A Graphic Literature Library
All are still in print, and can be found at
online bookstores and well-stocked retail outlets. This is not intended as a
"best-of" list, as many excellent books could not be fit into a list of 25.
Instead, it is meant as a guide for creating a well-rounded library of
adult-level material that reflects the history, diversity and current trends of
graphic literature.
Berlin: City of
Stones by Jason Lutes (Drawn & Quarterly; 2000)
Lutes has a clean, clear style in both his
drawing and writing that make him deceptively easy to read as he explores
personal stories unfolding in a turbulent period in history. A projected
multi-volume series following the lives of citizens in Weimar-era Berlin, the
promise of this first installment suggests "Berlin" will be a major work of
historical fiction.
Boulevard of
Broken Dreams by Kim Deitch (Pantheon; 2002)
Ted Mishkin, an early animator, has a
problem. Is his creation, the mischievous, bi-pedal cat Waldo, actually real?
Mishkin thinks so, and it drives him insane in this darkly delightful novel.
Deitch, an underground comix pioneer, has a style that combines the quaintness
of antique toys with the woes of modern life.
Full Review
Buddha by Osamu Tezuka (Vertical,
Inc.; 2003)
The key founder of the Japanese
comics style, the creator of Astro Boy helped turn an entire nation into comics
fans. Though it first appeared in Japan in the early 1970s, Tezuka's
imaginative version of the life of the Buddha has only now appeared in English.
"Buddha" exemplifies Tezuka's playful style and deeply humane themes in a work
for older audiences. Full Review
A Contract with God by Will Eisner (DC
Comics; 1978)
This book defined the term
"graphic novel," though it actually consists of four short stories about life in
working class tenements. Eisner, already a pioneer thanks to his "Spirit"
series of urban adventures, here introduced the concept of an original trade
paperback containing serious, drawn literature.
The Dark Knight Returns by Frank
Miller (DC Comics; 1986)
This black comedy
version of Batman's latter days remains one of the best selling graphic novels
of all time. Along with Alan Moore & Dave Gibbon's "Watchmen," it redefined
the concept of "superhero," and helped spark the first wave of "serious"
interest in comics.
David Boring by
Daniel Clowes (Pantheon; 2000)
Best known
for "Ghost World," thanks to the movie version, Clowes' "David Boring" is a more
sophisticated novel of a guy in search of a woman while the world may be ending.
Part of the "second generation" of comix creators, Clowes' flair for offbeat
characters and sly humor has no peer.
Epileptic vol. I by David B.
(L'Association; 2002)
France rivals Japan in
its serious attitude towards graphic literature. One of the new generation of
French artists, David B.'s huge memoir uses his brother's struggle with epilepsy
as the key to examine family dynamics, social history and the artistic impulse.
It's as gorgeous to look at as it is satisfying to read.
Full Review
Flood by Eric Drooker (Dark Horse
Comics; 1992)
One of just a few pantomime
comix artists, Drooker's first book, recently reprinted, consists of several
short stories focused on the urban experience. In spite of their lack of words,
his images have a strong political charge and sensitive emotionalism depicted
through intense graphic design.
From
Hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell (Top Shelf; 2000)
Alan Moore, who became famous for his
sophisticated superhero tales, put all of his considerable comic-writing skill
into this re-telling of the Jack the Ripper murders as a mystic ritual covered
up by the Queen. The mediocre movie version suffered particularly from its lack
of Eddie Campbell's masterful black and white images that perfectly conjure up
the fog-shrouded streets of gaslight London.
Full Review
The Golem's Mighty Swing by James
Sturm (Drawn & Quarterly; 2002)
Sturm's
ode to a Jewish team during the early barnstorming days of baseball looks like
old sepia-toned bubblegum cards laid out to tell a story. Through it he
explores the way the Old World adapted (with difficulty) to the New. A
fascinating spin on baseball as a metaphor for America, Sturm gives us a story
with the heart and drama of a great ball game.
Full Review
Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on
Earth by Chris Ware (Pantheon: 2000)
The
most perfect novel yet seen in this format, Ware innovates in form and in
content to create a uniquely American story, both tragic and gut-splittingly
funny. Neither smart nor a kid, Jimmy reunites with his long-lost dad, finds
him a great disappointment, and discovers an African-American sister he never
knew about.
