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Cruddy: An Illustrated Novel by Lynda Barry β€” book cover

Cruddy: An Illustrated Novel

by Lynda Barry
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Overview

On a September night in 1971, a few days after getting busted for dropping acid, a sixteen-year-old curls up in the corner of her ratty bedroom and begins to write.

Now the truth can finally be revealed about the mysterious day long ago when the authorities found a child, calmly walking in the boiling desert, covered with blood.

The girl is Roberta Rohbeson, and her rant against a world bounded by "the cruddy top bedroom of a cruddy rental house on a very cruddy mud road" soon becomes a detailed account of another story, one that she has kept silent since she was eleven.

Darkly funny and resonant with humanity, Cruddy, masterfully intertwines Roberta's stories β€” part Easy Rider and part bipolar Wizard of Oz. These stories, the backbone of Roberta's short life, include a one-way trip across America fueled by revenge and greed and a vivid cast of characters, starring Roberta's dangerous father, the owners of the Knocking Hammer Bar-cum-slaughterhouse, and runaway adolescents. With a teenager's eye for freakish detail and a nervous ability to make the most horrible scenes seem hilarious, Cruddy is a stunning achievement.

Nationally syndicated cartoonist Lynda Barry captures the pain and perils of coming of age as she introduces her irrepressible young narrator, Edna Arkins, who's doing her best to negotiate her way through the eighth grade--that cruddy year when girls become women and boys turn into absolute dorks.

Synopsis

Roberta Rohbeson, 1971. Her overblown, drug-induced teenage rant against the world soon becomes a detailed account of another story. It is a story about which Roberta has kept silent for five years.

Roberta Rohbeson, 1967.

NY Times Book Review - Alanna Nash

[T]he author's ability to capture the paralyzing bleakness of despair, and her uncanny ear for dialogue, make this first novel a work of terrible beauty.

About the Author, Lynda Barry

Lynda Barry is the creator of the nationally syndicated Ernie Pook's Comeek comic strip and the author of the novel and play The Good Times Are Killing Me. Once a commentator for National Public Radio, she lives in Evanston, Illinois.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons and Futurama Funny, moving, and deeply mind-blowing. Lynda Barry is a brilliant, wild writer, and Cruddy is her best work yet.

Alanna Nash

[T]he author's ability to capture the paralyzing bleakness of despair, and her uncanny ear for dialogue, make this first novel a work of terrible beauty.
β€” NY Times Book Review

Joe Garden

Lynda Barry is best known for her eclectic weekly comic strip Ernie Pook, which mixes mundane, shocking, and bizarre ruminations on growing up with periodic storylines about monster families and poetry-reading poodles. Many themes run through both her strip and her novel: the us-against-them world of childhood and adolescence, the search for identity, and the everyday cruelties people tend to dismiss. Cruddy is told in the first person by Roberta, a 16-year-old whose psyche and features have been eternally scarred by a horrible life with abusive parents and adults who see children as either subjective vessels for gratification or recipients of their anger. Cutting across two narratives, Roberta's story is an engrossing voyage through trash America and the bleak futures native to it. The first narrative recounts the events in Roberta's recent past, a drug-fueled and ill-fated adventure that unites her with a cast of similarly marginalized youths. All these characters are brimming with a desire for escape from their cruddy town, their cruddy peers, and their convoluted and cruddy lives. The second narrative, which takes place five years earlier, recounts an unplanned road trip with her murderous alcoholic father, who searches for three suitcases filled with an inheritance out of which he feels cheated. Both stories are peppered with an assortment of Lynchian human oddities, rendered more freakish through 11-year-old or psychedelic-hazed eyes. Thankfully, Barry has a knack for incorporating and naturalizing these characters: Instead of seeming tacked-on and contrived, they add to the perception of alienation Roberta experiences throughout the book. Barry also has a knack for creating an atmosphere rich with visceral details, even bringing out a strange beauty in frightening and alien situations. Cruddy is a superbly executed book with turns that surprise and thrill, and with an ambiguous ending that leaves equal room for hope and despair.
β€” Onion.com

Heidi Bell

One summer afternoon on a porch in Madison, Wis., someone handed me The Fun House, Lynda Barry's 1987 collection of comic strips. The bright blue book was open to a strip about some bored kids who wonder "what would it be like to cross 23rd Street and take a field trip up there where we never hardly were before." As they attempt to cross the busy street, one of the kids is hit by a car. The rest of them run back to their neighborhood "thinking if we can go fast enough, it didn't really happen." Having expected something like "Peanuts" with a gag line, I felt as if I'd been punched in the stomach.

