Saturday, January 11, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #42: Sandy Steen Bartholomew
Friday, January 10, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #41: Fantology 4
Thursday, January 9, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #40: Hole
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #39: Ruby Arnone, Clover Ajamie, Taylor Hunt
Ruby Arnone's And The Bat is their version of the Aesop's fable assignment. Like many who have taken it on, they have chosen to bend it to their own interests and concerns rather than a more straightforward adaptation. In this case, Arnone did a take on "The Birds, The Beasts, And The Bat," the fable about a bat who sits out a war between the birds and beasts by not identifying with either side but gets shunned as a result. Arnone abandons that narrative to examine the genocide in Palestine, noting that war is rarely a conflict between morally equivalent sides. This is an unapologetically didactic comic with some lovely pencil drawings.
Clover Ajamie's Healer's Tale is a beautiful, wordless story about a medicine woman of some kind who goes about her days in the forest. She's looking to heal trees but encounters signs of a mysterious and benevolent magic that's clearly healing the forest she loves so much. There's a delightful sense of the methodical as she goes about her day, munching on toast as she digs around the mushrooms. The encounter she has at the end feels entirely earned in its warmth and intimacy, and all of this is heightened by Ajamie's use of browns, yellows, and oranges.
Tyler Hunt's contribution last year was very funny, and this year's God's Away On Business mixes humor and existential discovery. Done as part of the Ed Emberley assignment (made mostly out of squares, triangles, and circles), it's about a despondent priest who kills himself in order to get an audience with god. Despite that angle, this is actually a funny comic. The priest winds up in limbo, guided by a skeleton bureaucrat through a dizzying environment before meeting the creator. He's told by god that he just got burned out because Earth was especially annoying. The priest steals god's pen and is ready to right some wrongs before being asked by the skeleton, "Do you think you won't get tired, too?" Hunt really goes to town on the cartooning details, even if those turn out to be a shaggy dog story. The best thing about the story is its pacing, as Hunt keeps the reader engaged from the very beginning, and the priest's case against god is very compelling.
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #38: Fern Pellerin
Fern Pellerin has a sharply refined if familiar style of cartooning. Creation Myth is a visually compelling and fluid version of a very common story: the trans journey of discovery. Pellerin used a somewhat cliched visual metaphor in the stage of development of a butterfly, but it's so beautifully executed and succinct (9 pages) that it worked fine. Pellerin's page composition is elegant and filled with decorative flourishes that enhance the narrative. This comic was part of a larger anthology whose theme was gender and transition, and Pellerin understood that it was important to get to the point.
Heave Away is a lesbian seaside fantasy romance that similarly does well in establishing a setting, thanks to the frequent use of open-page layouts and dramatic composition. Pellerin's somewhat limited character design impedes the story, and you can see the limitations of their cartooning in the way they depict action and movement as well. There are other problems, like wonky proportions, but Pellerin's ambitions as a storyteller were on display. The future setting but provincial characters certainly had their charms, and what Pellerin did best here was establish a sense of place. The story felt too long and not long enough all at once, as parts of it dragged early on but the world as a whole felt like needed more time to bake. This is pretty much straightforward YA fiction, but given Pellerin's talents, I'd be curious to see what direction they'll go in next.
Monday, January 6, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #37: Fernanda Nocedal
Fernanda Nocedal is clearly working through a lot of things with body horror-tinged fiction. In a short, untitled minicomic, they evocatively use a lot of shapes and colors to depict the horrific sexual assault of what appears to be a child. Working wordlessly, the visual wolf & rabbit metaphor is clear and unsettling. This is a really well-designed and effective comic that uses its sparse economy of colors and images for maximum impact.
Their other comics aren't quite as clearly designed. Darling Angel Flesh is a visceral story that seems highly influenced by Japanese horror. It's about a girl named Lilith (a bit of a giveaway) who finds herself transforming into her true, winged demonic form in the middle of a high school bathroom. This is less a story than it is a mood, as it touches upon the cursed feminine form and other gender ideas and dives deep into their guts. Nocedal's drawing isn't quite assured enough to pull of what they were attempting here, but the overall impact was still effective.
Grieving Hearts is the longest of Nocedal's comics, and I suspect it was their first-year final project. The story follows a young woman named Elizabeth living in a small town with her grieving and dissociating mother Carmen. She soon learns that the utter weirdos in the town aren't just taking a bizarre and inappropriate interest in their grieving over the death of Elizabeth's father--they are a cult planning to sacrifice them in order to summon some kind of demon! Nocedal's cartooning is much more effective here, and there's a delightful glee to be found amidst the gore, violence, and creepiness. The final panel, implying that Elizabeth may have been transformed against her will anyway, is classic horror storytelling. Nocedal uses a dense and inky style in support of clear and unnerving character design, with big expressions and lots of highly effective exaggeration. You can see how Nocedal is using their time at CCS to really hone their craft.
Sunday, January 5, 2025
45 Days Of CCS, #36: Maia Foster O'Neal
Maia Foster O'Neal's business card reads "Comics, Crafts, & Feelings," and their comics certainly are an example of truth in advertising. There's Sparklemaia's Little Zine Of One Pot Vegan Soup Recipes, which is exactly what it sounds like. Little is a four-page comic that's mostly an excuse to try some expressive color as Maia comforts a younger version of themselves.
Cracks is a variation on one of the most common subjects I see these days from young cartoonists: the trans journey of self-discovery. In Maia's case, there's a little more nuance because even though top surgery was an extremely important step in her gender-affirming care, she noted that "there's no simple answer." In a nicely illustrated sequence, focusing on specific labels was the equivalent of mistaking the map for the territory. The rest of the comic is straightforward and familiar, but the use of an open-page layout, expressive cartooning, and gentle approach to their dysphoria made this a pleasant and engaging read.
Harebells was Maia's first-year final project, and it fits into their ambition to work in middle-grade publishing. It's a story about two quarreling sisters and their mother who uses folk tales to help soothe sore feelings. It's a gentle story that touches on gender identity, as well as figuring out new roles in a family when circumstances change. Visually, it's a slightly more personal and idiosyncratic approach than the typical Scholastic/First Second playbook, especially with a nuanced use of color that allows Maia's line to still shine.
Maia's most interesting comic by far was Entangled. It's a clever two-track narrative and a visual tour-de-force that eschews the more cutesy aspects of their cartooning in favor of something far more visceral. The narrative is about how the human body is comprised of "bacteria, viruses, archaea, and fungi" and goes on to describe how fungi are hard to kill, adaptable, and can even hijack nervous systems. The open page layout is framed by branching, distorting images of roots and fungi that are hidden to us but ever-present. It's implied that the main character we see has been hijacked, changing their behavior (once again, there's not only dysphoria, but the kind of bullying that leads to isolation) in a way that is not necessarily negative, but integral to survival. Maia is generally pretty blunt with their storytelling, especially in terms of doing a lot of telling along with showing, but this mini shows that this doesn't need to be the case.