Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Prolific young Canadian-born avant-garde artist DeForge has become one of his generation's most admired cartoonists, and this is his first sizable collection. Most of the work here has appeared in a barrage of minicomics, small-press publications and Web comics. Many of DeForge's comics center on body horror: in "Sweet Tat," a popular band is made up of ugly lumps of flesh who infect their fans with a terrible disease, and some of the wordless comics deal with bodies that morph in more or less disturbing ways. DeForge's work is most powerful when he engages in world-building, however. In "Spotting Deer," which is rendered in delicate colors, the life of the mysterious eponymous creature is revealed-flesh from a special organ is harvested at farms so the deer can make a living. And in "Cody," a man explores the tense and exciting world of artistic littering. As in several of the comics here, there's a roman a clef aspect to "Cody." DeForge appears as a character and littering can be read as a metaphor for cartooning itself. While often willfully unsettling, DeForge's work resonates on many levels. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved