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Summary
Summary
An Eisner Award winner and LA Times Book Prize finalist!
No matter how hard he tries, Jimmy Yee cannot die.
A noose around his neck, a razor across his wrist, and even a bullet to his head all yield the same results: he awakes from each suicide attempt, miraculously unharmed, in his shabby room at the Sunbeam Motel.
Has he gone mad? Or has he truly died and found himself in hell? Jimmy is willing to tear the world down around him to get at the truth. Highly analytical and utterly unscrupulous, he is uniquely suited to unraveling this bizarre mystery.
From the brilliant and profane mind of Jason Shiga, known for his high-concept graphic novels, comes Demon: a four-volume magnum opus about the unspeakable chaos that one indestructible man can unleash on the world--and the astronomical body count he leaves behind.
Author Notes
Jason Shiga was born and raised in Oakland, California. He is the author of Meanwhile , Empire State , Fleep , Bookhunter , and over twenty other comic books and graphic novels. He is also the creator of the world's second largest interactive comic. His comics have a geeky side and often feature exciting uses of mathematics and unusual structural forms. Demon is his most ambitious project to date.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Suicidal Jimmy Yee's multiple attempts at killing himself result in a Groundhog Day-like resetting of where he began, but with bodies piling up with each try. To say any more would spoil intriguing revelation after revelation, as Jimmy begins to sort out what's happening and comes to a startling conclusion-one that solves the mystery but adds a new layer of horror. What can be said is that Shiga (Meanwhile) has woven a tight and tense narrative that keeps readers intrigued and guessing along with Yee, as he endures the mind-bending ramifications of his situation. Shiga's art style is a perfect accent to the story, largely due to its resemblance to clip art and the aesthetic of Sesame Street. The rounded, cartoony cuteness adds a perfect icing of incongruity to Shiga's rich cake of twisted tension. As with Shiga's other books, there are puzzles aplenty to solve, with an added layer of urgent narrative drive. Originally serialized as a webcomic, the story will prove just as addictive for readers finding it in print. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Jimmy Yee has a rather unique problem: he cannot die. After a botched bank robbery, Jimmy decides to take his own life, only to continuously find himself alive again shortly after his death. What seems to be a terrifying curse turns out to be a macabre superpower of sorts, as Jimmy soon must evade government agencies (by killing himself, of course!) to avoid capture. The premise is as gruesome as it is original, but those willing to stick around will be floored by the absurdity of the concept and lured in by the surprising, suspenseful turn of the second half of the piece. Dark humor abounds in Jimmy's straightforward thinking through his morbid problems, as his flippant willingness to die in a variety of ways quickly becomes comically disgusting. Shiga's simplistic cartoon style helps soften the blow; with his characters' bug eyes and rounded structures, murder and suicide have never looked so adorable. Like Jimmy's new lease on life, this is fresh, with plenty of potential, and definitely a series to watch develop.--Blenski, Peter Copyright 2016 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
MOST CARTOONISTS SPEND DECADES developing their craftin public before they're prepared to take on the challenge of a major graphic novel. Not Emil Ferris, who has slammed her oversized, 386- page magnum opus, MY FAVORITE THING IS MONSTERS (Fantagraphics, paper, $39.99), down onto the table of comics by way of introduction. Drawn entirely on blue-lined notebook paper, it's a startling demonstration of Ferris's range, power and ambition. She has a portraitist's skill with tiny subtleties of expression and lighting and a New Objectivist's eye for the raw grotesquerie of bodies and their surroundings, and her illustrative technique extends from impossibly delicate hairbreadth shading to passionate marker-mashing scribbles. Set in Chicago in the 1960s, the book is narrated by 10-year-old Karen Reyes, who imagines herself as a wolf-girl with a fanged underbite. When her beautiful upstairs neighbor, Anka Silverberg, dies under suspicious circumstances, Karen naturally wants to solve the mystery, but it involves deeper and sadder complications of adulthood than she can yet understand. A lot of those complications involve her beloved but rage-prone older brother, Deeze, short for Diego Zapata, who takes her to museums to show her classic paintings (which appear throughout the book, rendered in Ferris's intricately crosshatched pen lines). Deeze, Karen recalls, told her that Henry Fuseli's "The Nightmare" is effectively "history's first horror comic cover . . . and considering the whole arithmetic of boobs + monsters = horror, I guess he's probably right." Karen flits from strand to strand of her story: her mother's rapid decline from cancer, her painful crush on another monster-loving girl, the racial tensions that clawed at Chicago's social fabric at the time, and several long, wrenching digressions into Anka's experiences as a child prostitute in Nazi Germany. The terrible experiences she's processing are punctuated by flashes of simpler horrors - drawings of the covers of her beloved Dread, Ghoulish and Ghastly magazines (dead ringers for the real-world Creepy and Eerie, whose frequent contributor Richard Corben seems to have had as much of an impact on Ferris's artwork as his polar opposite, Lynda Barry). The book ends with something like a cliffhanger - a second and final volume of Karen's story is due this fall - but the incompleteness of a serial episode is appropriate for the way she tries to understand disaster as a promise that something else will follow it. Jason Shiga couldn't be much more distant from Ferris on the stylistic spectrum: His stories are entirely plotdriven, and his drawing skills are technically very modest (all of his characters are flat, bigheaded caricatures, trotting across rudimentary settings). Still, he uses what he's got brilliantly in the first two volumes of DEMON (First Second, paper, $19.99 each), a Grand Guignol comedy that he initially serialized online. (The remaining two volumes will follow later this year.) Shiga scatters panels loosely across each page, letting empty space sharpen the timing and staging of his gory farce. As the story begins, Jimmy Yee, the Everyman protagonist of many of Shiga's comics, is writing a suicide note. He hangs himself, and promptly wakes up alive and well in the same grotty motel. "I've been given a second chance," he declares before slitting his wrists, with the same result. After a few more attempts to kill himself end similarly, this version of Jimmy, a psychopathic actuary with a giftfor mental computation, figures out what's going on: He's actually a demon who possesses whoever is closest to him whenever his host body dies. Naturally, the government wants to use Jimmy as a weapon, and his path to freedom involves committing suicide over and over in increasingly ingenious ways (with a lot of homicide thrown in, too). The result is a bit like Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata's "Death Note" - escalating mayhem based on a plot gimmick with very specific rules - except that Shiga delights in letting the simple cuteness of his visual style sugarcoat horrific gross-outs. At the climax of the first volume, Jimmy has to figure out a way to kill his current host body, armed only with "nearly an entire square of toilet paper . . . double ply." His solution is hilariously original, and so far beyond the pale that it has practically forgotten what the pale was. Gabrielle Bell is a supreme miniaturist. Her tart, wry comics generally make their point in a few pages, then vanish like an uncomfortable party guest. Discomfort, actually, is the chief subject and substance of her work: Her characters slump and stare at their nails, obsess over their social awkwardness, fret over what to do about mysterious smells. EVERYTHING IS FLAMMABLE (Uncivilized, $25.95) extends that aesthetic to a book-length narrative, a memoir of Bell's difficult relationship with her mother, Maggie. When Maggie's house, a four-hour drive north of San Francisco, burns down, Bell steels herself to help her find a new place to live. ("Can you put me on something that will keep me on my best behavior?" she asks a psychiatrist.) Through the six square, neurotically overstuffed panels on each page, Bell shows us the landscape of her mother's life, populated by feral animals and possibly dirty dishes. There's clearly some horribly painful family history, but we see it only in glimpses and elisions; Bell and her mother are more concerned with the business of getting a new little house delivered, getting a stove and plumbing put in, and figuring out whether the ex-con who lives in a trailer on the property is a danger to her or not. The subtext of it all is Bell's ceaseless struggle with her own depression and anxiety, which she frames as black comedy. "Sometimes it feels like I'm carrying some invisible, unwieldy object, like, say, a bicycle, with both hands over my head, while continuing to try to function normally," she notes (and draws herself doing just that). The bleakest section of the book memorializes the dead cats of her youth, several of them killed by Freya, a dog owned by her abusive stepfather, Jeff. "One day, when I came home from school, Freya was gone and Jeffwas looking mournful," Bell writes. "I didn't feel anything, but I'd learned to fake it." Over more than three decades, the Italian