Tag Archives: Entertainment

Kickstarter: THE HUNT-Swords and Sorcery Comic

The Hunt is a universe of swords and sorcery adventure by Jorin Evers, a cartoonist in the Netherlands on quite a creative journey. I am impressed with what I see in this 48-page comic book that kicks off a Kickstarter campaign beginning tomorrow, January 11th. Both as the artist and writer, Evers demonstrates a pure delight for the fantasy genre. It will be fun to see this particular project evolve. Jorin Evers is an accomplished artist who got on my radar for his work on The Eighth.

Evers deserves to be proud of The Hunt series he is kicking off. Here are a few words from him:

“Designing characters and putting them in action-heavy sequences is what I find most entertaining. And that’s really what this project is about. I really wanted to have a setting for some cool action, which would allow me to draw some awesome characters.”

There’s one particular Evers creation I’m especially rooting for: a lone wolf character, who prefers to hide behind a cloak, but will spring into action and transform into a huge werewolf. It’s a little early to say but I have high hopes for him! Overall, this comic has a springy vibe to its characters and action fueled by a healthy manga influence. And, if you like vampires, Evers has got you covered too. Comics readers, wherever you find them, at conventions, comics shops or coffee shops, like to talk about how much fun it is once they’re hooked to a certain blend of fantasy or horror. The Hunt is off to a very promising start in finding those readers.

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ANATOMY OF COMICS book review

Anatomy of Comics. Damien MacDonald. Flammarion. 2022. $40.

This is a companion book to a touring exhibition honoring the comics medium from the La Caixa Foundation in Spain. I came across this a while back and I’d meant to write a piece about it. I was instantly drawn to the striking cover. If you’re a fan of comics, do you recognize the artist? Given the nature of pop culture and media, it doesn’t matter if this image was, at one point, in wider circulation. Today, it needs to fight for attention with everything else. This is, in fact, by world-renown comics artist Charles Burns. It was originally a silkscreen print published in a limited edition by l’A.P.A.A.R. in 1985 and printed by Frederic de Broutelles. It has graced the cover of Metal Hurlant (Issue #120, 1986) as well as Dope Comix, Juxtapoz and El Vibora. But, I think it’s safe to say, it has gained a new life as the cover to this collection of exemplary comics art. As I suggest, this work of art, alas, is not the Mona Lisa of comics (not in terms of wide recognition) but figures mostly within the world of the comics cognoscenti.

Anatomy of Comics (2022) and PeePee PooPoo #1 (2024).

So, I take a bit of issue with up-and-coming cartoonist Caroline Cash for taking this Burns work and making it her own, with a few of her own flourishes, for the latest issue of her comic book series. No doubt, it’s a very clever tribute but she provides no attribution. The average reader will simply assume it is her own work. And, sure, it has become a mantra to “steal like an artist” and perhaps Burns is okay with the homage. The longer view is this: an artist is always aiming for artistic integrity and that takes time, perhaps a lifetime, to truly find one’s way. That brings me right back to this collection of comics art that honors that creative process of finding one’s way.

Catalan cartoonist Ricard Opisso Sala (1880-1966).

The act of creating comics that will stand the test of time is not a sprint but a marathon. The name of this exhibition is “Comics, Dreams and History” and what it makes clear is that there’s no room for pretense, not when you’re creating dreams. Damien MacDonald, a cartoonist himself, provides five essays, or monographs, to accompany a mix of short notes on selected pieces in the show. MacDonald sets the tone by stating he’s taking on the role more of an avuncular guide than an academic.

Saint Winsor!

Winsor McCay, it is safe to say, has reached a special and undeniable immortality and so it’s no surprise to find him included, and celebrated, in this book. His work will forever be spoken in the same breathe with any dissertation on the comics medium. It’s interesting to note that there is barely any mention of Art Spiegelman. Many of the other all-stars make a splash in this book: Winsor McCay, R. Crumb, Jack Kirby, Milton Caniff, but no Spiegelman tribute. And perhaps this is an example of the fluctuating waves of the never-ending assessments still being made on a relatively new art form. Basically, I don’t think it’s a deliberate slight at all but it does go to show that there’s always room for rethinking until you finally reach a certain undeniable apex, such as Saint Winsor!

Spanish cartoonist Antonio Hernandez Palacios (1921-2000).

