I read Patience by Daniel Clowes, and though I liked the art, the story was just OK. I decided to give him a second chance, and I am glad I did. I enjoyed Ice Haven much more. The art is still gorgeous, beautifully rendered, inched and colored. But here, the story is much better. Small town, sad people, someone said, and indeed, the town and the folks who live there are seen from a bleak point of view. There's your loner weirdo wanna-be poet, who secretly resents (no, hates!) the cheerful poetess who lives next door and is much more successful than him. There are the kids: two boys who are kind of friends and like the same girl, the girl who is kinds of oblivious and does ballet, and the weirdo kid who gets kidnapped. There are the detective couple who come into town to find the boy who was kidnapped. The male detective tells his life like it is some noir novel, focused professionally on the job, yet with disturbing emotional outbursts, no doubt brought on by the incessant avoidance game he's playing, trying to avoid his problems with his wife. The female detective, on the other hand, is bored and trapped by the job, always trying (and, hint hint, succeeding) to escape it. There's the teenager who's having a relationship with an older man. There's her new step-brother, who is one of the kids in town and is in love with her. There's the "perfect murder" of a teenager 50 years prior.
With these characters loosely centered around the kidnapping, Clowes paints the picture with careful, sometimes hilarious, and sometimes bleak mini-strips. Perhaps the most captivating and expert instances are the kids, interacting with each other, philosophizing about life and desire, plotting against each other, all the while experiencing a rather stunted set of communication skills.
Clowes goes meta by including the comic book critic, who "explains" what Clowes might be trying to do in his stories, which I found hilarious. The comic himself lives int he town and is under suspicion for the kidnapping, of course, because he works on comics (for kids, right?)
Overall, Ice Haven is an astute and incisive look at the small town and perhaps the human condition. Recommended for those who like cookies, motel rooms, zines, convenience stores, and reading on the toilet.