Art Entertainment Picture This! From children's books to adult fare, storytellers use comic strips to appeal to readers of all ages. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News L ook to Art Spiegelman for comic books that can't be defined as comical. Spiegelman, 53, the son of a survivor, holds a 1992 Pulitzer Prize for his adult comics-style renderings about the Holocaust. Maus and Maus II express his father's experiences by depict- ing Jews as mice, Nazis as cats and Poles as pigs. The New York-raised writer/illustrator, early a contributor to underground comics and later co- founder/editor of the avant-garde comics magazine Raw, has turned to young readers in recent years. Kid Appeal He started with Open Me ... Im a Dog, moved on to Little Lit Folklore and Fairy Tale Funnies and now has released with changing and charged reactions to the tragedy. "Every kid I've met is strange, so I don't think of the book title as pejorative," says Spiegelman. His drawings and comics have appeared in many publi- cations, including the New York Times, the Village Voice and the New Yorker, which recently carried his darkened rendering of the Twin Towers on its cover. "Children's imaginations are willing to roam, and we were trying to signal that these stories would be stretches in one direction or another, built around a genuine respect for the way the mind and imagina- tion work on the part of kids. Rather than devising bland stories for bland kids, "the goal was to make something that could be reread often, throughout a lifetime if necessary. It meant asking for a highly developed set of skills coming in, and we went back and forth with the people [before each entry was finished]." Little Lit Strange Stories for Strange Kids More Than The Sum Of Their Parts (Joanna Coder Books/Harper Collins Children's Books; $19.95). Co-edited with his wife, Francoise Mouly, art director of the New Yorker, the anthology includes pieces by famed writers, such as Jules Feiffer, Claude Ponti and Kim Deitch. Spiegelman gets the book started with "The Several Selves of Selby Sheldrake," a tale about the multiple dispositions independently discovered in and by a mother and her son. Spiegelman found his story particularly relevant after Sept. 11, when his own daughter and son found themselves Barbara McClintock's "Runaway Shadow" explores loneliness. Ian Falconer's and David Sedaris' "Pretty Ugly" delves into definitions of beauty with some jarring images. Maurice Sendak's "Baby Keller" introduces an infant who can swallow cats, birds and people and also be swallowed himself— with all ulti- mately "unswallowed." The drawings can be unsettling, including the "Strange Picture" by Francois Roca, which challenges children to find 22 odd things in a cityscape. It is among other interspersed puzzle pages. "My wife and I had to shepherd each of these pieces, find what could be put next to "Every kid I've met is strange, so I don't think of the book title as pejorative," says Spiegelman. Budding Artists Michiganders contribute to comics craze. omic strips with some serious messages are on the minds of a writer-illustrator who grew up in Michigan and a writer- illustrator team currently living in Michigan. Neil Kleid, 26, who was raised in Oak Park and now lives in New York, is taking on freelance projects to push toward full-time work in this field. Engineer Mark Messler, 45, and librar- ian Randy Farb, 41, are hobbyists C 12/28 2001 52 focused on 4 Corners, a comic strip that explores Jewish traditions and appears in The Flint Jewish Reporter and on a Web site they maintain (www.geocities.com/fourcorners). Personal Statements "I've always been interested in comics, and I learned to draw by taking exam- ples from what I saw," says Kleid, a graphics art graduate from Wayne Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly another and make them more than the sum of their parts," explains Spiegelman, who has lectured at the University of Michigan. "Some of the artists were people we'd worked with in the past for grownups. Some were people we met through the New Yorker. Part was finding people who were making picture books for children but not necessarily in comic form. "We were looking for people who understood what it means to tell a story in a sequence of pic- tures, have a clear idea of narrative and show draw- ing capacities that are appealing to us." Spiegelman, who considers himself culturally Jewish, included a Chasidic tale in his other Little Lit book but offers no specifically Jewish stories in his latest hardcover publication. "My biggest project now is a three-panel opera, which is an epic theater piece about the rise and fall of the American comic book," he says. "I'm also beginning to work on a series of pages aboUt post-traumatic stress and the way my mind has been since Sept. 11." El State University and former "Bit City: A Random marketing employee at the Tale" is a mystery being Jewish Federation of published by Committed Metropolitan Detroit. Comics in an issue of Kleid, always enthusiastic Threads, which features about new ideas to explore, three intertwining stories has several projects in the completed by different works. people. His story "Letters From a On his own, sometimes Broken Apple" soon will under the Third Eye appear in 9 11: Emergency Publishing Anthology ban- Neil Kleid: 'A lot of ner, Kleid self publishes Relief an anthology being my writing explores and uses various New York published in January by psychological issues." outlets to sell his work. He Alternative Comics, with proceeds going to victims of is completing an autobiog- the terrorist attacks. (For more infor- raphy, Singles Night, which references mation, go to his Orthodox beliefs. www.indyworld.com/relief) "I like comics because they are so -