The one mention in the book of Art Spiegelman is worth a mention here and that is in regards to a manifesto that was signed by Art and other notable comics artists. The following appeared in 1973 in Short Order Comix #1:

“It is the artist’s responsibility to hate, loathe and despise–fromica! Comics must be personal. The artist must strive to create quality product. It is our fervent belief that certain comics should still be trees! It is the reader’s responsibility to understand the artist. It is also the artist’s responsibility to understand the artist! Swiping is bad, experimentation is good!”

Milton Caniff (1907-1988).

Since we’re dealing with quotes, let’s try another. This one is by Will Eisner and is also included in this book. Perhaps in a mix of honesty and self-deprecation, Eisner summed up the cartoonist’s lot this way:

“I was a frustrated writer, a frustrated painter. And here, for the first time, was this marvelous opportunity that happens to any creative person once in a lifetime. Suddenly, there appears a medium, a receptacle, that takes your inaptitudes in both fields, puts them together, and comes out with an aptitude.”

— Will Eisner

That brings to mind a similar quote by Charles Schulz, this one is not in this book but from an interview with journalist Michael Johnson. I recall reading another version of it somewhere else too, as it’s basically a stock answer. This is not something you’ll easily find referenced anymore. Schulz is now Saint Charles, after all.

“My life is a story of almosts. I am almost a writer and almost an artist, so I do this for a living.”

— Charles Schulz

The flame keeps flickering, in and out, until either it dies off or it shines on, depending upon who leaps in to advocate for a legacy. Young people promote other young people, from one generation to the next. Right or wrong, one’s peers always seem to be of utmost importance. Only time will tell. One star’s once bright future may face a correction, flicker out and evaporate. There was a time in the wilderness even for undisputed icons, from the Mona Lisa to The Great Gatsby. Perhaps this book’s greatest purpose is to bring back a relatively obscure work by Charles Burns by having it on its cover, a way to cast a spotlight on it. And then unexpected things happen: like a newcomer upon the scene sees it and takes that same image for her own purposes. So, not trying to step on anyone’s toes. This is a tricky business when it comes to creating images and worthy of further discussion, which is an ongoing exploration for us folk interested in the study of comics and actually making comics.

If you have read any book on the comics medium, then you go to the head of the class. This one I found refreshing in its conversational tone and decidedly European vantage point. It’s a good solid overview and MacDonald provides many interesting observations. He provides an extended relaxed style that he pursues to good use as when he tackles the subject of secret identities or the power of comics to inform. Someone new to comics will find this very helpful and there’s enough nuance to keep more serious readers engaged.

John Romita (b. 1930).

The main goal here is to appreciate the comics medium and get a sense of what it takes to create something as inventive and original as the frenzied character observing his own eyeball from deep within his own skull. Charles Burns was a plucky 30-year-old artist in 1985 when the art on the cover of this book was first published. Burns was well on his way and listening to something telling him to step on the gas and create mind-blowing comics. This book is for everyone who enjoys mind-blowing comics and aspires to create some of their own. Good luck! It won’t be easy but it is well worth the effort no matter how long it may take you.

Charles Burns with PeePee PooPoo #1.

But, hang on, we’re not done yet. I am not one to ever leave well enough alone in the pursuit of attempting to get the full picture. My guess was that Charles Burns was fine with Caroline Cash’s tribute. As the above photo demonstrates, the maestro is more than fine with it.

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The Complete I, René Tardi, P.O.W. graphic novel review

The Complete I, Rene Tardi, P.O.W. (Fantagraphics, 2024, $99.99)

Guest Review by Paul Buhle

To say that Jacques Tardi is a major figure in comic art and in the development of contemporary comic art, its meaning and its expression, is insufficient. To many thoughtful readers,  Tardi has not only the brilliance of the artist but also the courage and resolve of the resister within a world where “resistance” is often described as futile and its activists are derided as a public embarrasment when not a menace.

There is something about Tardi’s work that is, for many readers including this one, deeply personal. CLR James, the great Pan African historian but also world-historic writer on the game of cricket, remarked that a good writer can say “it happened” but only a great writer (or artist) can say, “I see it, myself.” And make that claim credible. Again and again, Tardi shows us convincingly what he has seen and by doing so, why it is important. That the son appears always young while talking to the father in various stages of 1930s-40s life is a convention to make this personal story possible.

