I first heard about this weird, fairly obscure volume in Scott McCloud’s ingenious book Understanding Comics. At the time, if McCloud said it was good or used it as an example of anything, I wanted to read it, but for some reason it took me a while to get around to this one.

By all accounts, this is a weird book. It’s part ant farm epic, part funny book, and part mythology. It’s about “the affinity of life,” according to Marder, and the story centers on a population of creatures called beans. they change and evlolve along with their seemingly self-contained world, and when something upsets the order of their lives, they adapt to it. They have to deal with attacks from outsiders, religious conflicts, how to respond to new religious experiences, and major social shifts, all with the utmost lightness of heart, drenched in joyful slang.

These stories have a tinge of something both alien and deeply familiar, some connection to a mythic sensibility, while on the surface exhibiting a hooting pleasure in simple play. He effortlessly mixes the strange sexual and social relationship the beans have with an underworld of creatures that provide them with food with goofy accents and simple narration, disarming the readers while drawing them in.

The beans also have a distinct spiritual life whose focal point is Gran’ma’pa, the tree that gives them life and sustains them on a daily basis. They look to it for guidance and meaning, and Marder handles this with supreme grace. I hardly stopped to think of how this could comment on preexisting religions while I was reading it because the invitation to care about and follow the beans for their own sake had been so irresistible.

The artwork seems to suggest that the whole world occurs in 2 dimensions, more or less. There isn’t a cube or a sphere in sight; the beans are collections of blobs and sticks, and their world is strictly up and down, although occasionally bits of y-axis perspective sneaks in. Couple this with the rich mythology built in and you’d think it was discovered on a cave wall or hieroglyphs on a temple if it didn’t have bear a distinct imprint from Krazy Kat creator George Herriman. The art is a cartoonish mosaic, iconic and constantly entertaining.

Related Posts:

Stephen Hull is roughly a quarter-century old and writing in places like Canceled Forever, Some Experience, his notebook, bathroom walls, etc. He lives around Chicago.

  One Response to “Comic Reviews: Beanworld vol. 1: Wahoolazuma!”

  1. First time I’ve ever heard the phrase “ant farm epic”. That term alone sold it for me.
    It sounds like a great read, although after working through the finale of LOST last night I think I’m going to need a mythology break.

 Leave a Reply

(required)

(required)

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

 

Login/Register

© 2011 Gather Round The Mic Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha