Below ambition

Simon Hanselmann

eBook - 2022

Megg and Werewolf Jones are Horse Mania. Horse Mania is a test of the audience's patience, proudly the "worst band in town," existing within and operating far below the status quo of ambition. Join the musicians as they battle through shoddy, distracted practice sessions, a squalid house show, and a doomed interstate tour. Watch as they drunkenly flail through their sets amidst toothaches, nervous breakdowns, hobby forms, suicide attempts, mounting hatred, and a galaxy of benzos. This is music and performance in its most primal, multifaceted, and pure form. Feel the tension. See the dirty looks. Taste the pain. Smell the depravity. Hear the veiled beauty. Horse Mania wants you to lose your mind. Below Ambition is a mediation ...on youth, performance, and memory as only the best comedic writer in comics is capable.

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Subjects
Genres
Electronic books
Graphic novels
Comic books, strips, etc
Published
[United States] : Fantagraphics Books 2022.
Language
English
Corporate Author
hoopla digital
Main Author
Simon Hanselmann (author, -)
Corporate Author
hoopla digital (-)
Online Access
Instantly available on hoopla.
Cover image
Physical Description
1 online resource
Format
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Audience
Rated M
ISBN
9781683965497
Access
AVAILABLE FOR USE ONLY BY IOWA CITY AND RESIDENTS OF THE CONTRACTING GOVERNMENTS OF JOHNSON COUNTY, UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, HILLS, AND LONE TREE (IA).
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Antisocial antics meet punk-rock provocation in this latest collection of down-and-dirty transgressions from Eisner-winning comics provocateur Hanselmann (Crisis Zone). His louche menagerie of fantastical creatures act more like sailors on shore leave than fairy tale protagonists. The seven sordid stories are primarily tales of a legendarily horrible band, Horse Mania, whose gigs are tantamount to audience assault. Its two members, hyperaggressive Werewolf Jones and the more laid-back witch Megg, occasionally bat at their keyboards but largely focus on drinking sessions and heckling other performers. Noting in only semi-tongue-in-cheek fashion that he is "whittling down the fanbase," Hanselmann takes a more aggressive and confrontational mode in these pages than the downbeat slacker vibes of his earlier volumes. He plays up each character's unpleasant sides, especially Jones's G.G. Allin--like love of the grotesque and tendency for pugnacious confrontations. It's a highly self-conscious framing, reflected in Megg's joyful response to getting a drink thrown in her face by an audience member, "Thank you! You've made our night!" But the mood is as raw as the rather tossed-off art. No matter how hard he might try to shake them, Hanselmann certainly still has fans, who will add this to their row of his odd, bawdy titles. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Prolific cartoonist Hanselmann follows last year's magnum opus, Crisis Zone, with a tale focusing on recurring characters Megg the Witch and Werewolf Jones as they attempt to create a following for their band, Horse Mania. Within a few pages, it is clear that the protagonists would be better off doing almost anything else with their time and energy--they're talentless, self-indulgent, lazy, and ultimately more interested in indulging in sordid rock-and-roll excess than in creating art or connecting with an audience. Several sequences, in fact, show the duo openly antagonizing the small audiences they're given a chance to appear before. Hanselmann delivers a lacerating satire of the posturing hipsters and self-important weirdos rampant in the local live music scene, especially in a sequence following Horse Mania on a brief, disastrous trip to play a show in another town. There is more going on here than just bilious commentary, though. Hanselmann skillfully and subtly establishes the sadness and pain that drive Megg to sabotage herself time and time again, creating a deeply empathetic portrait at the center of this otherwise lurid maelstrom. VERDICT Hanselmann remains a singular talent with a distinctive, necessary voice.

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