Several years ago I was hoping to see what the short form online comix guy Michael DeForge would do if he had a story to tell, in long form, a graphic novel, but after reading this, certainly one of the best graphic collections of the year, but a new collection of shorts, I am frankly not sure what is his best format. Keep ‘em guessing, looks like. Or, just say that DeForge can do a range of things very, very well. This is a great display of a range of what he can do, one of the best comics works of the year.
Michael DeForge is one of the smartest, funniest, most creative, the most resistant to categorization, working in comics today. One thing he does is play with narrative; he’s postmodern in that respect, messing with our expectations. But he’s always done that, with his weird, creepy, amoeba-like anthropomorphic blobby characters. In this collection he includes kid stories, sort of spinoffs from his Adventureland work, and he creates non-stories masking as stories. These are art comics, alt-comix, experimental, messing with various genres, work with a certain expressive vitality. There’s horror, dystopian, children’s stories, sci fi, and many bizarre places in between. Though this somehow seems more accessible to me than some of his early work, less violent and profane and that's a good thing. Is DeForge becoming more domestic, more conventional, more coherent? Dunno… But there’s humor throughout.
Some examples:
“Roleplay” is about a person masquerading as a surgeon. But everyone in this story seems to be roleplaying--a cop who seems to be arresting her after a family accuses her of killing their family member. .
“Of all the professions to impersonate, why did I choose ‘surgeon’?”
But hey, you have to get over that self-doubt, girl. She kills someone in surgery and coolly comments:
“They say if you love what you do, you’ll never work a day in your life.”
Funny and chilling. Call it black humor/horror and it works.
“No Hell” asserts there is no Hell, but several levels of Heaven that you can earn your way to. Quirky and funny.
“One of my Students is a Murderer. . . But Which?” is a fairly straightforward (for DeForge, anyway) kid story about an FBI detective who becomes a substitute teacher to figure out who is the murderer in an elementary classroom. A children's crime story--that genre, this time--played for laughs. There are other kid level pieces in here, too, though they are weird, for weird kids:
“My Step-Dad is a Disgusting Bug: And I Hate Him” will be an insect-phobic’s worst nightmare.
One short features a person beginning to ask what kind of food they want to eat--Polish? Mexican?--and moves to other questions, some of them absurd, the whole piece and the whole relationship is conducted in q and a--June Wedding? New Bedding? And so on.
“Soap Opera” is a wild shaggy-dog story about--ostensibly--a failing marriage, that goes all the way to the US Presidency. . . .
So it’s a fun ride exploring various ways to tell a story, in weird images and through minimalism/surrealism, anything but realism. Worth your while to check out!