A site for links and information about graphic novels for anyone interested in reading them. I hope that you find my posts informative, useful, or entertaining. Thanks for stopping by!
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Love and Rockets Month Coda
Thanks for reading my ramblings about Love and Rockets this month, and thank you also for bearing with me when I fell behind and was not posting as regularly as I would like. It has been a difficult yet rewarding experience for me, and I have a new-found respect for those who review comics on a regular, daily basis. This endeavor is way harder than it looks, and I hope that I have given you something to think about, enjoy, or look into.
I realize that I have presented the first volume of this series in the order they were originally collected, but today they are available in a different format. Those books are detailed in this helpful guide How to Read Love and Rockets by Fantagraphics, the fine folks who have published this series for the past three decades. I truly feel that the Hernandez brothers have created some of the best works available in graphic novel form. They are well worth checking out, if you have not already.
Happy anniversary, Gilbert, Jaime, and Mario! Thank you for all the great comics!
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Love and Rockets Volumes 13-15
Love and Rockets month comes to a thrilling conclusion today as I post about the last three volumes in the original run of the series. Enjoy!
Chester Square
This book ranges far and wide with its plot. For the most part it follows Maggie as she wanders about, trying to make sense of all the upheaval and loss in her life. For stretches of the story, she is stranded at a bus station in Chester Square, where she has to contend with lonely guys, a surly prostitute named Ruby, suspicious business owners, and local law enforcement. Alternatively, she also ends up on the road with professional wrestlers, and she muddies the waters of her personal and professional relationships along the way. All the while, she encounters conflict and decisions about who she should be and who she should associate with.
Names are a big deal in this book, and it seems that Maggie goes through many in the course of growing up. Not really a cipher, she is more a lost soul casting about looking for an identity and fulfillment, only to be deterred by bad relationships, tragedies, or just plain poor planning. Her journey feels like some sort of allegory or morality tale, with the elements of a cowboy western, Jack Kirby's Fourth World (a couple of characters look a little too much like Oberon and Highfather to be coincidental), Lee and Ditko's Spider-Man,and a Twilight Zone episode. Maggie is a wanderer in search of meaning, a sort of woman-with-no-name. Or rather, a woman-with-many-names.
Jaime's artful weaving of stories and characters evokes so many emotions and touchstones that this book feels monument, a meaningful highpoint in the Locas narrative and also in comics in general. The ending is a thing of beauty, sweet but not treacly. Jaime would eventually return to this series and these characters, but there is a sense of closure here and a rare moment of happiness after much drama and travail. Reading this book was a rewarding and moving experience for me.
My Rating: A masterpiece. Probably my favorite book from this first series.
Luba Conquers the World
Gilbert has long juggled a huge cast in his Palomar stories, and with this book he pushes his limits even further. Luba's past and present collide here, as she has grown older, settled down some, and moved to the United States. We get to see how life has treated her and also how a large number of the other characters have aged and established their own lives. We see them in America working as entertainers, entrepreneurs, and menial workers. They cover a gamut of sensations and fates.
Add to all these happenings flashbacks to Luba's childhood as well as Maria's (Luba's mother) life, including her involvement with criminals, violence, and her various children. It turns out Luba has two long-lost sisters, Petra and Fritz, who have their own stories and relations to account.
All of these ingredients combine into a huge story motor that has many moving parts. At times, scenes burst forth with emotion, energy, and intrigue. It is easy to get lost in all of these interconnected narratives, but certain themes and images appear again and again. The mysterious nature of family relations are examined, as well as the cycles that generations may follow. The characters frequently try to raise themselves up and strive for the best things in life, but they spend much time in the grime and grit of life. Still, Gilbert exposes the positive that can come from glorying in those places. Wallowing in the mud might be undesirable in the long run, but it is where many people get their starts and there are joys in these visceral experiences.
Life here is depicted as striving to reach for something better, something brighter, something maybe out of reach. Luba's version of conquering the world, like Gilbert's work in general I could contend, is humble, humbling, and amazing.
My Rating:There is so much packed in this volume, and it left me breathless, exhausted, and mostly fulfilled.
Hernandez Satyricon
This volume is a sort of catch-all, collecting various and sundry tales from all three Hernandez brothers. The stories are frenetic, full of crazy energy, and they are frequently profane, playful, and shocking. I can't say anything really stands out as particularly memorable beyond shock value, but the half of this book that contains promotional drawings, calendar panels, alternative covers, and poster art is full of crazy, beautiful ideas and gorgeous imagery.
I think this is more a book for long-standing fans who want to see rarities from the series.
My Rating: Mostly for L&R completists.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Love and Rockets Volumes 10-12
As we speed toward the exciting conclusion of Love and Rockets month, I will tackle the last 6 books three at a time. Starting with:
Love and Rockets X
Often described as a Nashville for the 90s, Love and Rockets X is ostensibly about music scenes, with quotations from all kinds of contemporary songs, from rap to more alternative bands, but it is also about racial tensions. These tensions crop up in competing musicians, rival clubs, and lots of macho posturing by people in the streets. Reading that last sentence, readers might just think that Gilbert is treading on Jaime's turf, and this book is partly concerned with capturing the spirit of the day much like Jaime's early work was concerned with capturing the voice of punk rock.
But it also busts out in surprising ways that connect to Gilbert's Palomar stories. We see lots of people who used to live there and who have immigrated over to the US, and their presence casts a different light on the story. More than just capturing the feel of a music scene, this book is also about a diverse cast of characters trying to make their way in a world and the problems that arise from miscommunication and variety. This story is not about a melting pot, but about how various people retain their flavors, sometimes turning out well and sometimes turning toward unrest, strife, or violence.
I think this book could almost be relegated to period piece status, but the presence of those Palomar characters rescues it from that fate. Gilbert's musician characters just don't do much for me. The opening and closing sequences that bookend the story seek to make this story seem universal, but to me they come off a little forced and cliched. Still, there are some great moments to be found in this book.
My Rating: Maybe my least favorite L&R book. Still well above the Mendoza Line.
