Achingly human auto-bio comics that extract big laughs from the small moments
Cartoonist Keiler Roberts quit making comics. Or did she?
Preparing to Bite, her latest collection of all-new, one-page comics is a return to perfect form. Roberts skewers innocuous aspects of everyday life and dissects them for their unique from cooking meals, to keeping doctors’ appointments, to owning pets, and even navigating now-inescapable zoom calls. These vignettes portray a woman in middle-age grappling with the realities of being a mother, a wife, a friend, a daughter, and lastly (perhaps even least of all), a practicing artist—all while dealing with the long-term effects of a debilitating disease.
From page to page, Roberts jumps from moment to moment, expertly using the comics form as nobody else can while showing off what it can do that no other form can. Preparing to Bite captures the transient gestures of life in the modern age, both mundane and inane.
En este nuevo volumen de viñetas tan intrascendentes y encantadoras como la vida cotidiana de cualquiera, Keiler Roberts nos vuelve a hacer fijarnos en las pequeñas cosas que nos rodean y en el humor sardónico que encierran. En el tranquilo discurrir de su día a día vemos cómo su pequeño mundo cambia: su hijo crece, su relación con el trabajo se transforma, sus mascotas aumentan en número… y, en ese observar, que tiene algo de voyeur, pasamos a formar parte de una cotidianidad que, a fuerza de viñetas, acaba perteneciendo también un poco a sus lectores.
The last book I checked out from the Chicago Public Library before moving to Las Vegas. I sat in the library and read it quietly. It was a saying goodbye.
She's done it again! Keiler's chronicling of the mundane is just as engaging, funny, and occasionally touching. From washing the dog's butt in the sink to sitting with her kid on the floor, she narrates frames with such clear honesty. This is a quick read--I finished the whole thing on a train ride home--and some pages had me laughing out loud.
More of Keiler Roberts's dry and observational wit in this book of tiny vignettes! She's reliably one of the only comics authors who can make me laugh!
someone should submit this to a museum as an exhibit for an entry on "Just Because You Can, Doesn't Mean You Should".
what in the white people drivel is this book? I hate to leave a bad review, specially for an artist, but the world is better off if this person truly quits comics. I wish I could get my 30 minutes back, and I wish I were the kind of person who could DNF a book. this would be the first one I would DNF.
Relatively relatable quick moments of the author with her pets and family. Honestly, it's sometimes hard to read about someone who doesn't seem to take much overt enjoyment in life; I can only handle so many of those types of people at once. Her daughter is given the wittiest observations, while the pets and husband just kind of are there, looking cute. It's a mixed bag for me. Some of the humor I enjoyed, other parts I found annoying or irresponsible.
Roberts’ work helped me define my favorite genre: hyperlocal slice-of-life memoir in sequential art. This collection of one-page standalone comics has her same dry humor on little moments in time. Several of these are pandemic-based, which is a little throwback. Everything she publishes is five stars to me.
I will always love all books/collections/works by the author. This one was overly dog(ailment)-focused for my personal taste but it's still perfect. As others have noted, I also appreciate that MS is part of the collection.
Portraits of a like during COVID. Preparing to bite is a collection of comics and panels showing the small moments during COVID. Roberts shows us her and her daughter's banter, her bad dogs, and her constant quitting of comics. Overall, a very short and cute read!
Vignettes from the author’s life captures the gloom and drudgery of daily life in a way that also somehow feels familial, intimate and sometimes humorous.
2.0 I just did not find this funny or amusing. Maybe I am missing something but I got the sense this mother does not like her daughter. She felt like a bully to me.
life works in such mysterious ways, serendipitously fell into my pocket on the most random day, this spoke to me specifically in a way ive been thinking about my whole life, i will buy and read every book roberts creates and i will write to her. what a moment in my life, what a good book can do