If another prefatory remark to a review of this trilogy does not overburden the reader, I would add that Tardi is the master of oral history, a “field” so recent that it has never reached academic respectability and so rooted in human history that it surely goes back to the earliest tribal communal expressions. The trilogy is an extended oral history, easily one of the first nonfiction efforts in comic form and almost certainly the longest.

The first volume.

He has been at this work a long time. Back in the 1990s, Tardi produced a two volume comic about the massive truma suffered during the First World War. It Was A War of the Trenches, noted for its realism, was followed by Goddamn This War!, praised for its accuracy as well as its sardonic, “black” humor.

In this stunning new three volume set, with its art intermittently tinted, Tardi tells the story of his father but by extension, the story of many millions of participants in war, non-participant victims and those destined or trapped to see the horrors up close.

In the first volume of the trilogy,  Tardi’s wife and collaborator Dominique Grange offers five large  prefatory pages of photos and drawings. Tardi himself chimes in with three more, mostly an acknowledgment of assistance from various quarters. They are paying homage to a generation fast slipping away. They are also telling younger people about their own collective past, their collective responsibility to French history, sometimes heroic, sometime monstrous (think of colonialism), but real and continuing.

These books are, crucially, also a testament to oral history of a certain kind, in this case assissted but only assisted by diaries that Tardi’s father had kept. A handful of other artists working on subjects ranging from the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s to the Vietnam War and the Israeli Occuption of Gaza have run up against the familiar problems. “Truth,” if the word is useful at all, is the truth of the story, the vividness and detail of memory rather than its factual accuracy. The son asking his father about a past that would be more painful than pleasant to detail, adds himself to the story.

It is oral history, after all, that allows the depth of detail but also a running dialogue about the details and meaning of memory. At every stage, generational conflict is on display.

A son who becomes a father resents the tedium of small town life and the dull certainties of a civil service career. A grandson, obviously devoting years to collecting a story, nevertheless needles his father, especially but not only about recruitment into the military and repeated re-enlistment. How could one choose an authoritarian organization full of class privilege, romanticizing violence and practicing violence on colonial victims from Africa to Asia? These are good questions answered with the stoicism of the working class or lower classes anywhere to military enlistment: a feeling of few alternatives for young people, and the often-later-regretted impulse to get away from home and “see the world.”

But there is more here, of course. This is also the story of Grange, the scriptwriter proper, Tardi’s partner in life and the daughter of another veteran of the same war. Her father died too early for Grange to get a detailed reminiscence, but this trilogy is very much a partnership. A recent outing by the pair, Elise and the New Partisans, in another fine Fantagraphics production, tells the story of the courageous radicals from the new left era, seen through the eyes of a Maoist-feminist militant.

The “Partisan” label has remained since the 1940s a crucial sign-of-sorts in French culture and politics. For outsiders, the “Resistance” is the official narrative: Marshall DeGaulle and the Free French Army march on Paris and heroically end the German occupation. As the concluding volume of I, father Tardi notes with special bitterness, De Gaulle had been off protecting the French empire in Africa from anti-colonial rebels while the dangerous and heroic antifascist struggle took place within France itself.

That the influence of Communists weighed heavily among the Partisans, a key source of post-war Left political popularity, offered another reason for a contrary and “official” narrative shared most of all by Americans. Not so in much of Europe: even the horrors of Stalinism in the War and after could not abolish the heroism of Partisans across large parts of the continent. The artist titled his latest volume The New Partisans for a reason: the memory has not gone away, even as the last of the antifascist underground pass, receiving good obituaries as far from France as the New York Times. The memory of the Partisans is not only a celebration of life and commemoration of bravery. It is also a reminder of the cowardice of the collaborators.

Rene himself remains, however, distant from all poltiical parties, saving much of his bitterness for the phony heroism of DeGaulle. Likewise for the bourgeois French citizens who made fortunes on the black market, likewise for the French police who rounded up Jews for deportation to the Death Camps, joining the Resistance just ten days before the liberation of Paris.  A hard-bitten veteran of real war, he saves the rest of his bitterness, the largest part, for the French Army leadership and the politicians who might have crushed the Germans in their first violation of the Versailles Treaty of 1919, but waited and waited. By the time they mobilized, the Wehrmacht was overwhelming, while French officaldom stupidly counted upon their revised Maginot Line to halt the German march. And then, among the officer corps, fled the Germans alongside the refugees, throwing down their guns along the way.