Wig Wam Bam
Named after a Sweet song, this volume shows that Jaime's cast is older, though not necessarily wiser. The song reference harkens back to a childhood revelation. This backward glance is nostalgic in a way, but perhaps more wistful, as the characters are all caught up in all kinds of intricacies and relationships and there is little hope of returning to those youthful concerns.
So many things happen in this volume that I am not even going to attempt to summarize, but I will say that it also covers so much emotional ground that it boggles the mind. And the ending is brutal and devastating. This book is dense with action, symbolism, and deft character work. To top things off, the story and the art suit each other so well that the whole operation appears seamless. If I had to choose one word to describe Jaime's work it would be economy. Not a line or panel seems wasted in his delivery of an impactful story.
My Rating: Out of the park. A home run.
Poison River
I cannot tell a lie. This book really impressed me, but it was something I had to read in chunks.
Poison River is a series of stories that span time and space. It tells about Luba, her life before she came to Palomar, and a tangled web of crime, deceit, and longing. Each character gets the spotlight for a story, highlighting a particular event or series of events in their lives. What complicates reading this book is that they all step in and out of each tale, and sometimes they look very different as the time-jumping means they are different ages in different stories.
Reading this book, I was struck by its emotional directness as well as its frank regard for sexuality. It deals with complex issues of determining sexual preferences, including choosing same-sex partners as well as confronting matters of obsession and incest. People's relationships drive their lives, and the complicated webs they weave ensnare the reader in a voyeuristic sense but they also seize the characters themselves as if they are doomed to certain fates all along.
This volume is an ambitious work, a life history done kaleidoscope-style, with constantly shifting main characters. This book is complex, and somewhat bewildering because the reader is constantly trying to reorient at the start of each tale. But, by golly, when you start making connections and realizations, it is a revelation akin to staring at one of those Magic Eye posters and suddenly seeing the image. In the end, there is a sense of the complete picture, even if there is not a single narrative thread that unifies the book. Still, there are plenty of shocking moments, secrets revealed, and emotions tweaked to make this a fine reading experience. I just don't recommend reading it all at once.
Full of crescendos and valleys, Poison River may disappoint some because it does not follow convention narrative patterns, but I feel it offers a rewarding reading experience. Moreover, this book just begs to be re-read.
My Rating: The opposite of The Death of Speedy, this book is a window that has been shattered. Still, there are many pretty pieces to admire.
Love and Rockets X
Often described as a Nashville for the 90s, Love and Rockets X is ostensibly about music scenes, with quotations from all kinds of contemporary songs, from rap to more alternative bands, but it is also about racial tensions. These tensions crop up in competing musicians, rival clubs, and lots of macho posturing by people in the streets. Reading that last sentence, readers might just think that Gilbert is treading on Jaime's turf, and this book is partly concerned with capturing the spirit of the day much like Jaime's early work was concerned with capturing the voice of punk rock.
But it also busts out in surprising ways that connect to Gilbert's Palomar stories. We see lots of people who used to live there and who have immigrated over to the US, and their presence casts a different light on the story. More than just capturing the feel of a music scene, this book is also about a diverse cast of characters trying to make their way in a world and the problems that arise from miscommunication and variety. This story is not about a melting pot, but about how various people retain their flavors, sometimes turning out well and sometimes turning toward unrest, strife, or violence.
I think this book could almost be relegated to period piece status, but the presence of those Palomar characters rescues it from that fate. Gilbert's musician characters just don't do much for me. The opening and closing sequences that bookend the story seek to make this story seem universal, but to me they come off a little forced and cliched. Still, there are some great moments to be found in this book.
My Rating: Maybe my least favorite L&R book. Still well above the Mendoza Line.
Wig Wam Bam
Named after a Sweet song, this volume shows that Jaime's cast is older, though not necessarily wiser. The song reference harkens back to a childhood revelation. This backward glance is nostalgic in a way, but perhaps more wistful, as the characters are all caught up in all kinds of intricacies and relationships and there is little hope of returning to those youthful concerns.
So many things happen in this volume that I am not even going to attempt to summarize, but I will say that it also covers so much emotional ground that it boggles the mind. And the ending is brutal and devastating. This book is dense with action, symbolism, and deft character work. To top things off, the story and the art suit each other so well that the whole operation appears seamless. If I had to choose one word to describe Jaime's work it would be economy. Not a line or panel seems wasted in his delivery of an impactful story.
My Rating: Out of the park. A home run.
Poison River
I cannot tell a lie. This book really impressed me, but it was something I had to read in chunks.
Poison River is a series of stories that span time and space. It tells about Luba, her life before she came to Palomar, and a tangled web of crime, deceit, and longing. Each character gets the spotlight for a story, highlighting a particular event or series of events in their lives. What complicates reading this book is that they all step in and out of each tale, and sometimes they look very different as the time-jumping means they are different ages in different stories.
Reading this book, I was struck by its emotional directness as well as its frank regard for sexuality. It deals with complex issues of determining sexual preferences, including choosing same-sex partners as well as confronting matters of obsession and incest. People's relationships drive their lives, and the complicated webs they weave ensnare the reader in a voyeuristic sense but they also seize the characters themselves as if they are doomed to certain fates all along.
This volume is an ambitious work, a life history done kaleidoscope-style, with constantly shifting main characters. This book is complex, and somewhat bewildering because the reader is constantly trying to reorient at the start of each tale. But, by golly, when you start making connections and realizations, it is a revelation akin to staring at one of those Magic Eye posters and suddenly seeing the image. In the end, there is a sense of the complete picture, even if there is not a single narrative thread that unifies the book. Still, there are plenty of shocking moments, secrets revealed, and emotions tweaked to make this a fine reading experience. I just don't recommend reading it all at once.
Full of crescendos and valleys, Poison River may disappoint some because it does not follow convention narrative patterns, but I feel it offers a rewarding reading experience. Moreover, this book just begs to be re-read.
My Rating: The opposite of The Death of Speedy, this book is a window that has been shattered. Still, there are many pretty pieces to admire.
