This story of a young boy’s battle with family, his art, expectations from friends and relatives brims with hilarity, aggravation, frustration and contradictions. Jimmy wants approval from his father for his artistic leanings. But the first time his father talks frankly to him about his conflicted emotions over Jimmy and his Uncle Lester’s creative inclinations, Jimmy is deeply uncomfortable. Jimmy idolizes his schoolmate Charlie Beemer. But Charlie’s subtle manipulations and critique over the best parts of Jimmy’s work render him miserable.
This book brims with the story of a boy finding and feeling his way through the use of his comic drawings, drawn in Mr. Feiffer’s recognizably unique style. Jimmy’s family comes off as typically normal and endearingly oddball—much like anybody’s family. Above all, we feel love. It’s the love that is there among the folks when they bicker, scream, yell, argue or tiptoe around each other. It’s the love that presents itself on the final page with a wordless image of simple triumph.
For Jules Feiffer fans, for anyone who’s ever chafed at the ties that bind but stand with their family no matter what, this book is a lovely affirmation of what it means to try, try, try again with the support of those who care about you.