Wednesday Mini Book Review: Sloth
The revived tradition continues :
Sloth, by Gilbert Hernandez (Vertigo Books, 2006). If ranking in an art form is a simple function of quality times quantity, then Gilbert Hernandez is nearly unchallengeable as the greatest comic book artist of his time (with only his brother Jaime, with whom he has produced the comic periodical Love and Rockets in a couple of formats for 25 years now, on and off, as serious competition).
While we are lucky to get even 40 pages every couple of years from some of our greatest comic book artists working in the non-superhero realm, Hernandez is unfailingly prolific on a variety of projects. This, Sloth, is his first standalone "graphic novel" produced without earlier serialiation in a comic book, done for DC Comics' "adult" imprint, Vertigo.
Sloth isn't among his best work--which is done with the cast of characters and their relatives living in or from the fictional Central American city of Palomar that he's been developing lovingly and elaborately for decades in the pages of Love and Rockets and other comic book series' for the indie publisher Fantagraphics--but it's still impressive.
It's both dizzying in its conceptual tricks and twists and deeply humane. It tells the story of a teenage rock band in a town troubled by waves of bordeom and ennui, said boredom becoming mysteriously reified in the form of year-long comas that come to touch the lives of the three central characters, bandmates involved in a love triangle of sorts.
Sloth is constantly switching up our sense of what is "really" happening; not in the service of random mindfuck bewilderment but always giving further insight onto the nature of the three lovable central characters and the meanings, both surface and mythic, of their relationships.
Hernandez's black and white pages contribute complete clarity and vividness to a world of mystery; he's especially gifted in facial expressions and body language and unfailingly creates a visual world that's clean and elegant while still vivid and quirky. Not a place to start with him, necessarily, but another impressive contribution to an important and wonderful body of work.
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If ranking in an art form is a simple function of quality times quantity, then Gilbert Hernandez is nearly unchallengeable as the greatest comic book artist of his time
I'm sorry, but wasn't I informed on these pages that "Cerebus", by some other guy, was the greatest comic ever?
Just wonder'n [scratches itch]
Holy slanted prose Batman!
Warren---The answer to your head scratcher is, as far as I know, "no," unless someone wrote something in reason about cerebus that completely slipped my notice.
Brian,
Technically it's in the American Spectator But it was linked here. I'm pretty sure there was a Hit and Run post as well.
I'm quite familiar with THAT article, but not any article in which I or anyone associated with reason called cerebus the greatest comic ever.
No? Oh well, just the impression I took away. Guess that's why, I never got my comicbook badge in geekscouts.
BTW, while I'm a fan of all seven, sloth is definitely my favorite.
BTW, while I'm a fan of all seven, sloth is definitely my favorite.
I'm still goin' to have to go with wrath.
Shiney! Should I go get Vera?
Warren, even if Cerebus is the greatest comic ever, that doesn't create a conflict with Doherty's assertion. His claim that Hernandez is the greatest comic book artist of his time is qualifed by ranking both by quality and quantity. Obviously, using that scoring system, the artist who produced the single greatest comic book woud not necessarily be the greatest comic book artist.