Trish's Reviews > Ghost World
Ghost World
by
by
Trish's review
bookshelves: animals, fiction, graphic-novels, adolescence, america, art, classics, family, funny, teen, totally-unexpected
Feb 11, 2018
bookshelves: animals, fiction, graphic-novels, adolescence, america, art, classics, family, funny, teen, totally-unexpected
In one of his interviews, the great graphic novelist Craig Thompson cites Daniel Clowes as a must-read graphic artist he admires. I admire Thompson’s work, so it makes sense I would seek out Clowes. This graphic novel was made into a movie in 2001 starring Thora Birch and Scarlett Johansson. I haven’t seen that yet, but it may well be the first sighting of Scarlett Johansson before big stardom.
A GR friend of mine wrote a deeply insightful meditation on the development of American cities in response to this work, going big in the face of adolescent alienation. As much as I enjoyed that piece, the book made a different impression on me. I’m going to go small: this is a novel of ideas that happen internally and out of sight. All we see is the petulance, the ripple on the surface of a psyche.
A young thin blond girl and a much edgier dark-haired friend who sports an aggressive haircut and heavy-framed glasses are nearing the end of high school. Contemplating their futures, the dark-haired girl wishes to become someone else. “I totally hate myself,” she cries late one night lying on the couch of a boy she’d just admitted she loved. Poor guy.
At that age we are both afraid of and jealous of the complexities adults wrestle every day; we want to try out our problem-handling skills to see if they can measure up. We want the next thing to happen so that we are not merely sitting ducks when it does. Desire for the world and fear of that same world mix unsteadily in our gut. We’re not ready, but when will we ever be?
The ideas shown in this graphic novel struck me as completely within the range of normal adolescence angst, disaffection, confusion, and fear about the world and one’s role in it. We’re pretty obnoxious and self-absorbed at that age, as anyone with a teenager in the house will readily commiserate. Clowes actually plays it so low key we are as bored and unimpressed with their lives as the characters are.
My favorite frame comes near the end when the dark-haired girl is driving the hearse her father graciously bought for her to take to college. Despite having a vehicle and a direction, the girl says she is depressed: “Everything is all the same no matter where you go.” The Buddhists say it like this: “Wherever you go, there you are.”
The tricolor palette in this book works fine: black and white with a green wash. The pen drawings capture the sprawled-leg teenager-y postures, the trying-so-hard-to-be-cooler-than-thou clothing choices and the deliciously descriptive backgrounds absolutely fill in the picture. I thought Clowes was brave to take on the challenge of depicting the mind of a teenaged girl, but he caught that moment in the lifecycle of a female of the species perfectly.
This is another example, if we needed one, that the writing—including what isn’t said—is as important as the drawing in great graphic novels. So many things have to come together to make a satisfying and lasting work. I admire the heck out of artists working in this medium and encourage anyone who hasn’t picked up a graphic novel lately to try one. It’s hard to read just one.
A GR friend of mine wrote a deeply insightful meditation on the development of American cities in response to this work, going big in the face of adolescent alienation. As much as I enjoyed that piece, the book made a different impression on me. I’m going to go small: this is a novel of ideas that happen internally and out of sight. All we see is the petulance, the ripple on the surface of a psyche.
A young thin blond girl and a much edgier dark-haired friend who sports an aggressive haircut and heavy-framed glasses are nearing the end of high school. Contemplating their futures, the dark-haired girl wishes to become someone else. “I totally hate myself,” she cries late one night lying on the couch of a boy she’d just admitted she loved. Poor guy.
At that age we are both afraid of and jealous of the complexities adults wrestle every day; we want to try out our problem-handling skills to see if they can measure up. We want the next thing to happen so that we are not merely sitting ducks when it does. Desire for the world and fear of that same world mix unsteadily in our gut. We’re not ready, but when will we ever be?
The ideas shown in this graphic novel struck me as completely within the range of normal adolescence angst, disaffection, confusion, and fear about the world and one’s role in it. We’re pretty obnoxious and self-absorbed at that age, as anyone with a teenager in the house will readily commiserate. Clowes actually plays it so low key we are as bored and unimpressed with their lives as the characters are.
My favorite frame comes near the end when the dark-haired girl is driving the hearse her father graciously bought for her to take to college. Despite having a vehicle and a direction, the girl says she is depressed: “Everything is all the same no matter where you go.” The Buddhists say it like this: “Wherever you go, there you are.”
The tricolor palette in this book works fine: black and white with a green wash. The pen drawings capture the sprawled-leg teenager-y postures, the trying-so-hard-to-be-cooler-than-thou clothing choices and the deliciously descriptive backgrounds absolutely fill in the picture. I thought Clowes was brave to take on the challenge of depicting the mind of a teenaged girl, but he caught that moment in the lifecycle of a female of the species perfectly.
This is another example, if we needed one, that the writing—including what isn’t said—is as important as the drawing in great graphic novels. So many things have to come together to make a satisfying and lasting work. I admire the heck out of artists working in this medium and encourage anyone who hasn’t picked up a graphic novel lately to try one. It’s hard to read just one.
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Reading Progress
August 4, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
August 4, 2013
– Shelved
February 3, 2018
–
Started Reading
February 3, 2018
– Shelved as:
animals
February 3, 2018
– Shelved as:
fiction
February 3, 2018
– Shelved as:
graphic-novels
February 3, 2018
–
51.25%
"This is pretty timeless stuff. Clowes worked on this in the early-to-mid nineties. Has classic angst of the female mind. We're so used to seeing the male aspect of this that the real radical nature of this is his adoption of the female persona. That's a lot of attention paid."
page
41
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
adolescence
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
america
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
art
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
classics
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
family
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
funny
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
teen
February 11, 2018
– Shelved as:
totally-unexpected
February 11, 2018
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)
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by
Rattlebag
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rated it 3 stars
Feb 11, 2018 11:23AM
Great review. I haven't read this in years. my favourite of his was Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron.
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I look forward to Velvet Glove... and the movie is on hold for me. Doesn't everyone look impossibly young in the early 90s?
I did see the movie, Jenna, and it is classic. Everyone played their roles so well. I can see where the story doesn't exactly match the book (the Daniel character, wasn't it?), but it didn't matter because they put in another real thing instead, that is, the relationship between the record collector and the dark-haired girl. Wasn't she a little dictator-ess?