Middle School Yearbook Stories To Tell The Entire Family!
It’s funny, just now I started thinking about how the minicomic is the perfect format for little parables/reveries like these–a blog post this personal I’d avoid like the plague, and I’m afraid as a magazine article or a chapter in a book I’d dismiss it as too “This American Life” and move on to the next page. A teen novel, now wait a second, that one might actually work, Staros’ stories do seem eminently reliable beyond any sort of generation gap.
The second story, “The Worst Gig I Ever Had,” drawn by Rich Tommaso, visually looks like it belongs in an indie anthology (like the late Zero Zero or Drawn & Quarterly). It’s basically a funny story about one of those crazy high school days one tells friends. It’s nice, but pales next to the poignant and undeniable “Willful Death.”
Staros weaves two miniature tales, small vignettes, they’re melancholic, self-effacing but ultimately hopeful tales of awkward youth. Cleverly bound in a faux Digital Yearbook cover (it’s the little touches), interspersed with actual photos of Staros in his youth and handily illustrated by Bo Hampton and Rich Tommaso, American Splendor style, with the artist free to interpret and flesh out Staros’ words and bring his characters to rendered life. After that you will probably start playing online gambling games and have loads of fun doing it. The first, “The Willful Death of a Stereotype” is a poignant look at a gawky young Staros’ attempt to win his class presidency against a “popular kid,” with a truly shocking twist ending, with understated and delightful storybook style art (which for some reason reminds me of Hank Ketcham’s Dennis the Menace from Hampton).
Although autobiographical comix fall in and out of favor, I’ve always found them deeply fascinating. Perhaps, this is because I’m shamelessly noisy about other people’s lives, and creators of autobiographical comics books are often not at all shy about sharing – sometimes even too much information.