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Flies on the Ceiling
Flies on the Ceiling
"Flies on the Ceiling" is a mature, masterful story about a breakdown. It is a dreamlike and horrific, as reality is melded with fantasy when Izzy has to deal with a choice that haunts her. She cannot run away from her thoughts, even though she runs far and wide to escape. She does find some relief in the form of a surrogate family, but ultimately that does not last. In the end we view this character who had largely been seen as quirky, strange, and sometimes ridiculous as a more realized, though damaged woman. This is a complicated and troubling tale: some see it as hackneyed with blatant symbolism while others view it as the intersection of grief, religiosity, and recovery.
The other Locas characters are well-represented in the rest of the stories. We learn more about Ray's life and childhood; we see how unhinged and needy Penny Century is as she tries to sabotage Maggie and Ray so to promote Maggie and Hopey. We also glimpse into Doyle's life and see how he began on the path of violence, grifting, and drifting. He is a pathetic character who seems capable of so much more, but he continually gets beaten down by life events. When I heard Jaime talk about his work this summer at HeroesCon, he spoke of his proclivity to act as a villain who tortures his characters. That vibe comes through in this volume loud and clear.
Gilbert does not have much work in this volume, but his impressionistic, dreamlike bio of artist Frida Kahlo is so full of admiration, craft, and daring imagery that it holds its own with the title tale. The rest of his entries read like experiments in form and surreality.
My Rating: Like the movie said, "There are a million stories in the naked city." Jaime is determined to tell them all, and tell them well. A couple of throwaway tales detract from the book as a whole.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Blood of Palomar
Blood of Palomar
Yesterday, I reviewed Jaime's first masterpiece, The Death of Speedy, and today I am writing about the first solo Gilbert book in the series. As good as this book is I do not really count it as his first masterpiece because of the punch of his first "Heartbreak Soup" story. Still, there are a million serial killer stories out there, but "Human Diastrophism" stands out from the rest because of its small town context, human characters, and political overtones.
The book starts with three short stories and they are remarkable for their brevity, soul, and emotional impact. The drawings of young Pipo's pout and Vicente's sly smile from the first tale "Sugar -n- Spikes" are brilliant and striking, and they contribute to the excellent pacing and stagecraft. This great sense of the theatrical carries over into the main story, a huge saga of political and romantic intrigue as well as murder.
The story captures the zeitgeist of late Cold War paranoia, where people feared atomic conflagration. Tonantzin is probably most symbolic of this feeling, at first the comely barbosa vendor who inspires many men to lust becomes suddenly politicized, speaking out against the overbearing influence of the US and USSR superpowers, even in their small corner of the world. She becomes a protester and advocate, alienating some and firing up others.
The townsfolk are concerned with ridding themselves of bands of marauding monkeys who are scouring their land and creating havoc. The brutality of slaughtering these beasts is juxtaposed by the actions of a monster in their midst, someone who is killing random townsfolk. Additionally, the sense of paranoia that seizes the people in town is palpable.
As someone is killing random people in town, there is a witness who is paralyzed from speaking, though he does try to communicate his knowledge through art. This Cassandra-like figure adds a mythic, philosophical aspect to the proceedings. His interludes comment as much on the power and function of art as much as how people respond to incredible and horrific situations.
Perhaps this story is some statement about the price of advancement or progress. That is not for me to say definitively, but what matters is that there are so many images, symbols, and situations here ripe with meaning that makes many such analyses possible.
I will not ruin the ending, but I will say that it is one of the most powerful fictional conclusions I have experienced, shocking, horrible, and sweetly sorrowful.
My Rating: A heart-rending, impressive classic. Gilbert's ability to manage a huge cast is exceptional.
Yesterday, I reviewed Jaime's first masterpiece, The Death of Speedy, and today I am writing about the first solo Gilbert book in the series. As good as this book is I do not really count it as his first masterpiece because of the punch of his first "Heartbreak Soup" story. Still, there are a million serial killer stories out there, but "Human Diastrophism" stands out from the rest because of its small town context, human characters, and political overtones.
The book starts with three short stories and they are remarkable for their brevity, soul, and emotional impact. The drawings of young Pipo's pout and Vicente's sly smile from the first tale "Sugar -n- Spikes" are brilliant and striking, and they contribute to the excellent pacing and stagecraft. This great sense of the theatrical carries over into the main story, a huge saga of political and romantic intrigue as well as murder.
The story captures the zeitgeist of late Cold War paranoia, where people feared atomic conflagration. Tonantzin is probably most symbolic of this feeling, at first the comely barbosa vendor who inspires many men to lust becomes suddenly politicized, speaking out against the overbearing influence of the US and USSR superpowers, even in their small corner of the world. She becomes a protester and advocate, alienating some and firing up others.
The townsfolk are concerned with ridding themselves of bands of marauding monkeys who are scouring their land and creating havoc. The brutality of slaughtering these beasts is juxtaposed by the actions of a monster in their midst, someone who is killing random townsfolk. Additionally, the sense of paranoia that seizes the people in town is palpable.
As someone is killing random people in town, there is a witness who is paralyzed from speaking, though he does try to communicate his knowledge through art. This Cassandra-like figure adds a mythic, philosophical aspect to the proceedings. His interludes comment as much on the power and function of art as much as how people respond to incredible and horrific situations.
Perhaps this story is some statement about the price of advancement or progress. That is not for me to say definitively, but what matters is that there are so many images, symbols, and situations here ripe with meaning that makes many such analyses possible.
I will not ruin the ending, but I will say that it is one of the most powerful fictional conclusions I have experienced, shocking, horrible, and sweetly sorrowful.
My Rating: A heart-rending, impressive classic. Gilbert's ability to manage a huge cast is exceptional.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
The Death of Speedy
The Death of Speedy
This book is the first of these volumes to contain work from only one brother. Jaime's work here ends up on all kinds of "best of comics" lists. People love it, and it is easy to see why. A lot happens: Hopey goes on tour with her band La Llorana. Izzy's little brother Speedy and his boys are running in some tough circles. Maggie is left to her own devices and begins a relationship with Ray, an artist who is a decent guy and in many ways a stand-on for Jaime Hernandez. Hopey keeps missing opportunities to contact and reconnect with Maggie. After some band drama, she ends up spending two weeks in a huge mansion with Penny Century having casual sex with a large musician named Texas. Aunt Vicki gives Maggie a job and keeps sweeping her off on wrestling road trips.
