Opus 121: Opus
121: CONNED (August 17, 2003). Two down, more
to go. Two of the summer's biggest comic conventions are now history.
More, however, loom on the near as well as distant horizons. In Toronto
(August 22-24), Atlanta (Dragon-Con, August 29-September 1), New York
(September 5-6), Baltimore (September 20-21), not to mention Motor
City's "fall edition" in Detroit (October 18-19) and Mid-Ohio-Con
(November 29-30). But Sandy Eggo's mid-July extravaganza is over;
ditto Wizard World in Chicago (August 8-10). I missed San Diego's big show this
year. I usually go, but this year, I was, instead, tracking flora
in the rugged mountains of Colorado at the Wild Flower Festival in
Crested Butte. From personal experience, I can tell you there's nothing
quite as terrifying as your wild bull shrubby cinquefoil (potentilla
fruticosa): when roused, it goes right for the throat. I escaped,
luckily, with my life, not a scathe on me. Meanwhile, my spies tell
me that Comic Con International was, as usual, huge -huger, even,
than last year, which was pretty huge. Rumors claim attendance of
over 100,000. I put little faith in rumors, particularly such self-serving
ones as those that rack up big numbers for attendance at such events.
Moreover, I don't know how they calculate out there in Southern California:
years ago, they determined attendance by counting the number of souvenir
programs they'd issued (that is, subtracting the left-overs from the
press run). And since, one year, I picked up five programs myself
(for friends and indisposed dignitaries), I suspected the tally was
exaggerated on the generous side. Maybe now they do it differently.
What they persist in doing the same, year after year -displaying a
dedicated inability to learn from experience -is fail, abysmally,
conspicuously, to manage the movement of the masses of attendees.
As in previous years, the Con's management demonstrated impressively
that it has mastered security but hasn't, even yet, acquired a modicum
of skill at crowd control. Vast quantities of people -paying attendees,
mind you -stood in preposterously long lines every day under a hot
sun, waiting for the doors of the Convention Center to open. The lines
snaked all around the giant edifice and down the waterfront to a nearby
shopping resort (and perhaps out into the cooling waters of San Diego
Bay itself, for all I know). On one morning, according to report,
the uniformed gestapo guarding the building opened only one door at
the appointed hour, expecting, I assume, that the thousands of persons
in line would access the Con through that single portal. Fortunately,
some attendees, once they'd gained entrance to the building, opened
doors for others. To give the convention management the benefit of
dubiousness, I suppose that San Diego's city fathers, fearing this
annual onslaught of strangely garbed citizenry, requires the Con to
exercise an iron hand in controlling the crowd, which the management
dutifully does, interpreting the dictum to prescribe leak-proof security,
uniformed guards at every turn, scowling menacingly at all comers.
And then there are the exhibitors whose investments must be protected,
too -particularly the awe-inspiring Hollywood types, who grow more
numerous every year and whose every whim must, perforce, be obeyed
(including, I imagine, a requirement that visiting celebrities not
be subjected to mob adoration in any physical way). The result is
that the con satraps hire more and more guards but continue to neglect
the rudiments of mob management. At Wizard World in Chicago, the crowd
isn't as gargantuan (they expected about 35,000-40,000), so the lines
are shorter. But what lines there are disappear almost at once when
the show opens. Somehow, perhaps without intending to, the Wizard
folk have managed to do with aplomb something the Sandy Eggo gang
hasn't, apparently, even begun to consider. Complaints continue to
lurk in San Diego among Golden Age comic book dealers, who feel that
the Hollywood interlopers have elbowed the original inhabitants of
the Con into the remote reaches of the cavernous exhibit hall, far
from wherever the attending multitudes might roam. Rumor (again) was
that the Golden Age dealers fully expect that next year the Con management
will decline their applications to exhibit and tell them to go start
their own convention. Well, that's a little extreme. Although the
Wizard exhibit is much, much smaller than the Sandy Eggo show, the
percentage of Golden Age dealers is, I suspect, higher. There may
not be quite as many of them as exhibit in San Diego, but they represent
a larger portion of the total number of exhibit booths. Or so it seems
to me. Sandy Eggo is about celluloid pop culture
with a little sf thrown in, a helping or two of toys, and a smattering
of comic books. It used to be about comic strips in newspapers, too,
but it isn't anymore. This year, only one of the more than three dozen
guests is associated mostly with newspaper strips-Frank Bolle. And
even he began his career by drawing comic books. He now draws Apartment
3-G, which he inherited after the departure 3-4 year s ago of
the talented Brian Kotsky, whose drawings were perfect evocations
of those of his masterful father, Alex. Before that, Bolle had been
the final artist on The Heart of Juliet Jones; and before that,
the last one to draw Winnie Winkle. (He's apparently made a
third career of finishing off old soapers.) The Wizard World con is about toys
and comic books, mostly, with only a patina of celluloid pop. I enjoy
looking at the toys and ogling the wannabe Playmates with plunging
necklines and push-up bras that decorate Artists Alley at both cons.
