And now for some comics that did not rock my world but count towards the Graphic Novels Challenge anyway:
Burma Chronicles, Guy Delisle
Once again Guy Delisle, French-Canadian animator and cartoonist, went a-traveling to a faraway land with an oppressive regime. In this case, his wife Nadège was working for Médecins sans Frontières (MSF); Nadège, Guy, and their small son Louis take off for Burma (Myanmar) for a year. Delisle notes at the beginning of the book that the UN has recognized the regime and calls it Myanmar, but that many countries, including Canada, have not. Hence Burma.
If I hadn’t read Pyongyang first, I think I’d have liked Burma Chronicles better. Burma Chronicles is charming, with keenly noted observations of day-to-day life in Burma, but Pyongyang was so chilling and scary that it was hard for this one to live up to it. Because Delisle was in Burma longer than he was in North Korea, he got to know people better, but you’d never know it from the book. He has an eye for detail but not an ear for conversation. His wife’s present throughout the book, and I never had any idea what she was like.
This isn’t to say that I no longer love Guy Delisle. At first his wife believes that they will be going to Guatemala rather than Burma, and Delisle immediately pops Star Trek into the DVD player and starts playing it in Spanish. A man after my own heart. I love watching Buffy in French. Plus there’s a picture of him trying to bathe his son in a shower that’s worth the price of admission all by itself. Tip: Don’t try to bathe a baby in the shower.
Love and Rockets, vol. 1, by the Hernandez Brothers
Am I stupid? Stupid in the head? Very, very stupid? I think I must be extremely stupid, y’all, because I swear to Jesus, I was reading these stories and they did not make sense to my brain. I have heard that Love and Rockets is glorious. It may be glorious but it is right over my head.
Any thoughts on this? If you loved Love and Rockets, please tell me what I’m missing. I have heard good things! I don’t want to lose a good graphic novel series around being a fail reader. Should I persist into volume two? Now that Delisle has given me a taste for travel writing, do you have any recommendations along that line? Good travel books? Anyone?