alexxkay: (Default)
[personal profile] alexxkay
Having made my last post about everything that's wrong with comics in America, I want to spend sometime talking about what's right. And this book definitely qualifies.

Alison Bechdel is best known for her long-running comic strip "Dykes to Watch Out For". I've read some of those, and some other miscellaneous work she's done over the years. I liked her well enough that when I read a positive review of this book (probably in The Comics Journal), I made a mental note to pick it up. I'm glad I did.

This book is a major leap forward for her. She displays a quiet but complete command of language and structure, both visual and verbal. Even if you aren't interested in the subject matter, any connossieur of the form is well advised to give this a look.

The subject matter is the author's relationship with her family, most specifically her father. Shortly after she came out as a lesbian (in college), she found out that her father had long been having sex with young boys. Not long after, he died under circumstances which may have been either accident or suicide. To some extent, this book is an attempt to make sense of her experiences growing up, now that she has so much more information than she did at the time.

This is also a book about books. Bechdel's family was emotionally disconnected. Many of the places they *did* connect were through shared literary experiences. Hemingway and Fitzgerald, Collette and Joyce, even Oscar Wilde -- all are almost characters in their own right in this story.

The title comes from the family nickname for the family business. While her father was an interior decorator by avocation, his *profession* was that of a mortician. This led her to have a somewhat unusual relationship to death. Bechdel talks about seeing Charles Addams cartoons before she was able to read and seeing them as very like her own family. (Her art style owes a good deal to Edward Gorey, especially in the way she draws eyes.)

Highly recommended.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-02 12:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cvirtue.livejournal.com
I keep meaning to get that one (having all of her other books now) but haven't gotten around to it. Must fix that.

eyes

Date: 2007-03-02 12:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lauradi7.livejournal.com
Huh. I've been reading DTWOF for much of its run and never noticed that. Her people always just looked like her people to me. I wonder how much I consider distinctively Gorey is really more his background room settings and clothing (and posture) more than faces. Time to start paying more attention.

Re: eyes

Date: 2007-03-02 04:10 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I hadn't noticed it earlier myself. But the setting and tone of this story is much more similar to Gorey than DTWOF ever was, so it suddenly leaped out at me.

Re: eyes

Date: 2007-03-03 05:10 pm (UTC)
ext_104661: (Default)
From: [identity profile] alexx-kay.livejournal.com
That was me; got logged out somehow.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-03-08 07:20 pm (UTC)
jducoeur: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jducoeur
We've been fans of DTWOF for many years now; Fun Home is on my "to read" list, probably as soon as I'm done with Buddha. It's been fascinating reading her blog (syndicated along with the strip as [livejournal.com profile] dykestwofstrip) lately, as she suddenly finds herself thrust from obscure indie-outsider to prominent celebrity at the top of critical best-seller lists and nominated for most of the awards out there...

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Alexx Kay

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