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Alternative & Underground Comics
Suckle: The Status of Basil by Dave Cooper β€” book cover

Suckle: The Status of Basil

by Dave Cooper
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Overview

From the id of Dave Cooper, creator of the critically-acclaimed Weasel comic book series from Fantagraphics and a designer of the Futurama television series on Fox, comes a surreal and unpredictable travelogue through a wholly unique cartoon universe that is both elegantly dream-like and grotesquely nightmarish. Suckle is Cooper's first major graphic novel, originally published in 1997 and unavailable for over three years. Since then, he has gone on to become one of the most acclaimed new cartoonists of the last ten years, winning multiple Ignatz and Harvey Awards for Weasel, which debuted in 1999 and has been Fantagraphics' most successful new series since the debut of Chris Ware's ACME Novelty Library in 1993.

Suckle spotlights Cooper's fascination with the surreal, sexual, and organic, and is reminiscent of the otherworldly dream logic of Jim Woodring's "Frank" stories. Suckle's protagonist, Basil, is born from a strange vulvic eruption in the desert. As his afterbirth is nibbled away by a myriad of outlandish scavengers, Basil naively sets out on a tangled, twisted quest for either a mother figure or a romantic interest. Cooper's bizarre and explicit themes and allegorically-rich imagery converge in an arresting, almost-psychedelic, literal and figurative climax from which Basil can begin to make sense of the world and his place in it. Printed on colored paper with limited two-color printing in parts, Suckle is as much a visual feast as it is a compelling fiction.

Author Biography: Along with his ongoing award-winning comic book series, an in-demand commercial illustration career, occasional animation gigs (he helped create the animated world of Matt Groening's Futurama TV series), and gallery exhibitions of his oil paintings, Dave Cooper is working on a children's book. He lives in Ottawa, Ontario, with his wife Julie.

Synopsis

From the id of Dave Cooper, creator of the critically-acclaimed Weasel comic book series from Fantagraphics and a designer of the Futurama television series on Fox, comes a surreal and unpredictable travelogue through a wholly unique cartoon universe that is both elegantly dream-like and grotesquely nightmarish. Suckle is Cooper's first major graphic novel, originally published in 1997 and unavailable for over three years. Since then, he has gone on to become one of the most acclaimed new cartoonists of the last ten years, winning multiple Ignatz and Harvey Awards for Weasel, which debuted in 1999 and has been Fantagraphics' most successful new series since the debut of Chris Ware's ACME Novelty Library in 1993.

Suckle spotlights Cooper's fascination with the surreal, sexual, and organic, and is reminiscent of the otherworldly dream logic of Jim Woodring's "Frank" stories. Suckle's protagonist, Basil, is born from a strange vulvic eruption in the desert. As his afterbirth is nibbled away by a myriad of outlandish scavengers, Basil naively sets out on a tangled, twisted quest for either a mother figure or a romantic interest. Cooper's bizarre and explicit themes and allegorically-rich imagery converge in an arresting, almost-psychedelic, literal and figurative climax from which Basil can begin to make sense of the world and his place in it. Printed on colored paper with limited two-color printing in parts, Suckle is as much a visual feast as it is a compelling fiction.

Author Biography: Along with his ongoing award-winning comic book series, an in-demand commercial illustration career, occasional animation gigs (he helped create the animated world of Matt Groening's Futurama TV series), and gallery exhibitions of his oil paintings, Dave Cooper is working on a children's book. He lives in Ottawa, Ontario, with his wife Julie.

Scram

Cooper's drawing is visceral, assured, charming and sometimes terrifying, and his narrative sense never falters.

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Editorials

Peter Bagge

Cooper has finally staked his claim as one of the very best cartoonists working today.

Prodigal Sun

[A] combination of the gritty realism of R. Crumb mixed with the wild imagination of Dr. Seuss.

Scram

Cooper's drawing is visceral, assured, charming and sometimes terrifying, and his narrative sense never falters.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 2002
Publisher
Fantagraphics Books
Pages
129
Format
Other Format
ISBN
9781560973010

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