And I usually buy a toy or two. (This year, Grafitti figurines of
Silent Bob and Jay -appealing creations in the cartoony abstraction
of their construction; ditto, the Mattel's Animated Batman with a
rubbery- flexible!- cape.) But I spend most of my time in Artists
Alley and at the dealers booths offering Golden Age funnybooks, submerging
myself in the eddying multitude with its gentle din. (In Chicago,
Artists Alley is accompanied every year by day-long wrestling matches
conducted at a ring less than a hundred yards from the Alley's borders.
Why a wrestling match belongs at a toy show and comic con is a mystery,
but we all know it's there: every time an overthrown body hits the
mat-a frequent occurrence-a resounding thump reverberates through
the hall.) Among my acquisitions this year are
three copies of Magic Comics, one of the last of the imitators
of the pioneering Famous Funnies that secured a place for this
new breed of periodical on the newsstand by reprinting newspaper strips.
Famous Funnies, which was launched as a premium give-away in late
1933, mutated into Famous Funnies "Series One," then into the
Famous Funnies of history with No. 1 (cover-dated July 1934),
was followed by a stampede of reprint titles, most of which offered
the strips of a single syndicate. Popular Comics, beginning
in February 1936, reprinted comic strips from the roster of McClure
Syndicate (for which M.C. Gaines, one of comics godfathers, worked,
rounding up printing jobs for two two-color presses); Tip Top Comics
followed in April (United Feature Syndicate) and King Comics
(for King Features) the same month. In October, Gaines landed
again with The Funnies, which used NEA strips mostly. In 1937,
the field continued to expand with the advent, in the spring, of
Ace Comics, another vehicle for King Features; The Comics,
another from Gaines, this time with samples from several syndicates,
in March; and late in the year, Feature Funnies with strips
from the Register Tribune and McNaught syndicates. In 1938, Comics
on Parade appeared with more from United Feature, and then, in
August of 1939, came Magic Comics, more King Features material,
notably (given the title) Mandrake the Magician.
Sparkler Comics, the last of the pioneering titles,
didn't appear until 1941 with reprints from United Feature. I picked up Nos. 29, 32, and 39 of
Magic. I have other titles and issues from this genre, most
of which I acquired years ago because, then, these reprint titles
were the only means of sampling the newspaper strips of the 1930s
and 1940s. Since then, most of the notable comic strips have been
reprinted in better venues than in the reprint titles. These titles
characteristically mutilated the strips in preparing them for reprinting.
Some strips were reduced so small they can scarcely be read; in others,
the panels were severely cropped in order to keep the reduction to
a minimum-with the result that most of the artwork disappeared because
the speech balloons carried so much of the story. Or additional artwork
was added to some panels, stretching them to make them fit the page
format. In short, the reprint titles were not the best way to view
old time comic strips. As the more notable strips became available
in the other reprint formats of recent times, I lost interest in acquiring
the old titles. But when, on an impulse, seeing three nearly consecutive
issues in the same bin, I looked at one of the Magic issues,
I saw several strips the reproduction of which was pretty good-notably,
Blondie, Tippie and Cap Stubbs, Henry, Barney Baxter, and
the irrepressible Bunky by Billy DeBeck. For the sake of the
latter two, particularly, I bought all three issues. Other strips in each issue include
Mandrake, The Lone Ranger (by Charles Flanders, who, as Ron
Goulart wryly quipped, filled his panels mostly with pictures of the
backs of his characters' heads), Popeye, Dinglehoofer und his Dog
(like Bunky, the top portion of a Sunday funnies page otherwise
devoted to the main feature, Fred Knerr's Katzenjammer Kids,
and, for Bunky, Barney Google), and Secret Agent X-9 (credited
to "Robert Storm" but drawn by, and later written by, Mel Graff, coming
off his AP strip, The Adventures of Patsy). Each strip gets
about four pages, and in between are a few one- and two-page features
created expressly for the comic book-a sports cartoon, a movie star
spread, the obligatory two pages of text (satisfying postal regulations)-here,
on stamp collecting-and a biography, text and drawing, of some famous
personage, and a startlingly well-drawn strip about Native Americans,
Indian Lore, by Jimmy Thompson, in a style akin to Alex Raymond's
best fineline work in Flash Gordon. The reprint strips appeared
initially in the newspapers of 1939, 1940, and 1941, and their vintage
often provides an insight into these antiques that we can't get except
by direct observation. In Blondie, for example, Dagwood
is somewhat more addled than he is today-more obviously baffled by
the doings of daily life. (Perhaps because, until he married Blondie
in 1933, he was the playboy scion of tycoon millions, and the idle
rich know nothing of daily life.) The comedy is more whimsical than
boffo. Barney Baxter is comparatively fresh on the national
syndicate scene: Frank Miller began the strip for a newspaper in Denver
in late 1935 and wasn't distributed nationally until King picked it
up in December of the following year. And here, in strips from 1939
and 1940, aviator Barney and his grizzled old-timer side-kick Gofer
Gus are running the air force and army in a Graustarkian kingdom,
each of them fully decked out with typical light opera uniforms (jodhpur
and epaulets galore). Miller's characteristic embellishment is often
ruined in adapting the artwork to the page format, but enough survives
to satisfy. We have none of Miller's spectacularly delicate cloud
formations, sculpted in the sky with his hachuring pen, but we get
a glimpse of Gus in a heroic mode: a highly comic character (his chinless
face is a doodle of the first order), he establishes his authority
over the army with a single blow, clouting into unconsciousness the
brute who scoffs at him. And DeBeck's Bunky is a delight,
through and through. DeBeck's hayey style with its lively line survives
in reprint, and the melodrama parody soars. Bunky (or, to use his
given name, Bunker Hill, Junior) is a pint-size waif, habitually attired
in the baby clothes and lacy bonnet of his infancy in the crib. But
his nose is not at all diminutive: it is a thing of grandeur, and
his speech, likewise. Separated from his ne'er-do-well parents, Bunky
is often in the clutches of a scruffy, whiskery hoodlum named Fagin,
an evil schemer so devoid of redeeming qualities as to make him, as
Goulart opines, "one of the great unrepentant villains of the funnies.
He dresses like a bum, robs widows and orphans, kicks stray dogs,
beats children, and is not above stealing pennies from a blind man's
cup. He is a total lowlife ... and yet, somehow, an attractive character."
His appeal arises from the comedy he embodies, the hilarity of unabashed
evil-doing. And Bunky enhances the comedic effects with an exaggerative
manner all his own. In one sequence reprinted herein, Bunky, watching
Fagin depart to cheat a neighboring farmer, tells Mrs. Fagin: "We
must hurry if we wish to warn old Silas of Fagin's nefarious scheme
to pauperize him." (Bunky talks like that-lofty stuff, replete with
numerous syllables and freshly coined argot.) But Mrs. Fagin is bent
on another errand- arranging for the murder of her husband. "Oh, such
a creature!" Bunky moans. "She's worse than Fagin. I must warn the
viper about her diabolical plot." Bunky's favorite term for Fagin
is embedded in the phrase that became the strip's chorus: "Youse is
a viper, Fagin!" Bunky is in dire need of extensive reprinting,
I ween. But until some appreciative soul springs for it, we have only
the fragments of Magic. I also picked up a couple early issues
of Animal Comics, ostensibly because of its carrying the early
incarnation of Walt Kelly's Pogo, but Kelly is manifest on
other, non-swamp pages of the comic book-with such one-shot gems as
Goozy (the title character is a jungle-dwelling monkey whose
side-kick is a parrot) and Nibble (a derbied mouse). And Kelly
often drew the back cover as a 6-panel pantomime gag with Uncle Wiggly
in the starring role. The fabled kindly old gentleman rabbit with
his barber-pole striped crutch and his housekeeper, Miss Nurse Jane
Fuzzy Wuzzy, the muskrat lady, is another regular in the book, drawn
always in the same manner but by whom, I dunno. (Not Lansing Campbell,
who illustrated many of Howard R. Garis' syndicated stories through
the years. Those years, incidentally, began in 1910 with the creation
of Uncle Wiggly, and continued until Garis died in 1962 at the age
of 89. A newspaperman by profession, Garis wrote the Uncle Wiggly
stories on an almost daily basis for syndication, producing, finally,
over 15,000 of them. Garis also wrote many of the Tom Swift books
and other series in the Edward Stratemeyer list-Baseball Joe, the
Motor Boys, Dick Hamilton, and the like. A formidable achievement.) And I increased my holdings of Jingle
Jangle Comics by one, the attraction being George Carlson's "Jingle
Jangle Tales" and his stories of Dimwitri, the Piefaced Prince of
old Pretzleburg, and his inamorata, the Princes Panetella Murphy-tales
fraught with such richly incongruous lingo as: "Once not so very long
ago, by a very salty ocean, there lived an extra salty sailor who
kept a small but slightly flat-footed dragon, who often had parsley
fever, so the sailor thought it best to get some freshly frozen coal.
