Palookaville #24 (2023) is like a party for Seth friends, though I’ll admit I am only getting it now, in 2025! But I read it all in one sitting, and then viewed the DVD film of his puppeteering story. The first section is the fourth installment of Nothing Lasts, and it focuses on Seth’s working two summers in a restaurant, and a summer for The Ministry of Natural Resources. Part of it, like any memoir, is about memory, the fading past, the best way to represent what you still recall. Sometimes that is through anecdotes, through portraits of key people, boring work, sometimes through images he recalls. It reminded me a bit of Guy DeLisle’s Factory Summers, though it is consistent with the nostalgic tone that Seth brings to everything he does.
The second part is a short chronicle of the making of a short film of Seth’s puppet play, The Apology of Alfred Batch, which is one of Seth’s sad, isolated cartoonist stories. You get a dvd with the book of the film, by Luc Chamberland, and it is interesting, and as promised, the puppeteering isn’t very good, but that’s in a way part of the point, its charm.
The third part of the book is an experiment from his sketchbook. He finds a list of flowers, chooses various names that interest him, then writes a story for each flower name, coloring it appropriately. These stories have an air of mystery to them that reminds me of his Ghost Stories illustration project. An idea for a creative writing or art class! Are thse stories great, as good as the classic ghost stroies he illustrates? Nah, but I like anything he does and they are good stories. I like the approach.
Honestly, though it is a grab bag of recent work, this will still end up as one of my favorite comics productions of the year.