Sometimes, though, feeling as if you've been punched can be a good thing. Barry's latest book, the richly illustrated novel Cruddy, is as wrenching as Dorothy Allison's Bastard Out of Carolina, but funnier. Here, 16-year-old Roberta Rohbeson tells the story of her life, ultimately confessing the truth about the terrifying odyssey she made five years earlier with her father, Ray. Flipping between the present (the early 1970s) and five years earlier, Roberta's story -- indeed Roberta's consciousness -- juxtaposes the trivial and the unfathomably violent, the silly and the heartbreaking.

On a bus in the middle of nowhere, sitting next to her passed-out father who has recently given her a black eye and bruised ribs, Roberta wants to write a letter to someone, but she can't think of anyone who would want to hear from her. Finally, she starts a letter to Jesus but can't think of anything to say. "Have a Good Summer," she writes, "and Stay Crazy." Barry is master of scenes that make us want to laugh and then, immediately afterward, cry.

The patterns of the novel parallel patterns of abuse, in which fear and pain so often follow close on the heels of laughter or tenderness. In the novel's present, we find Roberta in the dirty kitchen of "a cruddy rental house" where her mother is yelling at her for hitting her sister, Julie, with the Cutex nail polish remover bottle -- a normal enough situation in a house with two teenage girls. But during this scene, Roberta remembers another time her mother got mad at her, picked up the telephone receiver and bashed her in the face with it. "A broken nose," Roberta writes. "A boxer's nose. One of my many distinctive features."

"Were you like, in a car accident?" someone asks her, referring to "the various smashed aspects" of her face. She is scrawny from the year of malnourishment on the road with her father, and she has always looked like a boy -- "a pug ugly one was how the father said it." Her father calls her Clyde and tells people that she is a boy. The sheriff they meet at the horrific Knocking Hammer slaughterhouse calls her Ee-gore, but her ugliness only encourages him to try to use her as a receptacle for his perversions. Luckily, her father has given her Little Debbie, the knife that saves her life many times but also dooms her to feeling that she is as "corroded" as her parents.

Like Allison, Barry shows how completely children are at the mercy of the adults around them. But the issue is not uncomplicated. Barry characterizes children as both the most vulnerable and the most resilient creatures on earth. Most of the adults in Roberta's life have tried to victimize her, but she remains analytical, cynical, funny and less confused about right and wrong than she thinks she is. She knows, for instance, that her mother gets maddest not when Roberta does something wrong but "when she remembers all the ways she's been ripped off in life."

But the abuse takes its toll. While Roberta's romantic side clings to the equation "Truth plus Magical Love equals Freedom," she struggles with the urge to jump in front of trains. She fights her own lack of remorse for the bad things she has done either in self-defense or out of spite by carving "I'm sorry" into her arm, but when her friend the Stick asks her, "Are you sorry?" she dmits she isn't.

Barry is an expert in the too-often neglected vernacular of working-class childhood in urban America, and Roberta, with her haunting and often jubilant voice, is a typical Barry kid, screwed by circumstance but still searching for integrity. Cruddy adds to Barry's already impressive body of work another fine novel that is tender, goofy, scary and thrilling.
β€” Salon

Library Journal

Barry, whose recent graphic novel, The Freddie Stories, took as its subject the dysfunctional family from her newspaper cartoon strip, now takes us into the head of an indomitable 16-year-old. Roberta Rohbeson lives with her mother and half-sister, Julie, in a crumbling neighborhood overlooking a garbage-filled ravine. Roberta's energetic voice carries us along two story-lines. In one, Roberta and a classmate, Vicky, cut school and meet up with a series of low-life young men. Simultaneously, Roberta provides us with a running account of a cross-country crime spree with her father when she was 11. This trip involves three suitcases full of money, lots of alcohol, gore, putrefaction, and some of the most desolate, godforsaken locales in modern fiction. It also contains more violence than this reader can usually tolerate, yet Roberta's wacky, irrepressible outlook makes her story fresh, compelling, and sometimes hilarious. Does Roberta survive? All I can say is, she gets my vote as one of the all-time great unreliable narrators. Recommended for most fiction collections.--Reba Leiding, James Madison Univ., Harrisonburg, VA Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2000
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780684838465

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