Not only does much happen, there is also a gamut of emotions. The drama of macho posturing and the random danger that comes from armed young men revenging perceived disrespect. The pettiness of young couples trying to get back at one another for small slights. The pathos when Speedy tells Maggie he loves her and only her and she just cannot deal. The sad release of Speedy telling Izzy not to worry about him any more. The alternate monotony and random mayhem that happens during life on the road. The giddiness of the first days of a love affair.
For a person like me who did not take Jaime's work as seriously or with as much regard as his brother's, reading this book is a revelation. All the details and small goings-on from prior stories in these characters' lives suddenly cohere in this monumental work. Speedy, who up until this book was a relatively two-dimensional background character, steps into more prominence, and we see realize he is of more substance. Jaime's artfulness and incredibly subtle craftsmanship appears in full relief here, coalescing into a popular culture masterpiece that elevates the mundane, elucidates people's everyday lives, and portrays a complex array of emotions and relationships.
This book will make you laugh, cry, and want to go to a loud spectacle. It will also make you fall in love with all these people, which makes it hard to let some of them go.
My Rating: All the little pieces add up to a great, big, beautiful stained glass window of stories.
Labels:
Jaime Hernandez,
Latinos,
Locas,
Love and Rockets,
mature readers,
trade paperback
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Duck Feet
Duck Feet
So far, I am learning how difficult it is to review these early volumes that are more anthologies of stories from both brothers. I am going the bullet points and brief commentary route again:
Gilbert's stories:
My Rating: Contains some of my favorite stories, but it is more uneven than some of my favorite volumes.
So far, I am learning how difficult it is to review these early volumes that are more anthologies of stories from both brothers. I am going the bullet points and brief commentary route again:
Gilbert's stories:
- "The Mystery Wen"- A simple story about the cerebral Heraclio being a hypochondriac who fears going to the doctor.
- "The Way Things Are Going" - A walk on the dingy streets that some of the characters find themselves on when they leave Palomar looking for work. It reads like a short, noirish comic written by Bukowski. That's a good thing.
- "Duck Feet" - A creepy witch story that touches on the town's superstitions, kooky children, haunted trees, indigenous people, the law, and the mundane goings on in Palomar. Surreal, surprising, and suspenseful.
- "Bullnecks and Bracelets" - I am not even going to try to sum up all that happens in this story. It is far-ranging, sheds light into the lives and romances of a great many Palomar characters, and just plain amazing in its scope. This is the first of Gilbert's forays into making a Nashville-like story. Think of it as a short, magical history of Palomar, told with pinache and punch.
- "For the Love of Carmen" - The very first Love and Rockets story I read (in an anthology), and it knocked my socks off. A look at two very different characters that make for a contentious, complimentary, and loving couple. I just marvel at Carmen's combination of bluster and vulnerability. This story may seem sappy to some, but I love how it all comes together.
- "The Adventures of Rocky and Fumble" - By now you know I really like these stories and wish there were more of them. This one is part Huck Finn, part Andy Griffith Show, part Good Times, with a robot. I like the mix of comedy, dread, and whistfulness.
- "Locas" & "Locas versus Locos" & "Secrets of Life and Death"- Maggie ruminates about her weight and catches up with Rand Race. This short, sitcom-ish story kicks off a series of glimpses into various parts of a day in the lives of our heroines. Teresa wants to date Hopey. Hopey wants to date Maggie. A few other folks want to date Maggie, too. There is a whole lot of maneuvering, canoodling, and coach surfing here. Doyle is my favorite.
- Mojado Power" - A "boys will be boys" story with swearing, posturing, and arguing over the relative merits of Barbara Streisand. Just what you expect to find in a Love and Rockets book.
- "Rena" - A brief 2-page look into the former wrestling queen's life in Zymbodia. Mostly involves bickering with Duke and Bernie.
- "Rocket Rhodes" - A sad coda to the Rocky and Fumble stories. Rocky is grown up, stranded on an alien planet, and without much contact or hope of returning to Earth. A weird mix of hopefulness that devolves into adult disillusionment. Jaime can be cruel to his characters sometimes.
My Rating: Contains some of my favorite stories, but it is more uneven than some of my favorite volumes.
Monday, October 15, 2012
House of Raging Women
House of Raging Women
By now in the series, the brothers have shown just how much thought and design have gone into their stories. They tell tales from the past, fill in the backstories of their characters and cities, plus they keep us abreast of what is going on in the present.
Also, there is a whole lot of wrestling in this book. And the brothers show a lot about their popular culture roots, lovingly treating this populist, often-considered-vulgar sport. They delve into the history and mythology of wrestling in a variety of these tales, weaving a patchwork that is emblematic of their work in many ways.
Instead of summarizing every story, this time I am going to list each story by brother and give you my impressions and reactions.
Jaime's works here are:
- "La Tona"- A short lead-in to...
- "The Little Monster" - A funny, also troubling look backstage in the world of women's wrestling. India is a little person with rage issues.
- "Queen Rena at 34" - Queen Rena's legal wrangling with a drifter and past opponents makes for a short, entertaining romp.
- "The House of Raging Women" - Another look backstage of the wrestling world that highlights many life choices and strained family relations. Apparently the real drama is what happens where the public can't see.
- "Young Locas" - A poignant tale from Maggie's youth that Jaime would revisit in New Stories #4 in a more measured, devastating manner. A hint at a different path her life could have taken.
- "Locas" - Slices of life, including ripped jeans, haircuts, rock shows, and a trip to the beach. Lots of romantic intrigue and personality make these stories pop.
- "The Adventures of Maggie the Mechanic"- The "real" Maggie reads the "Mechanics" stories dismissively. An amusing meta-commentary on his own work.
- "A True Story" - His getting into the wrestling theme. The real-life story of Keith Franke, who later went on to fame and an early death as "Adorable" Adrian Adonis. Followed by a realer than life epilogue.
- "Boys Will Be Boys" - A throwaway story about how the men of Palomar cannot keep up with the smart, strong women.
- "An American in Palomar" - A tale of double exploitation and heartbreak, with the gorgeous snail seller Tonantzin and the rest of the town falling thrall to an American photographer seeking to capture the "simple" beauty of Palomar.
- "Holidays in the Sun" - A look into the tortured life of Jesus. He is obsessed with Luba, guilty about ruining his family, and despondent in prison. I know I keep saying this, but it is amazing how much gets packed into his stories.
- "Love Bites"- An argument between Heraclio and Carmen. Simultaneously funny, touching, sympathetic, and it has a happy ending. Full disclosure: this couple is probably my favorite duo in Gilbert's comics.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Tears from Heaven
Tears from Heaven
This fourth volume of the Complete Love and Rockets contains a number of interesting stories, continuing the pattern of the brothers building their fictional worlds. It is fascinating for me to re-read this volume and see how much gets telegraphed from this book.
Most of Jaime's Locas stories are rather plain, slice of life entries here. "Locas" and "Locos" do little more than show us scenes from the lives of various characters, and although they are well done in the vein of showing us mundane scenes, they do not pack much dramatic punch. Still the brief mentions of goings-on of Izzy do contain the germs of the heart-rending story that will headline volume 9's "Flies on the Ceiling." I also enjoyed the two stories that shed further light on Penny Century and her romance with gazillionaire H.R. Costigan, but they are lighter pieces of comedy.
I feel the strongest Jaime stories here are the ones about Rocky and her robot Fumble. Seemingly a one-off character from earlier volumes, here we see more about her childhood, family, and aspirations. She also meets Cheetah Torpeda, a robotic space-heroine, and the two go on adventures in another dimension. In some ways this story is a crazy sci-fi romp, but there is a tinge of sadness, too. This story is an elegy of sorts, as when it ends on a seeming cliffhanger, it is one that will not be resolved. It seems a goodbye note to these types of tales as from here on out Jaime will focus almost exclusively on his Locas cast of characters.
On the Gilbert side of things, he also returns to an earlier character, Errata Stigmata, telling the tale of her origins with input from his brother Mario. Her life is a series of surreal, tragic, and fantastic events, including love affairs, adultery, murder, religious fanaticism, art, and schooling. It is quite dizzying to see how much gets packed into such a small space. This is some of the best compressed story-telling in comics, and although I won't say it is the most affecting story, it is full of emotion.
Similar punches of emotion and power ring throughout Gilbert's Palomar stories in this volume. Not only do the brash personalities of Guadalupe and Tonantzin come through in their separate tales, the rest of the cast is more firmly established as well. Gilbert's work ranges from the soap operatic, "it goes-to-11" tone of "Ecce Homo" to the more subdued, yet no less impactful "The Reticent Heart," which tells of an unlikely and consequential love affair.
Rereading these volumes, it occurs to me more why I historically gravitated towards Gilbert's work over Jaime's. It seemed to me more mature and moving, and looking back over these books now I see that maybe it came to a point much earlier than Jaime's. Or perhaps he defined his characters and events more clearly early on. This is not to say that his stories are inferior or unworthy, they are just less thought out it seems to me.
Still now I see how much Jaime was more subtly creating his world and fleshing it out his characters. I feel like I am watching him feel his way through the creative process, and in the later books I'd say he catches up to his brother in spades. Jaime's work to me seems like skilled boxing, with stretches of artifice that lull people until he delivers swift, powerful emotional blows to the face. Today I would never say his work is inferior to his brother's. I just think he took a little longer to tell his stories the way he wanted. Plus, his artwork has always been consistently top notch.
My Rating: This book is a mixed bag of stories ranging from good to excellent.
This fourth volume of the Complete Love and Rockets contains a number of interesting stories, continuing the pattern of the brothers building their fictional worlds. It is fascinating for me to re-read this volume and see how much gets telegraphed from this book.
Most of Jaime's Locas stories are rather plain, slice of life entries here. "Locas" and "Locos" do little more than show us scenes from the lives of various characters, and although they are well done in the vein of showing us mundane scenes, they do not pack much dramatic punch. Still the brief mentions of goings-on of Izzy do contain the germs of the heart-rending story that will headline volume 9's "Flies on the Ceiling." I also enjoyed the two stories that shed further light on Penny Century and her romance with gazillionaire H.R. Costigan, but they are lighter pieces of comedy.
I feel the strongest Jaime stories here are the ones about Rocky and her robot Fumble. Seemingly a one-off character from earlier volumes, here we see more about her childhood, family, and aspirations. She also meets Cheetah Torpeda, a robotic space-heroine, and the two go on adventures in another dimension. In some ways this story is a crazy sci-fi romp, but there is a tinge of sadness, too. This story is an elegy of sorts, as when it ends on a seeming cliffhanger, it is one that will not be resolved. It seems a goodbye note to these types of tales as from here on out Jaime will focus almost exclusively on his Locas cast of characters.
On the Gilbert side of things, he also returns to an earlier character, Errata Stigmata, telling the tale of her origins with input from his brother Mario. Her life is a series of surreal, tragic, and fantastic events, including love affairs, adultery, murder, religious fanaticism, art, and schooling. It is quite dizzying to see how much gets packed into such a small space. This is some of the best compressed story-telling in comics, and although I won't say it is the most affecting story, it is full of emotion.
Similar punches of emotion and power ring throughout Gilbert's Palomar stories in this volume. Not only do the brash personalities of Guadalupe and Tonantzin come through in their separate tales, the rest of the cast is more firmly established as well. Gilbert's work ranges from the soap operatic, "it goes-to-11" tone of "Ecce Homo" to the more subdued, yet no less impactful "The Reticent Heart," which tells of an unlikely and consequential love affair.
