things sound too silly and childish? So you have, like, “His mabui has left! Quick! Get at ugan to an utaki, stat!” That sounds all mystical and “oriental”, right? Deep and stuff! But “His soul has left! Quick! Get a priestess to a sacred place, stat!” sounds less so, so it’s an understandable, but crappy choice.

Hermine: The World On My Plates

And it’s not just reticence with the silly religious stuff — the translation is just plain weird in a lot of places. “Yeah, for future reference”? I guess I understand what she means, but… that’s a weird way to put it. Perhaps the original text was similarly awkward? I wouldn’t be surprised.

I’m guessing everybody else loves the book, because it’s so “worthy”. Let’s see… Oh, the Chinese printer refused to print it:

However, during the proofing stage, we got some “feedback” from the printer in China that all of the mentions of Taiwan in the (new-to-this-edition) interview with Higa-san would need to be removed from the work, as would the mention of China in the book itself during the war.

But not because they thought it sucked.

And googling some more shows that everybody loves it, and some compare it to Maus. (!) This is the only vaguely moderate review I can find:

That being said, at over 500 pages, Okinawa is a commitment even for a manga, and not every story is a banger.

One comic book is a commitment? Kids these days.

Blaine L. Reininger: Broken Fingers (vinyl)

20:43: Dark Halo 1 by Gabriel Tiedt Lange & Onkel Hawaii (Backyard Barons)

This is a Danish book (but in English, as more and more alternative comics throughout Europe are, these days).

It’s a very attractive book — nice cardboard covers and printed well. And the artwork’s very appealing, too — it’s like… er… a modern take on 70s French(ey) comics, like er CF trying to do a Moebius story? Perhaps some Brandon Graham in there, too? Anyway, looks great, and while the story is pretty slight (and not very original), it’s a good, if very brisk read.

20:53: Are You Awake? by Jul Gordon (Colorama)

This is a very interesting little book.

It’s got a kind of quiet desperation going on — it somehow gets more and more gripping, and then a devastating ending coming as a total surprise. Kinda magical.

21:04: Firebugs by Nino Bulling (Colorama)

This starts off in a pretty thrilling way, but then the energy seems to dissipate about half-way through. Which is, I guess, very apropos of the story, which is also about a person stuck in a situation and not knowing quite what to do.

Half the pages are printed on matte paper and half on shiny, which is odd…

Blaine L. Reininger & Alain Goutier: Paris en Autumne

21:25: Totem by Laura Pérez (Fantagraphics)

Hm. Well, this looks very modern… like… a digital version of Tomine-for-New-Yorker… a post-Sabrina palette. OK, it’s not that bad, but I don’t find it particularly attractive.

It’s very mysterious, and I didn’t get at all what it was supposed to be about. But I’m pretty confident it’s not worth it to try to disentangle the plot points.

Benjamin Lew & Steven Brown: Douzieme Journee: Le Verbe, La Parure, L’Amour

21:39: Comment faire fortune en Juin 40 by Astier/Dorison/Nury (E-Voke)

This was originally meant to be a movie, but I can see why nobody wanted to make it: Every cliché ever in a heist movie is jammed into this script, and it’s just exhausting.

For the comics version, they seem to have hired somebody with no idea how much gold weighs: Those bizarre elongated gold bars, in what looks like a 2mx1.5mx1m cube is supposed to be two tons. The least dense gold ever!

This has about two dozen characters (I think — many of them are drawn so similarly that it’s sometimes hard to tell), and more plot twists than you can shake a stick at.

I gave up on this two thirds of the way through, because it’s pretty tedious.

Zazou, Bikaye & Cy1: Noir et Blanc (vinyl)

22:13: Tout Vance 8: Ringo 1 by William Vance (E-Voke)

William Vance has done a lot of different characters, and this series collects his less-well known, I think? I think I may have seen this around before, but I may not have read it. It’s one of those slightly more modern 60s westerns, I think?

Vance’s artwork is always pretty entertaining to look at, but the reproduction here seems a bit off — as if a lot of finer lines have gone missing. Reproduced from a printed copy, perhaps?

This is not one of those “revisionary” westerns — the Native Americans are villains, and the Mexicans are even worse.

And things take a turn for the worse with the second album, when Duchâteau (of Ric Hochet fame) takes over the script — basically nothing happens for forty pages, and in a very annoying way.

Band Apart: Marseille

22:51: Das Humboldt-tier by Flix (Cobolt)

This was originally published in German? That’s unusual.