Julius Knipl, Real Estate
Photographer: The Beauty Supply District by Ben Katchor (Pantheon; 2000)
Although Katchor's long-form "Jew of New
York" better qualifies as a graphic novel, I prefer his collected strips in the
"Julius Knipl" series. Freshly released in paperback, this third volume
contains more of Katchor's picture-poem odes to non-existent urban districts and
fantastical people like the radiator musician.
Louis Riel by Chester Brown (Drawn
& Quarterly; 2003)
Through this
interpretive biography of a 19th-century Canadian rabble-rouser and mystic
— with every deviance from recorded history carefully detailed in
footnotes — Brown explores themes of abuse of authority, madness vs.
religious exaltation and the nature of objective truth. That he tells it in the
style of big-nosed comic strip characters makes it all the more remarkable.
Full Review
Maus vols. I + II by Art Spiegelman
(Pantheon; 1986)
This history of the
Holocaust as experienced by the author's father remains the best-known graphic
novel ever published, and a major watershed in the "legitimizing" of the art
form. The only graphic novel ever to win a Pulitzer, it also stands among the
best works of Holocaust literature in any form.
Nightmare Alley as adapted by Spain
(Fantagraphics Books; 2003)
William Lindsay
Gresham's 1946 novel of the midway gets the noir treatment by underground comix
veteran Spain. Graphic novels don't have many adaptations from other media
(except for embarrassing movie tie-ins) but this creepy, sexy freak show is one
of the best. Full Review
One! Hundred! Demons! by Lynda Barry
(Sasquatch Books; 2002)
A long-time weekly
strip artist ("Ernie Pook's Comeek"), Barry created this all-original book from
her own experiences. Labeled an "autobiofictionalography" it contains
perfect-pitch memories of the awkwardness of adolescence in the form of short
vignettes. Full Review
Our Cancer Year by Harvey Pekar and
Joyce Brabner (Four Walls Eight Windows; 1994)
A pioneer in the form of autobiographical
comix, Harvey Pekar and his "American Splendor" series recently became the basis
for a hit independent film. This is his most serious and longest work, written
in collaboration with his wife and drawn by Frank Stack, and is a deeply moving
portrait of a family in crisis.
Palomar by Gilbert Hernandez
(Fantagraphics Books; 2003)
For fourteen
years "Love and Rockets," one of the most influential comix series ever created,
included Hernandez' tales of a fictional Mexican border town called Palomar.
All these stories have now been collected into a 522-page book that combines the
convoluted absurdity of a soft-core soap opera with Lorca's depth of character
and Faulkner's sense of place.
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
(Pantheon; 2003)
It couldn't be more
prescient or unexpected: a comix-style memoir by a woman who grew up during the
Iranian revolution. Totally unique and utterly fascinating, Satrapi's simple
style reveals the complexities of this veiled-off world.
Full Review
The R. Crumb Coffee Table Art Book by
R. Crumb (Little Brown & Co.; 1997)
Crumb's impact on his field, as well as his
longevity as a crucial artist, rivals that of Picasso. The closest he ever got
to a long-form graphic novel was an early work, "The Big Yum Yum Book," but his
short pieces remain the reason forhis influence. This is the only single-volume
collection that spans his entire output, including psychedelic freak-outs,
blistering social satires and naked autobiography.
Safe Area Gorazde by Joe Sacco
(Fantagraphics Books; 2000)
Sacco brings
journalism to comics in this oral history of life in the beleaguered Bosnian
city of Gorazde during the Balkans crisis of the 1990s. Along with his previous
series "Palestine" and his latest book, "The Fixer," Sacco has almost
single-handedly created a vital non-fiction graphic sub-genre.
Sandman: Season of Mists by Neil
Gaiman and various (Vertigo; 1994)
This
particular volume of Neil Gaiman's extremely popular "Sandman" series best
exemplifies why it crosses boundaries of genre and gender appeal. When handed
the keys to hell, Morpheus, the king of Dreams, contends with his immortal
siblings — including punky sister Death — as well as characters from
mythology, literature and history.
