Thorn & Fone Bone are a little worse for wear. |
Fone Bone is so adorable. |
The rat creatures have missed out on a delicious quiche. |
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Thorn & Fone Bone are a little worse for wear. |
Fone Bone is so adorable. |
The rat creatures have missed out on a delicious quiche. |
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I think I have a new hero in Julia Wertz.
To ring in the New Year, I treated myself to two of her comic autobiographies, and to say I had a good laugh or two would be an understatement. Before proceeding, though, I must warn that those who don’t have a tolerance for crude humor or profanity, these might not be the right books for you.
Fart Party, published in 2006 after originally appearing in smaller pieces online, is Wertz’s story about life as a 23-year-old in San Francisco. In it, we’re introduced to boyfriend Oliver, her younger brother, her older brother, and her mother (my favorite character). She lives on her own, works a job she loves, and does her comics on the side.
The story is told through vignettes that progress chronologically. To give the story some sort of anchor, I’d say it’s primarily about the development and ultimate death of the relationship between herself and Oliver. That’s not to say every comic is about that, but he plays a lead character in her life at this point, and she spends significant time talking about the growth and development of their relationship, up to its premature death. The end of their relationship comes thanks to his acceptance to school in Vermont and the reluctance on both their parts to change their minds — Julia’s to leave the city she loves and Oliver’s to engage in a long distance relationship.
But this is also the story of a girl learning how to devote herself to her art. Anyone who has had a passion — be it drawing, music, writing — will relate to Julia’s struggle to create. Amid the challenges thrown in her way, she still finds small pockets of time and energy to tell her stories, and she finds the humor in every day situations for fodder. And yes, she’ll even tackle that itself in more than one scene.
Although the art of the comics is nothing spectacular (simple pen and ink), it compliments the writing well. Wertz has an incredible sense of humor and although it is crude and at times offensive, this is the lens through which we get to know her characters so well. Julia is a 20-something navigating the tricky terrain of being on her own for the first time in a big city where things don’t always come easy nor where there is some sort of instructional guide. There are entire comics devoted to drinking the day away, the fact that cheese can make up a person’s complete diet, and how finding a television show you love can turn you into a zombie who needs nothing more than their next fix (ahem, not that that’s relatable or anything). But they are supplemented with comics about having her comics published, where she finds her inspiration, and the moment she knew her relationship with Oliver was officially over.
Fart Party’s tone is direct and honest, and although it is humorous, there is a lot of heart behind the story. This is a collection that begs to be read cover to cover rather than in spurts to get the full impact — in one strip you will be laughing to tears and in the next, you’ll simply be in tears because you understand completely how awful what’s happening really is.
What I found I loved in Fart Party I thought worked better in her 2010 book, Drinking at the Movies. Although the artistic style remains the same (and still works), the story arc and character growth and development are top notch in this volume. It feels more like a straightforward autobiography.
Drinking at the Movies chronicles 25-to-26-year-old Julia’s decision to leave San Francisco — the city she loves — and try to make it by in the mean streets of New York City. Now single, she has a little more freedom to roam, and like all good artists, she believes NYC (and the struggle to survive there) is a natural progression. Even though she doesn’t know a soul there, she packs up and moves.
We watch as she bounces between low-paying part-time jobs that offer no fulfillment, apartments that come with a myriad of quirks, and a variety of interesting health and art related challenges. She struggles with learning about her older brother’s inability to control his drug addiction, a family member’s cancer, and how to cope with her father’s new life with her step mother in Arizona. Then there’s the challenge of discovering how a city so different from the place she lived the first 25 years of her life works.
For me, Julia was a fuller character in this volume, and perhaps it’s because this is more a story of her figuring who she is through herself rather than a story about her relationships with other people and how they make her who she is. She has a lot of challenges and doesn’t deal with things particularly well, but they’re honest. She struggles to find the time and drive to make her art amid the personal challenges — and in this book there are far more personal and family challenges than in Fart Party — and she maintains a sense of humor throughout her huge and minute struggles.
Because I don’t want to spoil the end of the book, I won’t explain why this book resonates so strongly with me. But Julia comes to a conclusion at the end about herself and about where she is in her life that is something I still wrestle with on a daily basis. It’s a moment I felt coming and one which I wanted to tell her to look out for, but because I still can’t come to terms with it in my own life, I kind of hoped for a bigger fall. I suppose that will be tackled in her next volume.