All this reflects a bitterness that revives a bitterness that he feels by generational sensibility to the soldiers and civilians of the First World War, the grandparents of Tardi and also of Grange. They survived but many of their own relatives did not. The false expectations of glory and easy victory, the painful sense that the Germans had been pushed back only because the Americans entered the war, and above all the horrors of the trenches left behind a collective sense of exhaustion. Tardi’s parents grow up under this shadow, a postmaster and postmistress who are satisfied, more than satisfied, to be civil servants with a quiet life in small (and to him, boring) French village.

Thus Tardi’s father, restless in adolescence and feeling a sense of nationalism at the first stirrings of German revanche expressions, makes his great error (or so Tardi the son believes) enlisting in the army. Tardi’s youthful disdain in this decision is perhaps the only real moment of disagreement in the comic, reflecting conversations that might have happened or might have taken place mainly in the young man’s mind, finalized on paper.

A kind of generational peace is achieved, perhaps, when Rene recounts the only violence that he actually committed: in his day running a tank, he runs over German soldiers so thoroughly that only traces of body parts remain, a memory that haunts him for years. Still, even this apparently guilt-ridden retelling is an artistic re-enactment.

And perhaps that disjuncture between reality and retelling  is the last important conceptual point of this trilogy. The artist and his scriptwriter cannot really go back in history. And yet their effort to do so, based on an informal but deeply felt and ardently pursued oral history, father to son, is something remarkable, something still little seen in a comic art world where non-fiction remains a fairly small category with no rules.

What does the enormous achievement of Jacques Tardi but also Dominique Grange mean for comics in particular, for comic art and a fairly recent method of the telling of some large and complicated history? These are not likely questions asked by the casual comics reader or even the armchair critic. Or I should say: not asked easily.  The trilogy under review will be at the center of scholars and reviewers, also readers of French history in particular, for a long time. And for good reason.

Paul Buhle

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Comics Grinder Best Comics Graphic Novels 2024

Honestly, this is the only graphic novel that matters right now.

This year the #1 book was Final Cut by Charles Burns, published by Pantheon. Through and through, this is such a masterfully done work. You can read my review here. It was a delight to read, especially with a good deal of understanding and appreciation of previous work. But, the beauty of this is that you really could come to it without even knowing a thing.

Another title in a similar vein, you could call it the #2 book after Burns, has got to be Naked City by Eric Drooker, published by Dark Horse Comics. Again, you have a masterful artist at the height of his powers. You can read the Comics Grinder review by Paul Buhle here.

If we follow this train of thought, another book by a legendary cartoonist that deserves a shout out is My Time Machine by Carol Lay. I think we can all relate to a good time travel story. My review here.

Another title that truly stands out is Blurry by Dash Shaw. Same thing going on here too in that we have a seasoned artist with an impressive track record who, once again, hits the ball out of the park. You can read my review here.

Continuing with the auteur cartoonist model, Einstein in Kafkaland by Ken Krimstein, published by Bloomsbury, must be on any best-of-year list. I don’t rate this book in terms of its educational value alone. I am not expecting any graphic novel to explain to me the theory of relativity in any significant way. I rate this book mostly in terms of its enthusiasm and playfully delivering on its scenario, the possible meeting between Einstein and Kafka. Paul Buhle’s review here.

Death of Comics Bookcase (stories by Zack Quaintance) is a remarkable comics anthology that unleashes a whole new world of possibilities for its editor and writer Zack Quaintance. Much like a comic book version of Rod Serling, here is a collection of stories by show runner Quaintance focusing on what has come to be my favorite kind of writing, that with “a touch of strange.” My review here.

Volume 1 collects Issues 1-6.

Hands down, The Last Mermaid by Derek Kirk Kim, published by Image Comics, is another must-read. The story just keeps getting better and better as it unrolls. This is by one of the best in the business. My review here.

Hurricane Nancy by Hurricane Nancy, published by Fantagraphics, needs to be on our best-of-year list. This is the first collection of this underground legend’s work going back to the early lean years on the Lower East Side in the 1960s all the way to the present. Read my review here.

Delights: A Story of Hieronymous Bosch by Guy Colwell, published by Fantagraphics is a rare treat as you have one of our great underground artists focusing on the one of the great painters of all time. Paul Buhle review here.

My Favorite Thing Is Monsters, Book Two by Emil Ferris, published by Fantagraphics. A monumental work in comics gets a fitting sequel. Nick Throkelson review here.

