I previously read Scott Snyder's recent work for Batman and American Vampire, and I always enjoyed his narration, even though it can be overwhelming at times. Which is why I'm reading his Voodoo Heart book, which he wrote a few years before he started working with DC Comics.
I normally don't write reviews, but I figured I should do it since I'm reading an anthology book, and each story can vary in quality.
Blue Yodel: In 1918, a man goes on a cross country trip, chasing a blimp that supposedly has his fiance. The couple's odd jobs seem to foreshadow their actions in the story: Preston works as a rescuer of sorts at Niagara Falls, Claire is a fake model at a wax museum. I liked the parallels in the hypnotic trances between the people watching the blimp construction and the people watching Niagara falls; both groups do actions they may regret. The ending seemed abrupt (a common criticism I have with Snyder for some of his comic stories), and left ambiguous.
Happy Fish, Plus Coin: A young man, hiding from his rich family, befriends a disabled motivational speaker while staying in a rundown Florida town. The dynamic between the cautious unnamed narrator and the optimistic Gay Isabelle showcases more similarities between the two, including how they tell their life stories.
About Face: A man has to perform community service, working at a delinquent boot camp, and befriends the sergeant's daughter. There is the underlying theme that Fergus wants to be a hero (in his head) but in reality, his nature only causes problems, hence the community service sentence. His almost one-sided relationship with Lex is another example, as he imagines himself as a knight in shining armor to her.
Voodoo Heart: A young couple buys a broken down mansion near a women's minimum security jail. Given how prevalent it is in the story, the major theme is "what lies beneath": the sea monsters from the deep waters, the pristine muscle car in a junkyard, the new homeowner himself. There is a certain darkness everywhere, and one can either let it fester or control it. As the main attraction story, it is certainly the darkest story of the book.
Wreck: A hunter dates a Hollywood starlet as she recovers from an injury. A more bittersweet tale, with Wade hopelessly waiting for the day Grace has to return to California. The story examines how to tell if someone or something is purposely abandoned or lost in the chaos.
Dumpster Tuesday: A corporate employee travels to Florida to find his fiance, who ran off to see a brain damaged country singer. One of the more weaker stories, it was reminiscent to the first story Blue Yodel and the second Happy Fish Plus Coin when it came to the singer.
The Star Attraction of 1919: A stunt pilot travels across the US Heartland with a unwanted passenger. The beginning of story was hilarious, as it contrasts the pilot's desires with reality. Like the other stories, it ends with a not so happy ending.
The central theme of all the stories revolves around relationships with friends and loved ones. Honesty is needed to build solid bonds, otherwise relationships withered slowly but surely. All the stories feature tangents and flashbacks, like the history of early man and childhood memories, that foreshadows the outcomes of each story. Snyder later uses that technique in his comic book narration. In short, this collection provides odd tales set in America across the past century, in order to present how human nature affects relationships.