by Joan Baril
In my dear old Hippie days I used to read comics: R. Crumb’s Mr. Natural, Gilbert Sheldon’s Furry Freak Brothers and Rand Holmes’ Harold Hedd sagas which I found in the Georgia Straight, Vancouver ’s alternative newspaper.
Rand Holmes, creator of the Harold Hedd Comix
In the 80’s, a Japanese friend introduced me to a recently translated historical, Keiji Nakazawa's Barefoot Gen, an autobiographical story of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. I marveled at the power of combination: well researched history, well drawn comix and good writing.
Next came Chester Brown’s Louis Riel, which some consider the best graphic novel ever. Brown’s clean straightforward drawings match his impeccable history and his excellent writing. It took Brown five years to research the material which outlines the life and death of one of the most tragic figures in history.
I enjoy Guy DeLisle’s travel books. DeLisle, another Canadian, created insightful, funny, politically astute looks at China in Shenzhen Journey, Korea in Pyongyang, a Journey in North Korea and my favourite, The Burma Chronicles which details the time spent with his family in that country.
Then came an artistic masterpiece, Skim, by cousins Mariko and Jillian Tamaki. Skim is the nickname of a goth girl in an all-girls school in
A little girl, Marja, grows up in
Maus: A Survivor's Tale, Books I and II, by Art Spiegelman is a biography of the author's father, a Polish Jew and Holocaust survivor. It alternates between descriptions of Vladek's life in
Emma Goldman’s wild ride of a life is vividly conveyed in Dangerous Woman: the Graphic Biography of Emma Goldman by American Sharon Rudahl. Brilliant graphics and a fast moving story line trace the life of the famous anarchist and crusader for women’s rights from her birth in pre-revolutionary
So full circle back to
graphic artist Chester Brown
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But maybe women will get the last word. Last year, Ontario Judge Susan Himel found that laws set up to protect prostitutes actually endanger their safety, forcing them to furtively engage in hasty transactions conducted in shady locations. It’s all up in the air and the question hangs on the cases of prostitutes Valerie Scott and Amy Lebovitch and (fittingly) flamboyant dominatrix Terri-Jean Bedford. The male establishment is not amused.
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