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Showing posts with label Firebrand Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Firebrand Books. Show all posts

Aug 8, 2018

The 40 Years of Comics Project - The (Pride) Weekly Graphic Novel Number 73 - post-Dykes to Watch Out For, 2000

https://www.comics.org/issue/1461153/

I'd originally meant to blog this book during my Pride Month readings, but I got bogged down with work so it got shifted. That said, I'll reiterate what I said in my previous review of one of these collections - it's great. Alison Bechdel's cast is by turns ridiculous and real, which really is what real life feels like, so the characters come across as real. I feel like I'm reading comics about people I know, which, despite her many technical proficiencies, is the true gift that Ms. Bechdel gives the queer community in this series. And while we're starting to see such depictions in media nowadays (can't wait for Supergirl to start up again), Dykes to Watch Out For was doing this at a time when the idea of a queer person being an actual person, not a stererotype, was just about unheard of.

Given my current propensity for undergrounds, imagine the candor of the undergrounds crossed with Lynn Johnston's For Better or For Worse.

Maybe?

Onward!





Jun 13, 2018

The 40 Years of Comics Project - The Pride Weekly Graphic Novel Number 69 - Split-Level Dykes to Watch Out For, 1998

https://www.comics.org/issue/1461152/

When I finished reading this book, my first thought was "Where has this been all my life?" What a wonderful, wonderful comic. Honest, witty, strange, angry, and often quite funny. And it's not just that I love the characters and the community they're part of - Ms. Bechdel's sense of timing is absolutely incredible. I understand why she's held up as an exemplar of a great contemporary cartoonist. The second half of the book is an ongoing story, not broken down into the two-page installments of the rest of the strips. There are a number of different stories being told through this section, and the cuts from story to story, the tone and pacing of the dialogue, build to an almost frenetic pace before bringing us back to a comfortable, if not quite completely happy, ending. I am floored by Ms. Bechdel's mastery of this form, the sense of urgency that she conveyed to me through a very sophisticated technical use of the medium.

But, y'know, stuff like that aside, this is a great story about a bunch of gay ladies. I'm honestly not sure what else to say. The characters are, to a one, believable and lovable, some more than others, and none of them are perfect, either as people or as queer people. Some of the magic of this comic is that it paints the queer community exactly as it is: a community of flawed people, who don't always get along with one another, who are constantly growing and changing, evolving in our relationships with one another and with the wider society within which we exist. I've not seen a lot of queer comics that give quite so honest a view of the community. I'll be getting all of these books. It's not even a question.

Onward!