Best-Loved Books of 2008, #13: Favorite graphic novel memoir
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Freddie and Me: A Coming-of-Age (Bohemian) Rhapsody by Mike Dawson (Bloomsbury)
(bonus: up-and-coming author/artist)
When Mike Dawson spoke at our store, he opined that, in an era of CGI special effects, superheroes are better on the big screen -- which leaves memoir as the form best suited to comics. Bechdel and Spiegelman prove his point, and Dawson adds a doozy to the ranks of graphic memoir with his dreamy, episodic, gently self-deprecating story of a British kid in America obsessed with the band Queen. It's really a meditation on what we remember from our lives and why. It's also lovely and funny for anyone who was ever a self-dramatizing adolescent (Dawson confessed that much of the dialogue and narration was taken from his own terribly moody teenage diaries), or for anyone who loved a band so much they found it told the narrative of their lives. A great gift for fans of comics, music, or memoir.
Comments
eh? could you expand on that a bit please?
Mike said it better than me, but the jist of it was that comics move forward image by image, in much the way that memory does -- there might be a lot of detail or a little, and there are lots of gaps in between. Things can move at different speeds, or you can dwell on one image for a long time. His argument is that this is why comics are so conducive to memoir, and why some of the contemporary greats -- Art Spiegelman, Alison Bechdel, Marjane Satrapi -- are telling stories of memory using the graphic novel format. But you can ask Mike about it -- he's at http://mikedawsoncomic.livejournal.com/
anyways, I'll go see what Mike has to say about it. Thanks!