Stuck Rubber Baby by Howard Cruse (DC
Comics; 1995)
A novel set in the South
during the 1960s, "Baby" tackles both the civil rights movement and the
complications of being gay at that time. It's a moving work featuring people
— Southerners, blacks, and gays — who don't get much serious
attention in this medium.
Summer
Blonde by Adrian Tomine (Drawn & Quarterly; 2002)
Tomine is comix's tartest short story
writer, exploring the bleak lives of aging West Coast Gen-Xers. Newly reprinted
in paperback, this collection of his work includes a story of a woman who makes
desperate prank phone calls to the booth outside her window and another about a
sad obsession over a blonde shop girl.
Full Review
Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud
(Perennial; 1993)
The first and best of its
kind: a book-length essay in the form of comix. McCloud's theories on why and
how comics work are told with wit and imagination in this critically important
book that has shaped the way many people think about the medium.
Readers
Respond
Last week's
column
filled the TIME.comix mailbag like never before.
Here are some letters from readers, edited for brevity and clarity.
Why the Prejudice?
Your most recent article left me to wonder
exactly why creators like Art Spiegelman and critics like yourself are so very
desperate to disassociate themselves from the superhero genre of graphic novels.
It is a medium where you can mine the everyday life struggles of both people
born in Peoria or on the planet Krypton. Where you can use repetition of images
to convey the ennui of a life most ordinary or break the inked panels to express
the heroism that we all have in our souls under the most trying circumstances.
Mr. Spiegelman's "Maus" certainly accomplish that, and so has the most recent
issues of "The Fantastic Four," although the two may say it in different ways
and by different shades of subtlety. In the end, a graphic novel is just an
easier way to say "a large volume of printed storytelling expressed in a series
of sequential, hand drawn illustrations." Trust the public to make the
distinctions, based solely on the quality of the material.
William Cheung
Jersey City, NJ
As a Librarian I wrestled with the
nomenclature and found that "Graphic Novel," although flawed and imprecise, is
the best term of a bad lot. I doubt the discussion will ever end (look at how
the term "Science Fiction" is still debated, and embraced or shunned, i.e. over
Margaret Atwood), but I think the war is over and we are stuck with "Graphic
Novel" for better or worse. So, as much as I sympathize with Art Spiegelman and
his desire not to be shelved next to Marvel's books, he is just wrong. Of
course some Graphic Novels have a "seriousness of purpose," as he says, that
superheroes or some manga don't have. Novels like "The Amazing Adventures of
Kavalier and Clay" or "Fortress of Solitude" have a seriousness of purpose that
the latest Clive Cussler or Robert Ludlum doesn't have. Still they are all
novels. Spiegelman seems to be making the same mistake that people who won't
consider comics and Graphic Novels seriously make (I realize he really knows
better) by associating a type of content with the form.
Steve Svecz
Librarian
Warren-Trumbull County Public Library
Warren, OH
Librarians Take Offense
I've enjoyed reading your column in the past
and looked forward to reading your take on the 25th anniversary of the graphic
novel. Unfortunately, I froze up at your opening sentence. You may be referring
to one incident in the course of your research but you have done a disservice to
librarians. For the past several years, librarians have been strong promoters of
graphic novels. School and public librarians across the country have added
graphic novels to their collections; Comics and graphic novels have been the
subject of many programs at state, regional and national library conferences and
workshops. Publishers have welcomed the growth of the library market. The
opening of your column was an effective attention getter. I just wish you had
found some other way to introduce your exploration of the current state of the
graphic novel than slamming a group of the format's strongest supporters.
Jeffrey Gegner
Senior Librarian - Popular Materials
Specialist
Hennepin County Library
Minnetonka, MN
TIME.comix responds: The intention of
the opening anecdote was only to exemplify the on-going challenge of "graphic
novel" as a term and a form, not to disparage librarians. Here are some
internet resources, provided by a librarian reader, on this growing market:
Graphic Novels in Libraries
,Comic
Books for Young Adults
,The
Librarian's Guide to Anime and Manga and
Graphic Novels for Public Libraries
What the Future May Hold
Micha Hershman's comments about shojo manga
driving the expansion in the bookstores are accurate and can be proven by
looking at the BookScan GN charts. However, given the 2004 publishing plans of
some of the bigger manga houses (TokyoPop-500 titles, Viz- 400 titles) and the
fact that major publishers are getting on the bandwagon, we just may live up to
our industry's history of putting out too much of a good thing and thus creating
an implosion. I believe this is an area you might want to look into to temper
the somewhat rosy outlook for GNs. Never have I seen a better chance for GNs to
become a part of the landscape in libraries, bookstores and the public's
awareness. I just hope we don't blow it.
