#13:
A Family Matter
Storytellers: Will Eisner
Publisher: Kitchen Sink Press
Year Of Publication: 1998
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 68 pages
Storytellers: Will Eisner
Publisher: Kitchen Sink Press
Year Of Publication: 1998
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 68 pages
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT WRITING / STORYTELLING:
Eisner opens this book by
introducing each of the main characters in short 2-3 page scenes, and with
every one – with the exception of the final main character – he starts the
scene with a full-page image of a building important to each character (a nice
suburban house, the retail store where one characer works, the law office where
another works), which also manages to convey pertinent information about the
character. It’s a clever use of the
comics’ synthesis of words and pictures, and it is something I would like to
use someday.
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT ART / STORYTELLING:
Eisner’s visual
storytelling is wonderful, and I am continually amazed at the fact that he
rarely uses panel borders. Many of his
pages are done in a 6-panel grid, and despite the lack of borders, I never find
the visuals to be confusing or cluttered.
His mastery of the visual lexicon of comics is amazing.
I also liked
how he used thought balloons – instead of filling them with text, Eisner drew
the flashbacks each character was thinking of while talking with their father
or arguing with their siblings, and these flashbacks always added upon the
conversation being had in the present, which really worked well.
RECOMMENDATION: B
NOTES / REVIEW / SYNOPSIS
To celebrate
their father’s 90th birthday, all of his offspring come home to show
their love – each of them trying to put on the best face about their lives in
order to hopefully benefit from the estate of their father, who – having
suffered a stroke – is not long for this world.
Through the course of the contentious and chaotic family gathering, we
learn about the secrets harbored by all of the members through their visualized
thoughts. And, in the end, the truth
about their mother’s death comes out, even as their father, who was wheeled
into an adjoining room, dies in a similar fashion as his wife did. It’s Eisner and he wrings as much drama from
his characters as he can. Not
groundbreaking, but it’s Eisner, and it’s good.
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