Rusty Brown
Rusty Brown
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2019--
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Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Just the Series: Pantheon Graphic Library   

Series and Publisher: Pantheon Graphic Library   

Annotation: A major graphic novel event more than 18 years in progress: part one of the ongoing bifurcated masterwork from the brill... more
 
Reviews: 3
Catalog Number: #219222
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Special Formats: Graphic Novel Graphic Novel
Copyright Date: 2019
Edition Date: 2019 Release Date: 09/24/19
Pages: 1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN: 0-375-42432-6
ISBN 13: 978-0-375-42432-8
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2019000845
Dimensions: 19 x 25 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)

Ware (Building Stories, 2012, etc.) fans rejoice: The long-rumored and hinted-at adventures of Rusty Brown finally come to the page after years in the making.If Ware's Jimmy Corrigan is indeed the smartest kid in the world, Rusty Brown is perhaps among the least comfortable inside his own skin: He lives a life of quiet desperation in a snowy Midwestern suburb, obsessed with comic heroes such as Supergirl, who he's sure would melt away the snow with her heat vision ("maybe she has problems shutting it off sometimes"); for his part, he wonders whether, in the quiet after a snowfall, he might have developed superhearing. Rusty's dad, Woody, is no more content: A sci-fi escapist, he teaches English alongside an art teacher who just happens to be named Mr. Ware but seems happy only when he's smoking a cigarette and drinking coffee in the teachers' lounge even if Mr. Ware is given to bewildering him there with talk of Lacan, Baudrillard, and ennui. Joanne Cole, an African American third grade language teacher, gently empathizes with her angst-y little charges while nursing an impulse to learn how to play the banjo; it being the civil rights era, the music store owner who sells her an instrument asks, without malice, "So how'd you get interested in the banjo, anyway? Folk music? ‘Protest' songs?" The lives of all these characters and others intersect in curious and compelling ways. As with Ware's other works of graphic art, the narrative arc wobbles into backstory and tangent: Each page is a bustle of small and large frames, sometimes telling several stories at once in the way that things buzz around us all the time, demanding notice. Joanne's story is perhaps the best developed, but the picked-on if aspirational Rusty ("I appear as a mortal, but…I may not be…"), the dweeby Woody, the beleaguered Chalky, and other players are seldom far from view.An overstuffed, beguiling masterwork of visual storytelling from the George Herriman of his time.

Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Ware (Building Stories, 2012, etc.) fans rejoice: The long-rumored and hinted-at adventures of Rusty Brown finally come to the page after years in the making.If Ware's Jimmy Corrigan is indeed the smartest kid in the world, Rusty Brown is perhaps among the least comfortable inside his own skin: He lives a life of quiet desperation in a snowy Midwestern suburb, obsessed with comic heroes such as Supergirl, who he's sure would melt away the snow with her heat vision ("maybe she has problems shutting it off sometimes"); for his part, he wonders whether, in the quiet after a snowfall, he might have developed superhearing. Rusty's dad, Woody, is no more content: A sci-fi escapist, he teaches English alongside an art teacher who just happens to be named Mr. Ware but seems happy only when he's smoking a cigarette and drinking coffee in the teachers' lounge even if Mr. Ware is given to bewildering him there with talk of Lacan, Baudrillard, and ennui. Joanne Cole, an African American third grade language teacher, gently empathizes with her angst-y little charges while nursing an impulse to learn how to play the banjo; it being the civil rights era, the music store owner who sells her an instrument asks, without malice, "So how'd you get interested in the banjo, anyway? Folk music? ‘Protest' songs?" The lives of all these characters and others intersect in curious and compelling ways. As with Ware's other works of graphic art, the narrative arc wobbles into backstory and tangent: Each page is a bustle of small and large frames, sometimes telling several stories at once in the way that things buzz around us all the time, demanding notice. Joanne's story is perhaps the best developed, but the picked-on if aspirational Rusty ("I appear as a mortal, but…I may not be…"), the dweeby Woody, the beleaguered Chalky, and other players are seldom far from view.An overstuffed, beguiling masterwork of visual storytelling from the George Herriman of his time.

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Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Library Journal
Reading Level: 6.0
Interest Level: 9+

A major graphic novel event more than 18 years in progress: part one of the ongoing bifurcated masterwork from the brilliant and beloved author of Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth and Building Stories.

Rusty Brown is a fully interactive, full-color articulation of the time-space interrelationships of three complete consciousnesses in the first half of a single midwestern American day and the tiny piece of human grit about which they involuntarily orbit. A sprawling, special snowflake accumulation of the biggest themes and the smallest moments of life, Rusty Brown literately and literally aims at nothing less than the coalescence of one half of all of existence into a single museum-quality picture story, expertly arranged to present the most convincingly ineffable and empathetic illusion of experience for both life-curious readers and traditional fans of standard reality. From childhood to old age, no frozen plotline is left unthawed in the entangled stories of a child who awakens without superpowers, a teen who matures into a paternal despot, a father who stores his emotional regrets on the surface of Mars and a late-middle-aged woman who seeks the love of only one other person on planet Earth.


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