Polar vortex A family memoir

Dorrance

Book - 2024

"A graphic of two whirlwind months in the life of the author, when she suddenly has to care for her dementia-impaired mother, whose last home she urgently needs to find"--

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Dorrance (Mimi at Home) takes her quirky approach to semi-autobiographical comics to the next level with her vulnerable latest. A Londoner originally from the American Midwest, Dorrance relates the story of her abrupt return to her hometown of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, following her 91-year-old mother's injury due to a fall and subsequent dementia diagnosis. Landlocked in a place she thought she had left behind, Dorrance struggles to navigate the logistics of her mother's recovery as a historic winter storm--a "polar vortex"--looms on the horizon. Wrestling with the implications of her mother's confusion, helplessness, and impending mortality, Dorrance is also forced to reckon with the depth of her own emotional estrangements from her family, the rural community in which she grew up, and the person she used to be before she left it all behind to pursue a creative career. Her loose-lined, gestural art style is punctuated by abstract flourishes that fill simple panels with raw emotion and occasional bursts of absurdist humor (a conversation with her mother about recovery options transforms the hospital bed onto a game show stage: "Let's Make a Deal!"). The gentle lines, soft color palette, and quippy narration bring a sense of comfort and familiarity to the bittersweet story of family, memory, and the inevitability of loss. Dorrance demystifies the challenges of elder care with this sensitive snapshot of the many ways in which memory shapes family history. (Mar.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A debut graphic memoir about elder care in America by an expat coping with her mother's dementia. Dorrance's upbeat, airy linework packs an unsuspecting emotional wallop as she ruminates not only on her mother's demise, but on her own life, shaped in part by other rifts and losses. Over gossamer washes of watercolor, Dorrance often eschews the traditional frames of a comic strip to create a hazier story, adrift between real-life scenes and more fluid, sketchier memories. After learning that her mother was in the hospital, the author flew from England back to her childhood home to tend to her. But her proactive attempts were muddled by "the tug of [her] past," as well as by sibling tension, insurance claims, and care logistics, all of which left little room for her to properly process her impending loss. Dorrance let humor guide her through these difficult days, and the narrative often pushes away the dreadful reality of her mother's dementia with a high dose of levity. At times, this counterpoint between humor and grief is revelatory. In one scene, Dorrance stubbornly bickers with Death itself, a predictably costumed specter with a black hood and scythe. Moments later, any cartoonish cheekiness is obliterated by Dorrance's rendering of her mother, wide-eyed but staring emptily, muttering about her missing purse. Other visual gags are more quirky than powerful. In a tired recurring bit, Dorrance draws herself in a crown and mantle every time someone mentions her British accent. In another scene, she imagines a psychoanalysis session with the ghost of Dr. Ruth. Elsewhere, she pretends she's a contestant on Let's Make a Deal as she makes decisions about her mother's care. These tonal diversions always snap back to reality with a devastating whiplash, which can feel detrimental to the pacing and emotional intensity. A delicately drawn, unconventional chronicle of loss. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.