cartoonist who goes by the single name Igort has written and drawn fictional, historical, biographical and experimental books, relatively few of which have been translated into English. JAPANESE NOTEBOOKS: A Journey to the Empire of Signs (Chronicle, $29.95) is partly a remembrance of his experience working in the Japanese comics industry, and mostly an extended meditation on his long, deep fascination with Japan and its art. (As the subtitle suggests, it owes a bit to Roland Barthes's own book about Japan, "Empire of Signs.") It's a loose chain of commentaries on bits of Japanese culture that have made an impression on him - the films of Seijun Suzuki, the life story of the murderer Sada Abe, discrimination against the burakumin caste, the national fascination with chrysanthemums - illustrated with exquisite pen-and-watercolor images that filter iconic Japanese imagery through the visual techniques of European comics. Those observations are peppered by stories of Igort's personal links to Japan, where he's been unusually successful for a Western creator since the early '90s, when he got a job drawing comics for the publishing company Kodansha. (He tells the story of how his initial meeting there went on for three and a half hours: He didn't realize that it was his role to end it, and so his editor raised his rate three times, thinking that Igort was subtly negotiating.) His editors, he notes, told him that they were "honored to work with you, who in turn, in your previous life, were Japanese." That's the deepest longing of any cultural outsider, and like many such outsiders, Igort is particularly attached to the aspects of the country that are gone or vanishing. In the book's afterword, he relates a dream in which his translator imagined him as "a high-class woman of a certain age" in a kimono shop in the early 1900s. Such fantasies rarely involve being, say, a burakumin, but Igort's drawings of that posh, tidy vision are beautiful enough to get away with it. Most of Guy Delisle's longer graphic novels to date, like "Pyongyang" and "Burma Chronicles," have been memoirs of his travels. HOSTAGE (Drawn & Quarterly, $29.95) is neither about the Canadian cartoonist's own experiences nor grounded in his canny observations of place: It's the story of Christophe André, who spent almost four months in 1997 as a hostage. Kidnapped from a Doctors Without Borders office in Nazran, Ingushetia, a Russian republic near Chechnya, where he was an administrator, he was taken to Grozny and handcuffed to a radiator next to a mattress in a darkened room. That was all André knew. He didn't speak his captors' language, got almost no information of any kind from them, and had no way of knowing when or how he might be freed. In some ways, this story, translated by Helge Dascher, is a bizarre choice to present as comics: André spends 300 straight pages as a captive, with very little change of scenery and almost no other identifiable characters in sight. (Delisle's thin pen lines are submerged in a bare handful of flat tones of gray and gray-green.) But the location captured here is less André's grim little room than his mind, as he tries to ward offexistential despair - a battle that lets Delisle transmute tedium into compelling suspense. We see the captive narrator struggling to keep track of the passing days, and to keep his mind sharp by playing memory games about the Napoleonic Wars. He makes tiny jokes, like naming the man who brings him his soup Thénardier, after the innkeeper from "Les Misérables." A heroic effort on Day 80 yields him a clove of garlic. Delisle presents André's eventual escape less as a daring exploit than as a panicked, fumbling victory over his interior monologue - the psychological prison that months of darkness, immobility and uncertainty had imposed on him. It's usually a slight to argue that an artist "hasn't found their voice yet"; in the case of the restlessly versatile Jillian Tamaki, it's an endorsement. BOUNDLESS (Drawn & Quarterly, paper, $24.95) collects short stories that are so far apart from one another in tone and technique that they could almost pass for the work of entirely different artists. Some of them are less narratives than brief, illustrated prose poems. If Tamaki (the illustrator of the Book Review's By the Book feature) has a favorite storytelling strategy, it seems to be dreaming up some kind of odd artifact of mass culture and then examining the way people react to it. "Body Pods" concerns a cult movie adored by some of the narrator's friends, and their reactions as its stars begin to die. "Darla!" is an oral history of a (nonexistent) short-lived pornographic sitcom from the '90s. ("It was a different time," the narrator deadpans. "You could never make something like it now.") And the Borgesian "1. Jenny" begins by imagining a "mirror Facebook" whose users' profiles begin to diverge from their real-world counterparts,' and goes on to follow one woman's obsession with her alternate self's love life. The book's highlight, "SexCoven," is a showcase for Tamaki's mercurial style. Nominally, it concerns a mysterious six-hour-long audio file with druglike properties and the communities that successively accrued around it in the early 2000s. The story starts offlike a documentary whose narrator is looking back on the phenomenon, but in the course of its 30 pages, it drifts through a sex scene, a psychedelic depiction of a SexCoven trip, "screenshots" of a digital video and more, with each sequence presented in a different visual idiom. The task of culture is to connect people in the world, Tamaki suggests, but the kinds of connections it creates are weirder than anyone could guess. This year is the 100th anniversary of Will Eisner's birth, an occasion marked by a new edition of his most celebrated book. A CONTRACT WITH GOD AND OTHER TENEMENT STORIES (Norton, $25.95), first published in 1978, wasn't the first self-described "graphic novel," but it's the one that made the term stick. At the time, Eisner was already an éminence grise in American comics: "The Spirit," the formally groundbreaking weekly newspaper-insert comic book he had written and drawn in the '40s, had been rediscovered by a new generation of ambitious cartoonists, and he had spent the previous few decades creating instructional comics for the Army and other clients. "A Contract With God" was a departure, not just for Eisner but for comics in general. (Booksellers were puzzled about where to display it.) It's a suite of four stories about the inhabitants of a tenement in the Bronx of the 1930s, where Eisner grew up. "Cookalein" involves the fraught erotic awakening of a young man named Willie. In retrospect, the book seems like a pretext for its bitterly melodramatic, rageful title story - drawn from the author's own life - in which a devout Jewish survivor of pogroms, shattered by the death of his daughter, becomes convinced first that God has violated the terms of their agreement, and then that the contract simply wasn't airtight enough. Eisner's writing here, by modern standards, is hamhanded. The book is overpopulated by ironic twist endings, overcooked dialogue and villainous specimens with wretched sexual urges. As an artist, though, the Eisner of "A Contract with God" was a master arriving at his mature style. His characters crumple, bellow and gesticulate as if they've got a huge stage they need to fill; his blotchy, wriggling lines magically fall together into the contours of a worn-out suit or the light on a litter-speckled stairwell. Even the book's layouts, with only a few panels on each page and frequently borderless backgrounds that dissolve in a hash of pen scratches, didn't look like anything else in their time. In the light of the four decades of graphic novels that have followed it, "A Contract with God" is a display of Eisner's mighty labor to invent a new form, in commemoration of a cultural moment that had already disappeared. What graphic books are on your radar this summer? "Guy Delisle's 'Hostage' is on my list. It's a nonfiction account of an N.G.O. worker's captivity in Chechnya for three months in 1997. In the back of my mind I'm always wondering how I'd survive something like that, so I'm curious to see how this guy did it. I'm also curious to see how Delisle draws a 400-page story that happens in one room. 'Fetch: How a Bad Dog Brought Me Home' is by one of my favorite autobiographical cartoonists, Nicole J. Georges. And Gengoroh Tagame, best known for his gay erotic manga, has written a really sweet all-ages book called 'My Brother's Husband.' " - ALISON BECHDEL DOUGLAS WOLK is the author of "Reading Comics: How Graphic Novels Work and What They Mean." He writes frequently about comics for The Times.
Library Journal Review
At the literal end of his rope, Jimmy Yee has lost his family in an accident and commits suicide. Yet he wakes up alive. He tries again with a revolver, then with pills. Eventually, he figures out why he can't die-and so does the clever agent Hunter, who wants Jimmy to work for him. This is Jimmy's idea of a fate worse than death, and he sets out to best his adversary with murder, mayhem, and impromptu weaponry. Shiga's (Bookhunter) childlike, blobby characters create an effect that's both unsettling and engaging. Many simple, almost wordless two-color panels invite readers to scheme along with Jimmy, an amoral character who yet inspires sympathy and chuckles. Three more volumes are coming, so expect many more paradoxes (Shiga has a math degree), twists, and corpses as two brilliant minds try to outfox each other. VERDICT Shiga knows how to run a premise into the ground with supreme goofiness, and crime buffs looking for something completely different will be drawn into Jimmy's conundrums. Plenty of adult content makes this for older teens and up.-MC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.