It’s a take on the Marsupilami, created by Franquin. I only read a couple of the Marsupilami albums, but this is one of those “extraordinary adventure” non-canonical ones… Those sometimes have a lot of references to older albums — or go in a totally different direction.

Oh, this goes in a totally different direction — we start in 1801, but most of the story happens in Germany in 1931.

And… it’s great! It’s funny, it’s lively, and it has real stakes. It ends up being pretty moving, even? Very, very entertaining.

Hector Zazou: Reivax au Congo

23:21: The End

And now it’s time for bed.

Comics Daze

I hadn’t planned on doing a comics reading day this week, but then I got a whopping new package of brand new comics in the mail… like ten kilos? I think this means that the Book Season is upon us — publishers like to get a certain kind of book out this time of year so that they’ll be fresh in the minds of people doing Best Of lists in December, which leads to bigger Xmas sales. Or something.

And what kind of books are these? They’re the hefty, brick kinds of books that are all “literary” and stuff.

So I think that’ll be most of today’s reading? I’ve felt the heft of the books; I haven’t actually looked at them… let’s find out if I’m right.

And for today’s musical accompaniment — let’s do calm, calm music.

Two Nice Girls: 2 Nice Girls

13:40: Roaming by Jillian Tamaki and Mariko Tamaki (Drawn & Quarterly)

OK, this is gonna be on top of all the “best of” lists, I think. But also… possibly not? Because it’s not completely typical…

I mean, it’s diffuse than books like this usually are. More ambiguous, less resolved, and I love it. This book has some of the best scenes ever in a comic book. And it perfectly captures so many little things.

It’s also extra amusing for me — I was touristing in New York a few weeks back, and it’s eerie how many of the places the kids here are visiting I saw on that trip, too.

Anyway, it’s a pretty wonderful book.

Two Nice Girls: Chloe Liked Olivia

14:43: Restless by Joseph Kai (Street Noise Books)

Huh, really original colour scheme…

Anyway, this is fantastic. It starts off slowly, but the tension builds and builds — several different threats mount (that ship in the harbour, TonyX, the gummint) and… it’s a real page turner. Such an exciting read.

And while it’s a point of view seldom seen in comics, it doesn’t succumb to catering to the reader with exposition, but instead just holds that point of view.

Two Nice Girls: Like A Version

15:12: Eden II by K. Wroten (Fantagraphics)

This brick of a book comes in a plastic sleeve, which is pretty unusual for Fantagraphics… (I mean, it’s unusual for them to have design flourishes like that.)

Or I guess it’s more like a phone book than a brick.

OK, this is some kind of near-future satire or something? (“Satire” is code for “not actually funny”.)

0: Soñando

But then we abruptly shift gears, and we’re in Sit-Com Land. Sitcoms rarely translate to the page because the rhythms don’t sit the same way on the page. And you’d need a laugh track here to underline where the jokes are, because they’re not that funny.

“I’m adrift in a timeless void. Only stopping to sell my tears to rich sadists online.”

OK, I’m out. If you tried to design a book that’s less for me you couldn’t have made a more perfect book: This is 1) all philosophical (but kinda dumb), 3) about video games, with d) uninteresting drug sequences, 4) as a papery sit-com and (I’m mostly guessing based on the name) ii) with some “spiritual” dimension.

It gives you the uncomfortable feeling of being condescended to by a moron.

I ditched it after 120 pages. (Of 450.)

Laura Jean: A Fool Who’ll

16:18: Osha Violation by Seohsahm (Superpose)

OK, I’m gonna divert a bit from the thick September tomes and read some small press stuff.

Oh, it’s a bondage porn book.

16:21: Despair by Charlotte Pelissier

This is from the Desert Island Mystery box — Gabe showed me pics of this being made when I visited. The covers are all hand spray painted. Looks great!

This is pretty wild.

And very funny.

Laura Jean: Eden Land

16:33: Memoirs of a Man in Pajamas by Paco Roca (Fantagraphics)

OK, back to the corporate (ahem) comics.

This starts off with a longer, very amusing story…

… but the rest of the book seems to be shorter pieces. That is, the book collects three albums (I think), and I was exhausted after reading the first album (about 80 pages of this stuff) that I’m going to postpone reading the rest to some later date. (Some things work better when left as thinner comics.)

It’s not that these aren’t funny pages — several of them are very amusing. The problem is that Roca has a lot of “observations” about everything, and they’re mostly (well, I’m being kind — all) trite.

