Please welcome Chris A. Bolton, author of the comic book, SMASH: Trial by Fire to GreenBeanTeenQueen!
I haven't been what you could call a "child" for,
um, several years now. (How many? Never you mind.) But my childhood experience
with my local library was so strong that, to this day, when I hear the word
"library," my first thought is: Asterix.
Surely you know of Asterix the Gaul? The star of the French
comics created in 1959 by writer René Goscinny
and artist Albert Uderzo? Asterix is the short, shrewd, blond-haired warrior
who, along with his enormous friend Obelix, stumbles into countless adventures,
usually while battling the Roman army that surrounds their tiny Gaulish
village.
Like soccer and Tintin, Asterix is hugely successful and
wildly beloved all over the world -- but only moderately popular in the U.S. As
a young boy who loved and devoured superhero comics featuring Batman or
Spider-Man, I'd never heard of Asterix until one fateful Sunday afternoon when
my mom took me to the public library in Eugene, Oregon.
At the time, I thought the library was a vast palace of
books, nearly impenetrable in size. Now that I'm quite a big bigger and live in
Portland -- a much larger city, which has a central library that is several stories
tall -- I realize my mind was exaggerating this perspective a bit. (The Eugene
library has even gotten bigger, having moved to a larger building in the
1990s.)
But, at seven years of age, I found the dozen or so shelves
of the children's section quite daunting. Where would I begin looking? And more
importantly, how would I ever stop?
In short order, a shelf of books caught my attention. These
peculiarly-sized volumes were called "albums" in Europe and today
would be labeled "graphic novels" (despite being not quite
novel-length). But back in the mid-1980s, they were just oddly-shaped,
taller-than-normal comic books with hard covers that stood out to me at a
glance.
Two memories jump at me as I write: the tape on the covers,
and the shape of the characters' hands.
The Asterix
volumes all had reddish tape along the spines, presumably to patch them
together after countless eager readers had worn the bindings to splinters. The
titles of the books had to be retyped on the tape in that ubiquitous Courier
font indicative of typewriters. I'm sure hundreds of library books underwent
his life-saving procedure, but I'll always associate the look and tactile feel
of that tape with the well-loved Asterix
books in the Eugene library.
And those hands! There's something of a consistent style to
all the European comics I've seen from the 1950s and '60s. Most were probably
inspired by Tintin, although very few that I've found seem to try and actually
imitate Herge's distinctive visual style. But the look of Asterix was familiar to me from The
Smurfs, the Belgian comic series created by writer/artist Peyo in 1958.
In the early 1980s, the Smurfs were enjoying a newfound
popularity in the U.S. thanks to a hit Saturday morning cartoon series. Oh yes,
I was a huge fan of the Smurfs! I
watched the cartoon religiously and bought as many of the comics as I could
find -- although, oddly, only a handful of Peyo's Smurfs books were translated into English and published in the U.S.
until very recently.
As a budding artist -- until I grew frustrated with my
limitations and turned to writing, a much better fit (while my younger brother,
Kyle, became the family artist) -- I was captivated by the way Peyo draw the
Smurfs' hands. Big, round palms with long, nimble fingers that broadened at the
ends. Tight, compact fists that swung like little clubs. I filled mountains of scratch paper with drawings
of hands, trying to copy Peyo's distinctive proportions -- the likes of which I
had never seen in any other comic book.
Until Asterix.
I don't know if Uderzo copied Peyo (who was already
well-known in Europe for his pre-Smurfs
comics), or if they went to the same art school, or what. All I knew was, they
both drew the same, magnificent hands!
The instant I pulled one of those red-taped spines from the
shelf, opened the peeling cover, and laid eyes on those hands, I grabbed as many
Asterix books as I could scoop into
my skinny arms. Of course, there was a limit to how many books could be checked
out at a time, so I had to put a few back. (Which was just as well; I never
would have finished reading all of those volumes without racking up overdue
fines.)
From then on, I returned to the library every couple of
months. I found numerous other books to read and treasure. Many of those are
now sadly out-of-print, although I've managed to hunt down some favorites on
eBay (all ex-libris).
But I always walked out with a least an armful of Asterix books!
Looking back, I think what ultimately drew me to Asterix was the mixture of fun, cartoony
art with action-packed adventure that managed to be both humorous and exciting.
At the time, few American comics achieved -- or even attempted -- that balance
of tones, much less that dynamic visual style. Spider-Man made a lot of corny
jokes, but he took crimefighting more or less seriously -- and so did the
comics in which he starred. Even when hugely outnumbered by Roman legions,
however, Asterix and Obelix faced their challenges with unwavering grins firmly
affixed -- and so did their readers.
Many years later, I had this balance of tones in mind when
my brother and I developed our comic Smash,
about a ten-year-old superhero. We wanted to put our pint-sized (and, come to
think of it, Asterix-sized) hero in situations of real danger with genuine,
life-threatening consequences -- while still finding humor in the characters
and their predicaments. I'm sure we have a long way to go before we even
approach the mastery of storytelling magic in Asterix, but we're determined to get there -- or, at least, as
close as we can.
Today, I constantly visit my closest branch of the Portland
library. Thanks to the internet, I can put a hold on the book or DVD I want,
stroll into the building, find my reservations shelf, and head out with my
checked-out treasures in just a few, short minutes. But I like to stop and
linger now and then. Stroll through the shelves, browse unfamiliar spines, and
see what jumps out at me.
Not long ago, I wandered into the children's books room. My
gaze fixed on a shelf of graphic novels whose spines were instantly familiar
(even without the distinctive red tape or Courier titles). I scanned a bunch of
the Asterix books, admiring those
beautiful hands and recalling those long-ago childhood memories.
Then, a boy of about eight or ten walked in and darted
straight to that shelf. He skidded to his knees and pulled out the Asterix books, one at a time. As he
flipped the oversized pages, his eyes were as huge as a Roman centurion's when
Asterix bore down on him with fists cocked. I walked away to leave the boy to
the lifetime of wonderful memories he was creating at the library.
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