Chlorine Gardens

Keiler Roberts

Book - 2018

Dealing with pregnancy, child-rearing, art-making, mental illness, and an MS diagnosis, the parts of Chlorine Gardens' sum sound heavy, but Keiler Roberts' gift is the deft drollness in which she presents life's darker moments. She doesn't whistle past graveyards, but rather finds the punch line in the pitiful.

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BIOGRAPHY/Roberts, Keiler
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Subjects
Genres
Humorous comics
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
Autobiographies
Autobiographical comics
Published
[Toronto, Ontario] : Koyama Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Keiler Roberts (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Chiefly illustrations.
Physical Description
1 volume (unnumbered pages) : black and white illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781927668580
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Roberts (Sunburning) continues to mine both quotidian and existential moments in another deeply satisfying collection of simultaneously deadpan and poignant autobiographical comics, delineated in slightly awkward but appealing black-and-white drawings. Roberts depicts moments of funny domestic life with her husband, Scott; their young daughter, Xia; their dog, Crooky; and her quirky but always supportive parents. Mixed in are more fraught concerns, such as living with bipolar disorder and a recent diagnosis of MS. The never-ending struggle to make art is also a recurring theme: in one outstanding sequence, Roberts muses on the old expression "Too much of a good thing," which escalates into an exploration of the ebbs and flows-and overwhelming overflows-of her creative process. "Occasionally I'm stifled by overabundant creativity," she confesses. In another reflection, she mulls over mortality, vividly recalling one of her final visits with her dying grandfather as he was having dinner: "I tried to memorize him eating without crying." Her spare but evocative line drawings, with their generous use of white space, work in tandem with the direct and detached tone of her narratives, allowing readers to fill in the emotional spaces between visual pauses. Roberts is a unique and nuanced storyteller, and this proves her best, richest book yet. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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