Advocate by Eddie Ahn, published by Ten Speed Press, is a unique book in how in manages to inform on so many things in so many ways. Keep up with its spirited pace and learn a few things about family and our environment. My review here.

Eventually Everything Connects by Sarah Firth needs to be on everyone’s list for 2024. Without a doubt, this is an extraordinary effort on all fronts from its concise use of imagery and text to its thoughtful and engaging themes. My review here.

Fall Through by Nate Powell, published by Abrams, is a tour de force graphic novel following the development of a Southern Gothic punk band. Meet the band members: Diana, Napolean, Jody and Steff. Powell delivers once again as only he can, taking note of the ephemeral.

Palestine by Joe Sacco, published by Fantagraphics, is one of the great landmark works in comics. It received a special edition release in 2024 and is certainly of great relevance today. Paul Buhle review here.

I wish you all a Happy New Year. As we have all gathered, 2025 is going to test us in more ways than one. I am so grateful to all my loyal readers who keep Comics Grinder rolling along. Of course, I am also grateful to my friend and colleague in comics, Paul Buhle, for all his amazing contributions. As I began to hint, this new year ahead is going to challenge us and I know that comics alone won’t save us but comics can still educate, entertain and inspire us and that means a lot. So, don’t despair for the times ahead as everything runs in cycles and nothing lasts forever. We have to keep an eye on the future, learn from the past, and make the most of the present.

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DEITY by Adam Palmer comics review

Deity. Adam Palmer. Hundo Industries. 40pp.

Outsider art, or folk art, has been around forever and is considered a genre all its own complete with tropes. Within that format, Adam Palmer creates a fun and entertaining comic book. Some people seek adventure. Palmer makes things happen and lives to tell the tale. In this case, the reader is swept back to the ’90s heyday of biker culture in a small town outside of Portland, Maine. This is an auto-bio comic featuring the comics creator in his youthful prime. Adam is a cool dude who prefers to run in the wild until good sense kicks in and he returns to civilization. He discovers a slew of sitcom reruns and finds a role model with The Fonz.

Adam becomes his own version of The Fonz.

It’s not long before Adam discovers his purpose in life which is to be a leader among men. He rallies all the other misfit rebels in town when he suddenly needs to form a posse to confront a local gang that has threatened his sister. Rough and raw mayhem ensues in more ways than one. The whole comic has a rough-hewn quality to it as it disregards the finer aspects of comics storytelling. All the word balloons have a crunchy outline. Actual words alternate randomly between what is capitalized or not; what is spelled correctly or not. The whole design sense is very casual veering on poetic. It’s refreshing to see since I believe it all rings true.

Big Fight Night!

The story itself is one of those “truth is stranger than fiction” type of things that I can easily see The Fonz himself leading the charge. I can definitely see how this rumble took on mythic proportions over the years. It’s a great story and Palmer does it justice. As I understand it, having texted with the publisher, Palmer is quite a character. After having had his share of rants about the internet and the current state of comics, it appears that Palmer got down to business and completed this comic book in peaceful solitude in rural Maine. Well, I can’t blame him for needing some time alone. That is often the best way to create anything worthwhile. And, as Hundo states: “There’s a lot more to this story that Adam has already completed. So, stay tuned.”

At the end of the day, what I see is a comic that looks and feels very authentic. I don’t see it as trying to curry favor with any particular entity within the comics world of which there are many. I think Adam Palmer is doing that most daring thing of all: he is simply reaching out to the reader. Rough, raw and real. This stand-alone comic book has it all. If you’re interested in getting a copy, like many indie comics, seek out Hundo Industries over social media. There is also an upcoming Kickstarter campaign in support of this comic book so you can keep an eye out for that too.

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Marvel: Unforgettable Stories, Folio Society, sneak peek

Marvel: Unforgettable Stories. Patton Oswalt & Jordan Blum. The Folio Society. 280pp. $100. (Pub. date 27 Nov. 2024).
With the release of Marvel: Unforgettable Stories, a very special collection of some of the greatest hits from Marvel Comics, published by The Folio Society, I thought I would take a moment to revisit a couple of the titles included in this collection just to give a taste of what you can expect.
I have to admit that I have a keen interest in writing for comics as I create my own comics and I’ve been reviewing all manner of comics for many years. Even with my extensive experience, I can sometimes get tripped up over whether this or that comic is from what era. The best rule of thumb is that DC Comics dominated the Golden Age and Marvel Comics dominated the Silver Age. But that’s just a general guideline. As this new collection makes clear, Marvel Comics has a certain vision that it has refined over the years. Another bit of comics wisdom is to know when to use words and when to let the art speak for itself. In the two examples I want to share with you, each benefits from art so compelling that it becomes a character all to itself. I’m speaking of a Spider-Man issue from 2001; and a Hawkeye issue from 2013. Like everything in this book, this is a collection of truly exceptional stand-alone issues.