Rereading these volumes, it occurs to me more why I historically gravitated towards Gilbert's work over Jaime's. It seemed to me more mature and moving, and looking back over these books now I see that maybe it came to a point much earlier than Jaime's. Or perhaps he defined his characters and events more clearly early on. This is not to say that his stories are inferior or unworthy, they are just less thought out it seems to me.
Still now I see how much Jaime was more subtly creating his world and fleshing it out his characters. I feel like I am watching him feel his way through the creative process, and in the later books I'd say he catches up to his brother in spades. Jaime's work to me seems like skilled boxing, with stretches of artifice that lull people until he delivers swift, powerful emotional blows to the face. Today I would never say his work is inferior to his brother's. I just think he took a little longer to tell his stories the way he wanted. Plus, his artwork has always been consistently top notch.
My Rating: This book is a mixed bag of stories ranging from good to excellent.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Happy Birthday 53rd Birthday, Jaime Hernandez!
Jaime Hernandez grew up in a house full of comic books. He read all kinds, from Dennis to Menace to monster stories to Archie to Uncle Scrooge to superheroes. This disparate array of comics shows up in his work, from his stylized, deceivingly easy, impeccable art to his range of storytelling. He and his brothers drew all kinds of comics, and today he is a creator well known for making his mark in the independent comics scene with the long-running and acclaimed series Love and Rockets he co-produces with his brother Gilbert.
Love and Rockets has been coming out since 1982 and contains a number of different narratives and genres, from realistic stories about Latinos and rock bands to sci-fi tales of space aliens, professional wrestlers, and mechanics. Today the series continues not as a bimonthly series of pamphlets but as an annual volume that is more substantial.
Many of Jaime's stories have focused on a group he called Locas. They are a bunch of women, most of whom are Latinas, who live in California, are in bands or go to a lot of shows, deal with gangs and other urban issues, and also deal with relationship issues. The main character he follows is Maggie, a woman who has been a mechanic but who sometimes has a lack of drive or focus. She has a long history of tumultuous relationships, both with her friend Hopey and also with Ray. These stories are updated, revamped, and more realized Archie stories, set in an adult world where there are no easy answers or completely stock characters.
Considered a master by many, Jaime has won the Inkpot, Kirby, and multiple Harvey Awards for his work. He is not simply a great artist but also is capable of great emotional impact and range with his writing. One of his most recent stories, "The Love Bunglers" is considered to be one of the high-water marks of contemporary comics. But just as easily he can also tell affecting, interesting superhero stories in his own vein, as with his tales of the Ti-Girls.
In one of the highlights of my year, I got to meet Jaime in June at HeroesCon. I even got to be on a panel with him about Love and Rocket's 30th anniversary, having the unenviable task of discussing his artistic influences in front of the man. He was gracious, humble, candid, and a great storyteller. Later the next day, he also took part in a fascinating discussion of his "The Love Bunglers" stories, and later still in the Artist's Alley he drew me a sketch of Penny Century.
Simply put, Jaime is a great guy and a great creator. Happy Birthday to him!
Friday, October 5, 2012
Las Mujeres Perdidas
Las Mujeres Perdidas
If the last volume was notable for Gilbert's extended story "Heartbreak Soup," this one's hallmark is Jaime's "Las Mujeres Perdidas," which follows Maggie as she goes out on another international mechanics mission with her crush/boss/superstar mechanic Rand Race. She deals with jealousy as Rand is also being pursued by a Lois Lane-type journalist and, more significantly, she and Rena Titañon are feared dead after a terrorist bombing. These events send shockwaves in the news and to her friends back home, who fear the worst about her. The story takes a quite rough turn as the duo strive to survive, escape, and find their way back to safety and civilization.
Interspersed in the adventure story are the glimpses of life back home, hinting at the prolonged attention Jaime will pay to the punk rock world of these women in the future. There is an economic and soap operatic flavor to the adventures here, and it feels like Jaime is in some ways working his way through these stories so that he can get to ones he really feels compelled to tell, like the the short tale that closes this volume. With "A Date with Hopey," about one of Hopey's admirers and his misguided attempt at a love connection, we get a glimpse of this endeavor.
Gilbert gets into the punk rock scene himself in this volume, with the brief "Fan Letter," but most of his work in this book builds more into the mythology and universe of Palomar. "Act of Contrition" follows Luba's hesitant relationship with Archie, a local who is smitten by her and is embarrassed to tell her his profession. As the couple go out on the town, the town buzzes with gossip and everybody has an opinion and seems to be somewhat affected. Archie seems like a sweet and likeable guy, and it is difficult not to root for him, though Luba seems more a force of nature and it becomes clear that he might be able to handle or keep up with her.
The other stories "The Whispering Tree" and "The Laughing Sun" establish more local features and background. The first is a short, funny, and haunting account of the local children skulking around a supposedly haunted tree. The second shows us the adolescent gang from volume 2 now all grown up and reunited from their different life trajectories to find their friend Jesus, who blames himself for killing his child and who has disappeared into the mountains outside of town wielding a knife. The goofiness of the old friends reminiscing juxtaposes well with the seriousness, frustration, and concern they feel about their lost comrade and their search for him in the arid and treacherous landscape. The story is at once harrowing, human, and humorous, no small feat to pull off in the space of 20 pages.
My rating: Some great comics from creators who are finding their way through their work.
Chelo's Burden
Chelo's Burden
This volume contains a variety of stories, including some one-page shorts from Gilbert and another of his Errata Stigmata tales, as well as Jaime's "Out of Space," which features a young woman named Rocky and her robot Fumble in a sort of "girl and her dog" tale done sci-fi style. Gilbert's stories are somewhat surreal and impactful, setting forth a style that he would rely on for much of his later work. It also has another installment of Mario's "Somewhere in California..." this time featuring a tale of film-making and foul play.