Laura Jean: Our Swan Song

These pages originally ran in a magazine — one per week I’m guessing — and I think they probably worked very well in that context. Roca really plays up his schlubbiness, and reading page after page of this, it’s hard not to start to dislike him. I know, I know, these aren’t documentaries — what we’re reading is the way he chooses to portray himself, and he does this to get a laugh — but it’s a difficult genre. Joe Matt was a master of this genre: He, too, exaggerated his annoying qualities to make entertaining strips, but there was something really lovable and endearing about it all. Roca doesn’t have that fine-tuned control, and at the end of this I was going *gngnngng* at the pages here a lot.

Still, it is entertaining, but I think it’s best consumed in smaller quantities, which I’m going to do with the rest of the book. I think it might make for a perfect read-a-couple-pages-before-bed-time book.

Morgan Caney & Kamal Joory: Magic Radios

17:48: A Book to Make Friends With by Lukas Verstraete (Fantagraphics)

Well, isn’t this a fancy book… it comes with a slipcase that has handles embedded that you can pull out…

Kinda like this Ben Katchor book, but fancier.

Oh! I don’t know what I expected, but it wasn’t this… With such a lavish production on this huge book (almost tabloid size), I guess I was expecting something more finicky. More like Chris Ware or something. Or something wilder than this, like Gary Panter?

Not that this isn’t wild.

It’s a pretty slight story — it’s about somebody stealing a MacGuffin, and this guy losing his identity, and… stuff.

It’s an enjoyable read, but I guess I expected more? In this case, I think the fancy design worked against the book — a simpler presentation wouldn’t have raised the expectations so high, perhaps.

18:19: Damnation Diaries by Peter Rostovsky (Uncivilized Books)

This is an unusual-looking book for Uncivilized — I mean, it looks and feels just like an Image TP collecting a handful of issues. The same format and similarly glossy paper.

And this really is a honest-to-god satire, so none of the jokes are actually funny. I mean — two digs at modern art over the first few pages? I know that modern art is the bugaboo of certain “I know how to draw a hand” comics artists, but c’mon.

And then an Ikea joke? The jokes are just painful. Hey! Perhaps that’s a meta comment on it all, since the book is set in hell? So reading it should be painful?

Anyway, this book is about a former art teacher stuck in hell, visiting a psychologist to work out his real problems, and then there’s a resistance group in hell that wants to make things better, so they explode a huge bomb, burying lots of people. Like one does if one wants to improve things. I wonder whether Rostovsky works as a writer for Marvel/Disney:

Anyway, the book sucks. (But he does know how to draw a hand.)

Telebossa: Garagen Aurora

19:03: Ursula/This Disease We Call Skin by Erika Price/Lane Yates

Very cool.

I like the obsessive qualities here. And I guess this strip is about cell phones?

Telebossa: Telebossa

19:31: The Hills of Estrella Roja by Ashley Robin Franklin (Clarion Books)

This has a lot going for it — it’s got likeable characters, artwork inspired by Japanese comics, and a fun X-Files-but-for-2023 plot.

Various: Erased Tapes: 1 + 1 = X (1)

Oops; it’s eight — I should eat something. Be right back.

It’s got some problems, though — I was having a hard time telling some of the characters apart, and the usual way artists deal with that is by giving people different hair colour (Expert Tip Time) — but here that strategy is being defeated by the tendency to colour everybody by mood instead.

The plot is also just kinda seems to be lacking in general sense. Like — she drove out here, and there’s no time limit or anything to what she’s doing. She could just go back to Austin and return the next week with better equipment for monster hunting. And SPOILERS the ending itself: Those people taking care of The Secret sure did a bad job. I mean, a cave where anybody can just walk in? A defence that relies on nobody dragging their feet across a line of dust? A stray can could have released those monsters. How about installing a door? Or laminating the Anti Monster Dust Line Of Defence? Just something?

I know I know, those are very very nerdy things to be bitching about, and if you say that I must be fun at parties I have to tell you that you’re wrong.

Still! It’s a good, fun read.

Various: Erased Tapes Collection VIII

21:34: This Country by Navied Mahdavian (Princeton Architectural Press)

This is about a couple moving to a very remote place in Idaho.

Nothing really dramatic happens there — they grow some veggies and meet the neighbours (all of whom are pleasant towards them (except for asking him where he’s from)).

And then there’s this.

The artwork is really attractive throughout, and especially the drawings of wildlife are great.

The storytelling is really on point, too — like I said, nothing dramatic happens, but there’s still a nerve going through this: It’s not boring for a microsecond. (It’s also quite funny here and there.)

It’s really good.

Various: The World Is Everything

22:40: The End

So I think I’ll call it a night here. The day started with two really solid books, and then there were some mixed books, and ending it on a high seems like a good idea. (Besides, I have to do some French learnin’.)