Mike's Place: A True Story of Love, Blues, and Terror in Tel Aviv is an autobiographical graphic novel written by the team of Jack Baxter and Joshua Faudem and illustrated by Koren Shadmi. This graphic novel memoir recounts the last days of Jack Baxter in Tel Aviv, while filming a documentary about Mike's Place.
Jack Baxter, American journalist, and his young filmmaker Joshua Faudem are celebrating their last day in Tel Aviv, after a successful filming of their documentary about Mike's Place, a western-style bar that prides itself on a conversational policy of "no politics." Baxter is getting ready to fly back to the States to be with his wife and begin the finishing touches on his film. Minutes before he's about to get a cab, there is an altercation with the bar's bouncer – a patron who unsuccessfully tried to enter the bar screams the words, "ALLAHU AKBAR!" and detonates the explosives he has attached to his body, unleashing death and carnage all over the bar.
Jack Baxter was blown through the front window of the bar, but miraculously, he survived. Three other civilians in the bar that night were not so lucky. After Baxter emerged from a coma with life-threatening injuries, he and Faudem re-purposed the documentary to reflect their experiences. The film, Blues by the Beach, serves as the inspiration for Mike’s Place and the result is nothing shy of exceptional.
Mike's Place: A True Story of Love, Blues, and Terror in Tel Aviv is written and constructed rather well. It is a brilliant collaboration of quality writing and beautiful black and white drawings. The illustrations by Shadmi capture the subtle nuances of the tensions leading up to the tragedy.
All in all, Mike's Place: A True Story of Love, Blues, and Terror in Tel Aviv is one of the rare examples of a story that is both personal and informative, dealing with the real-world issues afflicting the Middle East and beyond.