“Severance Package”

The first example is entitled “Severance Package,” from Spider-Man’s Tangled Web #4, September 2001, written by Greg Ruck, art by Eduardo Risso. This one keeps to a delicious rigorous tempo as our main character is basically being summoned to his death. This guy screwed up big time and he must answer to The Kingpin. Once you get the gist, the artwork takes over. One perfect moment is when our doomed henchman is taking the elevator down to see the boss. Risso evokes the dread with individual panels staggering down. Fantastic stuff!

“Pizza is My Business”

The second example is entitled, “Pizza is My Business,” from Hawkeye #11, August 2013, by Matt Fraction, David Aja and Matt Hollingsworth. Now, this comic is a wonderful commentary on the rise of the internet and social media, basically permeating into the very fabric of our lives. A lot of the comic is made up of various emojis and symbols. The star of this issue is the Hawkeye mascot, Lucky. As many pages as possible are devoted to how Lucky goes about solving crimes. This is essentially a wordless comic with only a few word balloons evoking dialogue. It’s a beautiful example of how sometimes only a few words, or no words, are needed.
The Folio Society, the independent publisher of beautifully illustrated hardback books, is paying tribute to Marvel’s epic storytelling tradition with Marvel Unforgettable Stories.
This is a handsome, collectible 280-page hardcover that collects ten seminal Marvel stories selected by acclaimed writer and actor Patton Oswalt and acclaimed writer Jordan Blum. The story selections by Oswalt and Blum range from the classic ― including The Amazing Spider-Man #33 from the heart of the Silver Age ― to the contemporary ― including Hawkeye #11. Marvel Unforgettable Stories features an all-new stunning cover and slipcase design by Marvel artist Marcos Martín (Daredevil),  an introduction by Patton Oswalt, and 280 pages of super hero adventures featuring Spider-Man, Wolverine, Daredevil and Captain America. The Folio Society will publish Marvel Unforgettable Stories on Wednesday, November 27, 2024. 100 signed copies will be available on Tuesday, November 26, 2024.

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Uncle Sam: Special Election Edition comics review

Uncle Sam: Special Election Edition. Steve Darnell and Alex Ross. New York: Abrams, 2024. 121pp, $25.99.

Guest review by Paul Buhle

The Special Election Edition came out just in time, more or less, for the most disappointing election in recent US history. Or just in time to drive the main point of this extraordinary comic home: the utter confusion in what the US has been, stands for, might be, remains very much the national saga. No matter what any politician (maybe not Bernie Sanders or AOC) says. The bilge of the politicians’ messaging still makes for indigestion and the worst may be ahead.

Never mind, let’s focus on the comic. Darnell (the scriptwriter), Ross (co-plotter, so called, and illustrator, joined by Todd Klein on Lettering) caught me flat footed in the original 1997 printing. Like any other radical historian of the 1960s-80s generation, I was not likely to expect anything so riveting, no immanent critique of “Americanism,” from the mainstream comics industry. Sure, gay and lesbian superheroes had been added, not to mention the popularity of noir comics with heavy social implications. Uncle Sam was another geography.

So much so that its real value, and I hope real impact, is difficult to characterize. The tall fellow in the funny suit with suspenders emerged in the nineteenth century, definitely boosted by the tall (and homely) Abe Lincoln but goes back to earlier self-celebration. You might say that it borrowed a little or a lot from the “Columbiad” celebration of the marvelous creature (actually a semi-clothed female) entering the New World with perfectly innocent intent, an image displaced by icons from the neoclassicism of the Roman Empire: the heraldic eagle, counterpart to the “Senate” on “Capitol Hill.” Uncle Sam was more the fighting type, of course, but he had God on his or our Side.

Thus the First World War posters set the pace, with actor James Montgomery Flagg as model for Red Cross fundraising and recruitment messages, not to mention contemporary sheet music illustrations and magazine covers. We have been stuck with the guy ever since, actually recreated as a comic book action hero by none less than Will Eisner in the 1940s.

