Previously…
I don’t often review graphic novels, but I had seen Monsters
101 by M.Rasheed around for a while and my first inkling of the comic ‘All
ages’ , a labeling I actively avoid.
But the more I saw
it the more intrigued I became. So recently, I picked up a copy and was
pleasantly surprised by what I found.
Situation
Willy Pugg is a bully. The milk money stealing, nerd tripping, rule
breaking bully from every school in the country and every John Hughes movie of
the 80's, and he's pretty proud of that fact. When we first see Willy who is
known as ‘The Pugg' by his victims he's turning a girl upside down to get her
money for the day. Willy seems to run the school like the warden at a prison
and he is almost unstoppable when the teachers aren't around. However, someone
is watching Willy, someone who even he is afraid of and will have to eventually
answer to. Willy runs into these ‘people' on the outskirts of town in the form
of three monsters that want him to bring them other kids to eat. Apparently,
children are a delicacy where they come from and they need a supplier, in
exchange, they will turn Willy into a monster. However, Willy isn't well liked
and after being caught attacking a student is threatened with expulsion, if he attacks another. His attempts at
being nice land him three friends; Jerome, a young foreign exchange student,
Mort, his primary target in the school, and Katina a girl whom he inadvertently
saves from another bully. These three interactions will shape his life for rest
of the book and change the way Willy Pugg interacts with the world around him.
Story
I will be honest when I started to read this book I wasn't expecting much. The idea of a comic book aimed a younger audiences never inspires confidence in me as they're sometimes campy and nonsensical, that being said this was the most emotionally jarring comic I have read since Gaiman's Sandman. Rasheed does a great job of making us hate this character in the onset, when he tries to be nice to people and they turn him down there is no question about why. Willy Pugg is one of the best villains I have seen in a comic in a long time simply because he is real. We all knew a Willy Pugg, some as his victims others as bystanders and some of those who have challenged him. This isn't your handsome jock, Flash Thompson bully, this is your emotionally damaged, broken home bully who in their heart just wants to be understood like everyone else. The character of Katina is that chance for him and probably the thing that saves his soul, and though their relationship cannot be described as a romance, there is true love at work, the kind that young children feel for each other and the kind that adults lose as they grow.
Pictures
I give props to anyone who writes and draws their own
comics. M.Rasheed wrote and drew a 150 page graphic novel and while it can get
a bit inconsistent towards the end, it’s more than understandable. His inks are
crisp and the way he foreshadows the ending in Willy’s silhouettes is great.
I’m surprised this isn’t run as comic strip in a news paper as it reminds me of
classics like Gasoline Alley in some subtle ways, with simple facial
structure that is also capable of conveying complex emotion.
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