Kirkus Reviews QR Code
COVID CHRONICLES by Kendra Boileau Kirkus Star

COVID CHRONICLES

A Comics Anthology

edited by Kendra Boileau & Rich Johnson

Pub Date: Feb. 15th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-271-09014-6
Publisher: Graphic Mundi

Extraordinary circumstances inspire a range of extraordinary artistic response, as this anthology attests.

As the pandemic lengthened and deepened, the response across the comics community intensified—first online, where many went viral, a turn of phrase that tinged a few shades darker in light of the virus. This volume launches the Graphic Mundi imprint from Penn State University Press. In the preface, Boileau, the publisher for the new imprint, writes that these comics “are documentary, memoiristic, meditative, lyrical, fantastic, and speculative, offering a view onto the countless ways the COVID-19 pandemic has changed lives.” All of the entries share one defining quality: immediacy of the moment, a response to the crisis from within it. A few are day-by-day diaries, including the opening narrative, by Jason Chatfield, about testing positive, in which he writes about his inability to meet his writing goal of trying “to finish a sentence.” Hatiye Garip’s “Corona Diary” is brief and wordless, achieving eloquence through a variety of shifting shapes and images. In “COVID Hardball,” Rich Johnson and Eli Neugeboren lay out a series of baseball cards of significant figures of the pandemic era, including New Zealand’s Jacinda Ardern; Singapore’s Halimah Yacob; Donald Trump, who “repeatedly held large campaign rallies without requiring masking”; and Anthony Fauci, the “M.V.P. (Most Valuable Physician).” The collection also includes superheroes battling evil monsters and entries on the pandemic’s effects on Natives and other marginalized populations. Of course, there is the tragedy of death but also the inspiring poetry of trying to come to terms with what it all means. Boileau sums it up well: “Strange, perhaps, for these emotions to resonate so clearly in a medium that people often assume is either directed toward children or there for our amusement. But comics have a history of tackling weighty and mature subjects—and doing it well.” Add this book to that history.

In a diverse, impassioned book, these quick responders illustrate the impact of the pandemic with work of lasting value.