However, what is most monumental in this book is Gilbert's "Heartbreak Soup," a long tale that is part telenovela, part magical realism. In his first extensive look at the lives and events in Palomar, I was puzzled, amazed, shocked, horrified, bemused, and enchanted by the goings on in town. Luba, a newcomer who has opened up a bathhouse, has people intrigued, gossiping, and in arms about her business, attitude, and many children. Her rival is Chelo, who has her own established bathhouse and who also has an intimate relationship with the sheriff, which gives her some leverage in local dealings. Also the story follows Heraclio, Israel, and the rest of a gang of adolescents as they swagger, brag, and grope to gain understanding and experiences, casting a different perspective on the town. Readers are also privy to a cavalcade of other characters, including Toco, a young, troubled lad, the strong-willed sisters Pipo and Carmen, and the local Casanova Manuel and his many conquests, which lead to many a conflict and eventual heartbreak and tragedy.
What is amazing to me about this story is how quickly and seemingly effortlessly Gilbert draws the reader into a fully realized world. It is so easy to feel familiar with the characters, not to say that they are all cardboard stereotypes. Palomar is a magical, strange, fascinating place to visit, and its inhabitants are endearing, maddening, and frighteningly real. Also amazingly, this story plants many seeds that would produce fruit even decades later.
Jaime's stories in this volume include the slightly superhero-themed "Maggie vs. Maniakk" and "100 Rooms" where we see and learn more about the Locas crew, focusing mainly on Penny Century and her relationship with gazillionaire H.R. Costigan. There are extravagant parties, super-villainous bodyguards, and romantic intrigue as Maggie hides out in a vast mansion and shacks up with a mysterious stranger, but what strikes me most are two things: how fleshed out the characters are and how relatable these happenings are despite the fantastical setting. Like his brother Gilbert, Jaime here demonstrates that he is expert at cutting to the chase, making his characters instantly accessible, and telling complex and compelling tales in deceivingly short order. And this is not even mentioning another Jaime tale, "Toyo's Request," a touching, gritty story where we learn more of the mythology behind Maggie's family friend, the world champion wrestler/international activist Rena Titañon. With this book, the hits just keep on coming.
My rating: Comics world-building at its best. An absolute classic:
Music for Mechanics
Music for Mechanics
This volume reprints the first two issues of the original Fantagraphics series. It contains many short stories and has more of a science fiction bent than later stories in the series. It is also noteworthy for two longer works, Gilbert's "BEM" and Jaime's "Mechanics."
"BEM" introduces us to Luba, though not in the way she would come to be seen in the Palomar stories. Here, she is more a super-powered sorceress and revolutionary who summons a great beast to destroy her enemies. The plot is meandering and difficult to pin down, but it tends to be an action tale with some superheroic tendencies. The art tends to appear more Kirby-superhero influenced here than Gilbert's later style.
"Mechanics" is an epic tale of Maggie doing a job in the fictional country of Zimbodia with Rand Race. Here we get introduced to many of the major players and relationships in Jaime's universe. We meet the main cast of characters, including Hopey, Izzy, and Penny Century, who are back home in the states, reading letters from Maggie. Reading this story, and the series of shorter Mechanics tales interspersed in this volume, I was struck by how much is packed into this sci-fi adventure story. Many of the themes and plots here are still being developed and referenced more thirty years later, though not quite in the same genre.
There is also a Mario Hernandez story, "Somewhere in California..." which is a sci-fi detective tale somewhat in the vein of Blade Runner. He is the brother who most pushed the others to publish their work, and while his style might be called the most rough, it is also full of energy and action.
Among the smaller works from Beto in this volume are "Radio Zero," which introduces us to Errata Stigmata, a character who turns up in several of his memorable stories, and "Music for Monsters," a riff on Kirby monster stories and Jaime's work. The volume ends with "A Little Story," which gives us a brief glimpse into the world of Palomar, the fictional Latin American village where Gilbert would set much of his later work in the first series of Love and Rockets.
Though it seems a bit rough and primordial, this volume shows off the Hernandez Bros. chops well and also introduces us to the sturdiness and longevity of their characters and stories. It is amazing to look back at how many themes, events, and people were conceived here, some seemingly in offhand manner, but that would reappear and loom large in their later works. This volume is almost a comic book Big Bang, a brief, brilliant burst that contains everything that would follow.
My Rating: This volume is a fascinating, dense, and dizzying introduction:
Love and Rockets, Volumes 1-3
Music for Mechanics
This volume reprints the first two issues of the original Fantagraphics series. It contains many short stories and has more of a science fiction bent than later stories in the series. It is also noteworthy for two longer works, Gilbert's "BEM" and Jaime's "Mechanics."
"BEM" introduces us to Luba, though not in the way she would come to be seen in the Palomar stories. Here, she is more a super-powered sorceress and revolutionary who summons a great beast to destroy her enemies. The plot is meandering and difficult to pin down, but it tends to be an action tale with some superheroic tendencies. The art tends to appear more Kirby-superhero influenced here than Gilbert's later style.
"Mechanics" is an epic tale of Maggie doing a job in the fictional country of Zimbodia with Rand Race. Here we get introduced to many of the major players and relationships in Jaime's universe. We meet the main cast of characters, including Hopey, Izzy, and Penny Century, who are back home in the states, reading letters from Maggie. Reading this story, and the series of shorter Mechanics tales interspersed in this volume, I was struck by how much is packed into this sci-fi adventure story. Many of the themes and plots here are still being developed and referenced more thirty years later, though not quite in the same genre.
There is also a Mario Hernandez story, "Somewhere in California..." which is a sci-fi detective tale somewhat in the vein of Blade Runner. He is the brother who most pushed the others to publish their work, and while his style might be called the most rough, it is also full of energy and action.
Among the smaller works from Beto in this volume are "Radio Zero," which introduces us to Errata Stigmata, a character who turns up in several of his memorable stories, and "Music for Monsters," a riff on Kirby monster stories and Jaime's work. The volume ends with "A Little Story," which gives us a brief glimpse into the world of Palomar, the fictional Latin American village where Gilbert would set much of his later work in the first series of Love and Rockets.