Michael J. Martens
Vice President of Business Development
Dark Horse Comics
Milwaukie, OR
The First What?
There were, predictably, some objections to
the anniversary concept of the article, pegged to the use of the term "A Graphic
Novel" on the cover of Will Eisner's "A Contract with God." Here is one such
example: I have no. 909 of the 1,500 copies of the first edition of Eisner's "A
Contract with God." It is a handsome hardback book. No dust jacket. And nowhere
on the cover or title page or, even, in Will's introductory remarks does the
term "graphic novel" appear. Since the publication of this seminal work, the
term "graphic novel" has come into more widespread use than it enjoyed then in
1978, and in subsequent editions of the book, apparently insinuated itself onto
the cover. But it wasn't there on the first edition; so the first appearance of
"A Contract with God" did not, ipso facto, inaugurate the use of the term
"graphic novel." The term "graphic novel," as it applies to the "long form
comic book," was originally coined in November 1964 by Richard Kyle in a
newsletter circulated to all members of the Amateur Press Association. The term
was subsequently modified and used by Bill Spicer in his "Graphic Story
Magazine" (a usage Spicer gained Kyle's approval for in advance). The first time
a "long form comic book" was identified as a "graphic novel" was the 1976
publication of "Beyond Time and Again," by George Metzger, where the term
"graphic novel" appears on the title page and on the dust jacket flaps. There
had been other efforts at "graphic storytelling" before. Eisner mentions the
work of Lynd Ward [creator of the wordless novel "Gods' Man" in 1929] in his
introduction, for instance. Milt Gross did an entire narrative in pictures with
no words: "He Done Her Wrong" in 1930. Gil Kane and Archie Goodwin produced "His
Name Is… Savage," [a book-length comic,] in 1968. "A Contract with God"
gathered all of these narrative strategies together between the covers of a
single publication — and set the pace for those who would follow. Will
Eisner has, without question, done more to advance the medium of comics than
just about anyone. But he didn't invent the graphic novel form; nor did he coin
the term (as he would be among the first to acknowledge).
R.C. Harvey
Champaign, IL
TIME.comix responds: For the record,
Will Eisner confirmed with TIME.comix that the words "A Graphic Novel" appeared
on the cover of the paperback edition of "A Contract with God," but not the
hardcover, which had no dust jacket. The paperback was published in 1978
simultaneously with the hardcover, says Eisner, with a larger print run. In
fact Eisner acknowledges that the term "graphic novel" had been coined prior to
his book. But, he says, "I had not known at the time that someone had used that
term before." Nor does he take credit for creating the first graphic book.
Eisner admits that, "I can't claim to have invented the wheel, but I felt I was
in a position to change the direction of comics." TIME.comix' argument is that
Eisner's book, published outside the comic book system and pretty clearly the
first comix work deliberately aspiring to literary status, by having the term on
the front cover, crystallized the concept of a "graphic novel." But the matter
is clearly open to debate.
TIME.comix returns in two
weeks. Watch for the 2003 ten best comix list coming on December 19!
25 books from 25
years for smart, sophisticated readers
ANDREW
D. ARNOLD writes the second in a two-part
series."These 25 must-read
books, in alphabetical order, span the last 25 years of graphic novel making.
All are still in print, and can be found at online bookstores and well-stocked
retail outlets. This is not intended as a "best-of" list, as many excellent
books could not be fit into a list of 25. Instead, it is meant as a guide for
creating a well-rounded library of adult-levelmaterial that reflects the
history, diversity and current trends of graphic literature. These 25 must-read
books, in alphabetical order, span the last 25 years of graphic novel
making..."
Posted: Mon - November 24, 2003 at 02:35 PM