This book’s Uncle Sam is anything but clear-minded or resolute. He’s homeless and hapless, a broken old man wandering through a deeply sick society. The cruelty of the present for this pathetic dumpster-diver drives him back to a real and imagined past, or many pasts. He finds himself, for instance, in a modest domestic scene with a kindly wife during the Revolutionary War. She explains that George Washington is a slaveowner protecting his own fortune. Sam, a healthy looking Sam in his 30s, can only say what he will say again and again, “I pray this war will make us better. All I know is that I can’t let it make things worse.” Off to battle, presumably. Too soon, he finds himself in a modern USA where “I walk past a nation that’s covered in equal parts of dirt and despair.”

The voices inside his head won’t go away, like Andrew Jackson’s Secretary of State on Native Americans, “We must frequently promote their interest against their inclination” as they are sent on the notorious death-march Trail of Tears. Sometimes, it’s John Brown who is quoted, sometimes journalists describing the inhuman behavior of white mobs assaulting a black prisoner later on in the nineteenth century.

Uncle Sam, at the scene of Civil War battles, is particularly beset. Here, if anywhere, is the Good War. My own Great Great Grandfather, an Abolitionist who marched with Sherman through Georgia, making the continuation of slavery impossible, would surely have said so. And yet it did not seem to bring the purge of racist sins that idealistic Americans hoped for, quite the contrary: the excuse in advance for other wars with idealistic claims entirely false.

A survivor of the Dust Bowl, looking remarkably like the wife of the first Uncle Sam, can only say, “We had it coming.” Rip away the top soil for short term gain and what else should be expected; the craving for constant expansion provided its own rationale and rationalizations.

And so Sam grinds onward into the 1980s and his apparent appropriation by the New Right where public manipulation becomes almost open: “If there’s one thing I learned about you, the American people…it’s that you…fear change.” Sell them emotional security, sell them the image of liberalism as the enemy, and any protester can be bashed on the head, jailed, even slaughtered.

In Sam’s head, he is still marching to the tune of Yankee Doodle, while in reality he sits in jail, referencing MLK, Joe Hill, Sacco and Vanzetti.  Sooner or later, he gets to the slave pens and is released as harmless, only to meet Miss Britannica, Sam’s original.

The horrors relived from here to the end of the book are less words than pictures, and less horrific in images (with some exceptions) than in the messages being driven home, page after page. An Empire acts like this or it wouldn’t be an empire.

Paul Buhle

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CALAVERA PI #1 (of 4) comics review

CALAVERA PI #1 (of 4). Art & Script by Marco Finnegan. Oni Press.

I was recently walking around the Mission District in San Francisco on the Friday night of Dia De Los Muertos. As a Mexican American, it immediately strikes a deep chord with me. It has been a while since I took part in any of the rituals: a mix of solemn tribute to the dead and festive gathering. It did my heart good to see people wearing makeup to look like skeletons. And so, with that in mind, I’m all in with this comic book, an audacious Mexican crime noir that pushes limits and doesn’t hold back.

The story is set in 1920s Hollywood, a time and place all too rife with possibilities for crime fiction. This first issue opens with a wealthy white man in front of his mansion barking orders for that night’s debauched party which includes sex trafficking. The young Mexican women are being ushered in when the house maid decides she’s seen enough and attacks her boss. This action triggers her immediately being shot dead which unleashes a whole chain of events: a Chicano private detective, caught in the crossfire, is transformed at some point after his own death. Juan Calavera becomes Calavera P.I., a hero rising from the grave.

As general storytelling trends keep evolving in the book market and comics industry, the opportunity is there to get it right more often than not with just the right balance of authentic voices. What I’m saying is that people know when they’re into a story that rings true. Consider, for instance, Stephen King, just to pick a writer you most likely have read at some point. He is, on average, someone you know what to expect from. I think Marco Finnegan (Morning Star, Night People), the creator-artist-writer of this comic book, is pulling together an honest and exciting story which is building towards another creator you can rely upon for good stuff.

Finnegan knows when to slip in some Spanish and not worry if some readers will not know the meaning. Basically, it’s pretty self-evident. There’s conflict. People end up swearing at each other. Enough said! The same goes for his use of Mexican culture. It’s all smooth and relatable. Readers will enter Juan Calavera’s world and feel at home.

