Oh. Where do I start?
Let’s try it by numbers:
20% Heavy lifting: The author of the brilliantly funny “My Background Life as a Slytherin” has a big graphic novel out (a doorstopper, practically!), let’s check it out! I’m told it is VERY FUNNY!
19% Smart: I have actually finished it weeks ago and my thoughts are still lingering on the wit of this book, so I’m trying to be 1% as clever in the review I have finally decided to write.
18% Distracted: Not that I am doing very well, I haven’t yet conveyed how much I loved this book. I have however liked about 20 different posts on Instagram and replied to 4 tweets since I started writing this. I even posted a lovely steaming cup of tea on Stories.
17% Performance anxiety: So. This book was not actually funny as in laugh-out-loud-and escape reality through Mr.Bean comedy sketches. In fact, it was as depressing as Mr. Bean comedy sketches can be, if you think a bit more about them. Or if you are “too sensitive”, or whatever particularly annoying people might say about you. Anyway.
16% Anxiety rising: Oh god, this is a book about the uber-tech-late-stage-capitalist-dystopia we’re currently in. With very rich people very good at hyping up their own egos and ultimately pointless things. (Like legs. If you get this, you get this.) With a hint of A.I. That becomes sentient. And social unrest. And bootleg dentists. And immigration enforcement. And regular people in the middle of all the madness, doing their best at being regular. And I could feel my tension rising while reading it, those perfectly fast-paced panels, the gradual crescendo of my awareness that “Screw it, it’s a book, but we’re living in it, somehow”.
15% Fun: This can be so funny! That 2 panel joke is perfect! So human in this dehumanizing wave. Oh gods, I can’t believe how stressful it is to see the people in this comic writing constantly on their phones, all the time! Oh god, this is me too, addicted to a lit rectangle! All the time!! I have ran out of tweets to read on my timeline for today, for instance.
14% Social Commentary: So, even child neglect is artfully and discreetly addressed here. I see a lot of thematic drift like this and it’s nicely interwoven in the storyline. I can compare this tendency of taking completely serious themes and building them into a story that’s also funny to Terry Pratchett. It’s about imperfect humans trying to be themselves, being idiots, being mediocre, being amazing, being destroyers and loving and deserving of love at the same time. Except the conmen and the overinflated narcissists, they can go out in a helicopter and fall into the sea. *not a spoiler, not what actually happens in the book.
13% Sad: The aftertaste of sadness is here, and here to stay. I could probably even cry, but my smartphone blue light dried up my tears. I can’t keep but wonder if the ONE app that everyone was badmouthing, that was supposed to be the ultimate life coach app, wasn’t actually fit for the purpose. The main character did seem to benefit from it, if only by taking up those pesky healthy habits that actually do work, like running and eating fruit and veggies. I think I might need this in my life too. Too bad the app is fictional and has an untimely fictional demise, because the anecdotal improvement we witness is still, well, anecdotal.
12% Phone Battery: Tech will not make your actual, IRL-life better, after all. Except when you get a pretty sentient AI girlfriend in the package, and unleash anarchy upon the immigration system.
I have to stop now, got a long bathroom break coming. Buh-bye!
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1% L.E.: I forgot to talk about the art! So deceptively simple, yet so expressive, so deadpan at times! The pacing of the comic and the drawings all seem very natural and spontaneous. A lot of hard work that lies beneath the covers to make a funny Black Mirror graphic nove