Maybe Wertz’s style can best be described as what would happen to Daria when she leaves home and tries to make it on her own. Her books encapsulate life in one’s 20s with spot on humor and unflinching rawness. They are sad and funny, full of hope and hopelessness, crudeness, rudeness, and downright heartfelt moments. I am eager to dive into her other work and look forward to the possibility alluded to in Drinking at the Movies that Fart Party may become a television show in the near future.
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Best Book of 2010
Monsters of Men by Patrick Ness
Best Book of 2010 – Runner Up
The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex
Best Audiobook
His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman
Best Audiobook – Runner Up #1
Bog Child by Siobhan Dowd
Best Audiobook – Runner Up #2
Feed by M.T. Anderson
Worst Narration
Tie: First Light by Rebecca Stead and Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson
Both pretty good stories (First Light in particular) made almost unbearable by poor narration – bad accents, voices that sound much too old for the characters, hokey inflections. Too bad.
Best Graphic Novel
Fables by Bill Willingham
Book I Most Look Forward to Giving to Patrons
Delirium by Lauren Oliver
Biggest Disappointment
Across the Universe by Beth Revis
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Bone, Volumes 1 and 2
Jeff Smith
Ghostopolis
Doug TenNapel
Fables, Volumes 1-12
Bill Willingham
Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Life
Bryan Lee O’Malley
The Sons of Liberty #1
Alexander and Joseph Lagos
Amulet: The Stonekeeper
Kazu Kibuishi
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While I haven’t had quite as much time to read lately, as I’ve started a new job last week, here are some recent Middle Grade reads of mine!
Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword, by Barry Deutsch: A charming graphic novel for middle-graders about Mirka, an eleven-year-old Jewish Orthodox girl whose life goal is to fight dragons. In her quest to find a sword of her own, she disagrees with her siblings, breaks free from the standards imposed upon her by her stepmother, thwarts the wild pig who has been making her life miserable, and fights a six-legged troll. Deutsch’s illustrations are bold and simplistic, Mirka is feisty and spunky, and the book is a wonderful introduction to Jewish Orthodox traditions. A great transition book for fans of Babymouse and Fashion Kitty.
The Lost Hero (The Heroes of Olympus #1), by Rick Riordan: I was eagerly anticipating Riordan’s Camp Half-Blood spin-off, which lived up to the hype, for the most part. Riordan has a wonderful, kid-friendly (especially boy-friendly) writing style, filled with non-stop action, blunt, attention-grabbing chapter openings, and vivid glimpses of mythological creatures. The Lost Hero follows three new Camp Half-Blood campers: Jason, the first known son of Zeus, who has a mysterious case of amnesia; Piper, a daughter of Aphrodite, whose movie-star father has been kidnapped and who struggles with loyalty to her new friends; and Leo, the son of Hephaestus who can emit fire from his bare hands. Fans of Percy Jackson will love the reappearance of beloved characters, along with the “Percy Jackson” name-dropping. While older readers will most likely guess the big plot twist from miles away, Riordan builds to his conclusion in a well-paced manner. The only quibble I have with this book is the ‘romance’ that blooms between Piper and Jason, which just seems rushed and formulaic–thrown in there just for the sake of a relationship.
Penny Dreadful, by Laurel Snyder: I absolutely fell in love with this magical, enchanting book. When Penny’s father suddenly quits his high-powered job, she and her family move to Tennessee, to a little town in the middle of nowhere, where Penny’s mother has inherited a house from her great-aunt. (Which is wonderful, because Penny has just wished, hoping against hope that magic is real, for her family to be saved from ruin, and for an adventure!) However, the family soon comes to find that they have also inherited the tenants in their new house, families who live rent-free in the various zany additions that were added on to the original building. Penny soon meets a collection of oddball neighbors who charm both her family and the readers, and who assist her as she schemes how to save her family from financial ruin. The transformation of Penelope from a bored, yearning rich girl to a content, free Penny is lovely to behold (it also doesn’t hurt that Penny is a reader!). Snyder has a true gift for characterization, and I can not wait to read her next book. Readers of this will love Kate Messner’s The Brilliant Fall of Gianna Z. and Jeanne Birdsall’s The Penderwicks.