Marco Finnegan is at the right place and time. His artwork has won him a good share of fans and praise: a stripped-down and punchy style. I appreciate the concise and precise impact it makes, like Pop Art. We need that right now. By all counts, these are tough times we’re entering into. What better way to meet the moment than a brash comic book story about not succumbing to despair but, instead, fighting back?

I have to hand it to Marco Finnegan since he’s pulling double duty as the artist and writer. The whole crunchy vibe here brings to mind all the amazing crime comics by the creative team of writer Ed Brubaker and artist Sean Phillips. Check out their work on Criminal. If I narrow it down to one auteur cartoonist, how about David Lapham? Try out Stray Bullets or Murder Me Dead. I believe Finnegan follows in this tradition and I have high hopes for him. Going back to trends, we need his voice now more than ever. I know that Finnegan has hit the nail on the head. Now, let’s get more and more readers on board. How will we make that happen? Well, comics reviews lead the way as does word of mouth. This is just the first issue and there will be a trade paperback before you know it. So, check it out and, if you dig it, let people know.

Rating: 10 out of 10.

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Hurricane Nancy Art: Making Sense of the News

Here is a new work of art by Hurricane Nancy. We all have our thoughts on current events these days. It can be a lot to process and sometimes art can help lead the way. In this latest piece, it looks like someone is being torn in two directions without any clear path ahead. Well, time will tell.

Be sure to visit Hurricane Nancy and check out her art for sale.

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Eric Drooker: NAKED CITY interview

Eric Drooker is that consummate artist, the ideal artist that young people generally aspire to be. Take a look at the short film below to gain some perspective on Mr. Drooker. This is a short film he did in New York in 1981, a tumultuous time with undeniable relevance to today; a timeless film. We will always need to remind ourselves we have nothing to fear but fear itself. I had the honor of putting together this studio visit with the artist. We discuss his latest graphic novel, Naked City, published by Dark Horse Comics. In it, we find a set of characters, representative of all humanity, who are basically reminding themselves that they have nothing to fear but fear itself.

Born and raised on Manhattan Island, Eric Drooker began to paste his art on the streets at night as a teenager. Since then, his drawings and posters have become a familiar sight in the global street art movement, and his paintings appear frequently on covers of the New Yorker.

Eric Drooker in his studio.

His first book, Flood, won the American Book Award, followed by Blood Song (soon to be a feature film). Naked City is the third volume in Drooker’s City Trilogy. His graphic novels have been translated into numerous languages in Europe, Latin America, and Asia. After designing the animation for the film Howl, he was hired for a project at DreamWorks Animation.

The City Trilogy: Flood (1992), Blood Song (2002), Naked City (2024).

Drooker’s art is in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Library of Congress. He is available for speaking engagements and frequently gives slide lectures at colleges and universities. Mr. Drooker’s art is available for sale at his website.

At heart, Eric Drooker is a street artist with all the energy that comes with it: everything from his zest for creating work to his zeal for talking about his art. Just give the floor over to him and he’ll work his magic, maybe even play the harmonica if necessary.

The New Yorker, October 28, 2024, The Money Issue. “Crushing Wealth” by Eric Drooker.

“Troubadour” by Eric Drooker.

The New Yorker, March 6, 1995, “Under Bridges” by Eric Drooker.

“Tomorrow” by Eric Drooker.

While I was in his studio, he picked up a copy of The New Yorker magazine, with his art gracing the cover, an issue published just the prior week, and launched into a talk about how the magazine cover functions as a form of street art. While the magazine has a healthy readership, it also reaches a vast number of people who regularly consume just the art on the cover as they come across the magazine on display in various locales whether in a bookstore or in the dentist’s office.

The New Yorker, November 9, 2009, “Autumn in Central Park” by Eric Drooker.

The New Yorker, August 6, 2007, oil on canvas, 20″x16″, “Urban Jungle” by Eric Drooker.

Naked City got on my radar earlier this year and I’m so grateful that I got an advance copy. My friend, and colleague in the comics world, Paul Buhle, wrote the review for us here at Comics Grinder. Without a doubt, Naked City is a significant graphic novel with the added distinction of being part of a trilogy, part of a great artistic process. We, as artists, can and must do some planning ahead on projects while, at the same time, allow the art process to do its thing. Such is the case with Naked City. It is as much a graphic novel about being an artist as it is simply about being human and being true to yourself.

“The Argument” by Eric Drooker.

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