.. 'Make it the kind with nice black fringes,'" he says in placing
his order. And I chanced upon a few reasonably priced issues of DC's
The Fox and The Crow, that long-running one-plot extravaganza
by Jim Davis. And-the find of this summer-a couple issues of Silvertip,
the Four-Color title about the Max Brand range-rider, illustrated
by Everett Raymond Kinstler, later known for his portraiture. He began
his career drawing comic books in 1942. In these pages (1955), his
drawings are often slapdash, and his visages are sometimes appropriated
from Joe Kubert , but he displays an inventive manner, varying page
layouts and panel compositions with elan. In action sequences, his
figures sometimes overlap panel borders, and he constantly changes
point-of-view. He occasionally chooses the wrong angle for depicting
an action, but, over-all, the books are a lively visual treat, and
one I hadn't expected. Finally, I found an inexpensive copy of an
issue of Police Comics (I try to get one every convention),
which, in addition to the usual antic work of Jack Cole, features
an Al Stahl version of "Flatfoot Burns," the bulb-nosed, pint-sized
comic detective who dashes around on a unicycle, all elbows and knees
(the mark of Stahl). Artists Alley is always fun to wander
through, and it seems to me that the calibre of work on display gets
better year-by-year. While there are always a few rank amateurs in
the ranks, more and more, I see beautiful drawings that display a
keen sense of design and an impressive command of color and line,
texture and form. Comics are no longer, decidedly, the refuge of the
artist either on his way up or on his way down-as they were in the
thirties when they were born and subsequently fostered by "comic art
shops" populated by both worn-out has-beens and yet-to-be-discovered
beginners. Now those who labor in comics are artists in every sense.
And the covers of many titles these days display the sort of art that,
two generations ago, laminated the covers of paperback books-lively,
story-telling (or story-hinting) illustrations, the sort that I'd
thought had disappeared forever. But now, they're back. Speaking of disappearances, one of
the most commented upon is Marvel's. The House of Ideas isn't taking
an exhibit booth at comicons lately. Can't say that I fault them for
that: they're making plenty of money without the advertising. For
the second quarter in 2003, Marvel posted a spectacular profit: $32.8
million, or 42 cents a share, compared with $4.4 million, or 8 cents
a share, at the same time last year. In short, an increase of more
than five times its previous year's standing, due, in large measure,
to the box office success of its character-based movies. Said CEO
Allen Lipson: "We haven't even begun to scratch the surface on developing
a broad range of opportunities to repackage and repurpose our characters."
Wheeooo! If Marvel's exhibition strategy catches on and becomes a
trend, what'll happen to those huge crowds in Sandy Eggo? CIVILIZATION'S
LAST OUTPOST.
The so-called heightened Airport Security is laughable on at least
two counts. Did you watch any of the episodes of "24"on Fox last winter?
Did you see the one in which bad girl Nina breaks a plastic credit
card in two, creating a jagged edge that she subsequently uses as
a knife to slit the throat of her captor? Think this is a bit of fantasy?
Well, I tried it out, in a manner of speaking, the other day. I broke
a credit card in half. The edges weren't quite as jagged as the tv
version, but they were saw-toothed enough that I could easily slice
through a piece of chicken breast on my plate. And I suspect if I
were a highly motivated religious zealot, bent on killing a stewardess,
I could apply the same jagged edge to the soft throat of a flight
attendant with sufficient force to cut deeply. So plastic credit cards
are potential weapons. Do you think Airport Security will
now begin confiscating everyone's credit cards? Not in consumer haven
America they won't. Fingernail clippers and pen knives, yes; but not
credit cards. To confiscate credit cards would be to sabotage the
American Way of Life. So every airline passenger is probably going
to be permitted to board their planes, armed with plastic. But any alarm about this is silly,
my niece pointed out the other day. "What will the terrorist do once
he's slit the throat of the stewardess? Now he has the attention of
the rest of the passengers, so he's going to say, 'Nobody move or
I'll slit your throats?' The circumstance is impossible and laughable." True. But what's true of a jagged-edged
credit card fragment is also true of fingernail clippers. And of knives
in general. Assuming the terrorist so armed would be successful in
killing, say, one stewardess, how, then, is he going to control the
rest of the passengers on the flight? No one's going to move for fear
he'll slit their throats, too? Doubtful. Box cutters were successful on 9/11
because the flying public had been "trained" to be submissive to hijackers.