Though it seems a bit rough and primordial, this volume shows off the Hernandez Bros. chops well and also introduces us to the sturdiness and longevity of their characters and stories. It is amazing to look back at how many themes, events, and people were conceived here, some seemingly in offhand manner, but that would reappear and loom large in their later works. This volume is almost a comic book Big Bang, a brief, brilliant burst that contains everything that would follow.
My Rating: This volume is a fascinating, dense, and dizzying introduction:
Chelo's Burden
This volume contains a variety of stories, including some one-page shorts from Gilbert and another of his Errata Stigmata tales, as well as Jaime's "Out of Space," which features a young woman named Rocky and her robot Fumble in a sort of "girl and her dog" tale done sci-fi style. Gilbert's stories are somewhat surreal and impactful, setting forth a style that he would rely on for much of his later work. It also has another installment of Mario's "Somewhere in California..." this time featuring a tale of film-making and foul play.
However, what is most monumental in this book is Gilbert's "Heartbreak Soup," a long tale that is part telenovela, part magical realism. In his first extensive look at the lives and events in Palomar, I was puzzled, amazed, shocked, horrified, bemused, and enchanted by the goings on in town. Luba, a newcomer who has opened up a bathhouse, has people intrigued, gossiping, and in arms about her business, attitude, and many children. Her rival is Chelo, who has her own established bathhouse and who also has an intimate relationship with the sheriff, which gives her some leverage in local dealings. Also the story follows Heraclio, Israel, and the rest of a gang of adolescents as they swagger, brag, and grope to gain understanding and experiences, casting a different perspective on the town. Readers are also privy to a cavalcade of other characters, including Toco, a young, troubled lad, the strong-willed sisters Pipo and Carmen, and the local Casanova Manuel and his many conquests, which lead to many a conflict and eventual heartbreak and tragedy.
What is amazing to me about this story is how quickly and seemingly effortlessly Gilbert draws the reader into a fully realized world. It is so easy to feel familiar with the characters, not to say that they are all cardboard stereotypes. Palomar is a magical, strange, fascinating place to visit, and its inhabitants are endearing, maddening, and frighteningly real. Also amazingly, this story plants many seeds that would produce fruit even decades later.
Jaime's stories in this volume include the slightly superhero-themed "Maggie vs. Maniakk" and "100 Rooms" where we see and learn more about the Locas crew, focusing mainly on Penny Century and her relationship with gazillionaire H.R. Costigan. There are extravagant parties, super-villainous bodyguards, and romantic intrigue as Maggie hides out in a vast mansion and shacks up with a mysterious stranger, but what strikes me most are two things: how fleshed out the characters are and how relatable these happenings are despite the fantastical setting. Like his brother Gilbert, Jaime here demonstrates that he is expert at cutting to the chase, making his characters instantly accessible, and telling complex and compelling tales in deceivingly short order. And this is not even mentioning another Jaime tale, "Toyo's Request," a touching, gritty story where we learn more of the mythology behind Maggie's family friend, the world champion wrestler/international activist Rena Titañon. With this book, the hits just keep on coming.
My rating: Comics world-building at its best. An absolute classic:
Las Mujeres Perdidas
If the last volume was notable for Gilbert's extended story "Heartbreak Soup," this one's hallmark is Jaime's "Las Mujeres Perdidas," which follows Maggie as she goes out on another international mechanics mission with her crush/boss/superstar mechanic Rand Race. She deals with jealousy as Rand is also being pursued by a Lois Lane-type journalist and, more significantly, she and Rena Titañon are feared dead after a terrorist bombing. These events send shockwaves in the news and to her friends back home, who fear the worst about her. The story takes a quite rough turn as the duo strive to survive, escape, and find their way back to safety and civilization.
Interspersed in the adventure story are the glimpses of life back home, hinting at the prolonged attention Jaime will pay to the punk rock world of these women in the future. There is an economic and soap operatic flavor to the adventures here, and it feels like Jaime is in some ways working his way through these stories so that he can get to ones he really feels compelled to tell, like the the short tale that closes this volume. With "A Date with Hopey," about one of Hopey's admirers and his misguided attempt at a love connection, we get a glimpse of this endeavor.
Gilbert gets into the punk rock scene himself in this volume, with the brief "Fan Letter," but most of his work in this book builds more into the mythology and universe of Palomar. "Act of Contrition" follows Luba's hesitant relationship with Archie, a local who is smitten by her and is embarrassed to tell her his profession. As the couple go out on the town, the town buzzes with gossip and everybody has an opinion and seems to be somewhat affected. Archie seems like a sweet and likeable guy, and it is difficult not to root for him, though Luba seems more a force of nature and it becomes clear that he might be able to handle or keep up with her.
The other stories "The Whispering Tree" and "The Laughing Sun" establish more local features and background. The first is a short, funny, and haunting account of the local children skulking around a supposedly haunted tree. The second shows us the adolescent gang from volume 2 now all grown up and reunited from their different life trajectories to find their friend Jesus, who blames himself for killing his child and who has disappeared into the mountains outside of town wielding a knife. The goofiness of the old friends reminiscing juxtaposes well with the seriousness, frustration, and concern they feel about their lost comrade and their search for him in the arid and treacherous landscape. The story is at once harrowing, human, and humorous, no small feat to pull off in the space of 20 pages.
My rating: Some great comics from creators who are finding their way through their work.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Love and Rockets Month Begins!
Love and Rockets #1 was published on September, 1982. This landmark issue featured work from the Hernandez brothers, Gilbert, Jaime, and Mario, and the series has become one of the paragons of independent comics publishing. It features a variety of stories, from science fiction and superheroes to surreal and horror stories, but mostly it focuses on people's lives and relationships. These people come from small towns, like Gilbert's fictional Palomar, or urban places, such as Jaime's Hoppers, a fictional version of their hometown Oxnard, California.
To commemorate the 30th Anniversary of this landmark series, this month I will be reviewing the first fifteen trade paperbacks that reprint the entire first series #1-50.
Check in tomorrow for the first installment!
To commemorate the 30th Anniversary of this landmark series, this month I will be reviewing the first fifteen trade paperbacks that reprint the entire first series #1-50.
Check in tomorrow for the first installment!
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