Congrats for the Eisner 2024 Best Graphic Album—New: Roaming, by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki (Drawn & Quarterly). Okay, see below, where I disagreed with the esteemed judges. But I am a big fan of the Tamakis!
Well! I thought this was just okay. Consider the source, a 70-year-old white guy (swipe! buh-bye, Dave!) but stop! I also think that This One Summer, their last collaboration, one of the best YA graphic novels ever. Period. And I've read much of what they have done, and reviewed it (though it is hard to keep up with all the supe stuff Mariko is doing). So I think this is okay.
At page 100, at page 200, though, I am like: This is a 446-page graphic novel about a spring break with three girls in Manhattan in 2009 and almost nothing but sightseeing has happened yet??!! It's a travel book about being tourists in The City!?? Okay, then a little buzz happens between two girls, at the expense of the other one, there's some tension, and this gets resolved, and that's it.
Roaming has some of the intensity of feeling in the images that happened in those first two books, thanks to Jillian's amazing artwork, but this one over all is lighter, less consequential than something that digs deep into what it means to be a girl and woman such as we find in This One Summer. So the story is.. . nice, but lets me down a bit? It's a kind of roaming Manhattan story, episodic, with groaner refs to a time when you didn't want to use your phone because you incurred "roaming" charges, ugh.
The art is the real hero here from Jillian, whom I find in the credits got help in selecting/developing images for her depiction of 2009 NYC from online followers, I think? And then there are these sort of thrilling magical realist moments, swirling lovely colorful expressions of the emotional life of the trip. Those are the best pages, for sure, and there’s a few of them.
I dunno, I think any fans of this duo will buy anything they do, and this is going to be a hit, but honestly I would probably cut 1/3 of the story (ugh, but then you'd lose that artwork. . .) just to get more efficiently to the heart of it. But the girls become real, the two original friends right the ship, yay, okay. This will be an event in comics in 2023, so y'all should read it especially if you are fans of glbtq all girl friendship books and Tamaki comics greats.
Thanks to Netgalley, and Drawn & Quarterly for the tasteful production, and the goddesses Mariko and Jillian, who will probably hate me now (as if I existed) for this tepid review, but hey. I gotta be me.