The general philosophy was: do what they say, and eventually you'll
all be safe. But that was when all hijackers wanted was to get to
some destination or another -or to blackmail money out of rich airlines.
Now that we know hijackers might be bent on killing themselves and
all the rest of the passengers on a flight, superior numbers of non-combatant
civilians are likely to doom any knife-wielding (or fingernail clipper
wielding -or credit-card wielding) terrorist. Give us back our nail clippers! Not likely to happen. For reasons I'll
get to in a trice. First, though, the second reason that Airport Security
is laughable. The next terrorist assault on America is not likely
to repeat the airplane hijacking dodge. The events of 9/11 demonstrate
with awful persuasiveness how imaginative our foe can be. Think they'll
have recourse to the same-old-same-old next time? Nope. They'll try
something new. My guess? The Golden Gate Bridge will be blown up by
a ship passing beneath it, laden with explosives. We have scarcely
any way of preventing that -short of stopping at sea any ship headed
for San Francisco Bay. We're notoriously weak in our seaport
security. It's entirely possible that Osama bin Laden and his entire
extended family are safely living within one of those huge containerized
freight shells, ensconced as comfortably as anyone in any other sort
of mobile home -probably in some cargo holding area in one American
port or another. But, to return to Airport Security
and nail clippers. We aren't likely to get our nail clippers back.
The whole idea of Airport Security is to keep the American voter as
fearful as possible. Fearing the worst, he and she will doubtless
vote for George WMD Bush in the 2004 election: we are notoriously
reluctant to change horses in midstream, particularly when the stream
is full of alligators. So the scheme is to keep us fearful. As long
as Airport Security remains on "high alert," we'll stay fearful. Relaxing
Airport Security would result in the reverse: we'd feel somewhat more
secure. And we probably wouldn't vote for George WMD Bush then. Never, I would venture to guess, has
an intelligent people been so thoroughly snookered as we have been
on this issue. That the most advanced nation in Western Civilization
has permitted its leaders to successfully commit this act of deception
and mass hypnosis is an astoundingly revealing fact about us -about
how naive and gullible we've become -or, perhaps, about how individually
self-centered and therefore a-political we are, how entirely apathetic.
And therefore pathetic. No wonder we turn to the funnies: we
need to escape ourselves. GRAPHIC
NOVEL REVIEWS.
In The Last of the Independents, Matt Fraction and Kieron
Dwyer have produced a perfect evocation of those gritty caper
movies where everything goes wrong and gets bloody. We meet Cole,
an older sort of hardcase with a middle-age spread, his paramour,
a younger woman pilot named Justine, and their handyman of all work,
Billy, a strong and slightly retarded giant of a man, whose loyalty
to Cole is based largely upon Cole's having treated him like a human
being. They rob a bank and take a huge bundle of boodle which is being
laundered through the bank by the Las Vegas mob. The mob then comes
to get its money back, and Cole and Justine and Billy do heroic battle
with them. And things go pretty rapidly from bad to catastrophic.
How it all comes out, you'll have to read this book (Ait/PlanetLar,
$12.95) to find out. There are delicious little touches -Billy is
the only one who knows where the money is buried because Cole and
Justine know he'll never talk, no matter what the inducement, but
each of them might; and when Cole tells Justine, kneeling before him
to console him, that she's kneeling in barf. The artwork is nifty
-a bold and crudely expressive flexible line, not much feathering
but fineline nicks and tucks for modeling. Printed in sepia ink on
sepia-mottled paper, the book's other innovation is that it's bound
on the short side of its 6.5x10-inch format, but the dust jacket turns
the book the other way so that on the shelf it looks as if the spine
is on the long side. This book is an expertly done graphic novel,
deploying to dramatic effect all the tics and tropes of comics art
-narrative breakdowns, page layout, visual storytelling. A genuinely
rousing treat. Persepolis: The Story of A Childhood
is another sort of thing altogether. Written and drawn by Marjane
Satrapi, the book tells her own story about growing up in Iran
during the Islamic revolution that deposed the Shah in the late 1970s.
In the New York Times, reporter Tara Bahrampour relates a telling
incident from Satrapi's life that is not in the present volume: In
a life drawing course at Tehran University, Satrapi and other art
students drew from a female model draped in a chador. "Their sketches
of black formless figures must have been instructive in cultivating
an appreciation of the absurd, at least," writes Bahrampour. "When
the class finally insisted on a male model, clothed but at least in
possession of visible limbs, an Islamic morals policeman showed up."
Satrapi recalled that he asked her if she was "looking at" this guy.
Realizing that she was doing a forbidden thing, she asked, "Should
I look at the door and draw him?" The morals cop said, "Yes." Persepolis deals with the other,
everyday indignities, mostly minor but insulting, belittling, and
dehumanizing, of growing up in theocratic Iran, all from the perspective
of the young girl who is the protagonist, Satrapi herself. Producing
the book was a labor of love and patriotism. In the introduction,
Satrapi relates the history of her native Persia. And then: "This
old and great civilization has been discussed mostly in connection
with fundamentalism, fanaticism, and terrorism. As an Iranian who
has lived more than half of my life in Iran, I know that this image
is far from the truth. This is why writing Persepolis was so
important to me. I believe that an entire nation should not be judged
by the wrongdoings of a few extremists. I also don't want those Iranians
who lost their lives in prisons defending freedom, who died in the
war against Iraq, who suffered under various repressive regimes, or
who were forced to leave their families and flee their homeland to
be forgotten. One can forgive but one should never forget." Satrapi's drawing style is of the "clear
line" (Tintin) variety, and she uses solid black in this black-and-white
production with great effect, shrouding her tale with a somber aura.
Much of the story is told with captions that are poised in dramatic
tension over the pictures, which, in their turn, sometimes provide
a contrasting comment on the prose. Satrapi's prose itself is terse,
colorless, the perfect unemotional posture to assume for relating
indignities in an almost ironic manner. She uses the medium expertly,
varying layout for emotional impact and often resorting to symbolism
to emphasize a narrative point. But she infuses her story with humor,
too. She and her father are out in the city
when Iraqi aircraft drop bombs, so they hurry home to comfort the
mother. Dashing desperately across town and then upstairs to their
apartment, expecting to find the mother distraught, they find, instead,
that she's just emerging from the shower, wrapped in a towel. The
father hugs his wife. "The Iraqis bombed us!" he exclaims. "Really?" she says. "When?" "Just now." "Well," she says, "I guess I should
dry off." Satrapi's caption under this picture:
"War always takes you by surprise." The war with Iraq permitted the theocratic
regime to become more repressive, Satrapi observes. "They eventually
admitted that the survival of the regime depended upon the war. ...
In the name of that war, they exterminated the enemy within. Those
who opposed the regime were systematically arrested and executed together.
As for me," she continues, "I sealed my act of rebellion against my
mother's dictatorship by smoking the cigarette I'd stolen from my
uncle two weeks earlier." The pictures show her lighting up and
then, promptly, coughing. "It was awful," she says in the accompanying
caption, "but this was not the moment to give in." Then in a speech
balloon in the next panel, she says: "With this first cigarette, I
kissed childhood goodbye. Now I was a grown-up." Comedic touches like these enhance
the profound humanity of the work. And Satrapi's narrative itself,
surprisingly, reveals an unexpected Iranian life. Despite repression
in 1980-84, there was a certain freedom of movement. As a teenager,
Satrapi was able to obtain on the black market audiotapes of her favorite
Western music and various articles of fashionable clothing, too. Still,
at nearly every venture away from the home, she was menaced by the
possibility that the morality police would apprehend her and punish
her with a whipping or imprisonment -"anything might happen," she
says. Satrapi now lives in Paris, where she
smokes and wears miniskirts. Her book has sold more than 120,000 copies
in France and has been translated into six languages. The American
edition, from Pantheon (156 6x9-inch pages in hardback, $17.95), offers
but the first two of the story's four parts; the others, we assume,
are forthcoming. The Iranian government will doubtless not permit
the book to be sold there, but Satrapi says she might translate it
into Farsi and put it on the Web, which is widely used by young Iranians.
In the West, the book, she hopes, will help unhorse myths about Iran
and Islam life. I'd say she's well on her way to doing exactly that. And now, for an overview of what this
website has in store, click here
to be transported to the Front Page where it's all laid out for you. To find out about Harv's books, click here. |
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