Rusty Brown: Dive into the world of Chris Ware at Delcourt

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Almost two decades after his cult graphic novel, Jimmy Corrigan, Chris Ware returns with his spiritual and autofictional sequel: Rusty Brown available from Delcourt since November 4, 2020. Before offering it as a " graphic novel ", Chris Ware had first self-published Rusty Brown in issue 16 of his Acme Novelty Library, published in 2005. It is therefore 15 years later that Chris Ware publishes Rusty Brown in a comic book, which could be described as biographical. A dense work that consists of 356 pages. Through this album, we follow the very sad life of a sensitive boy with an overflowing imagination: Rusty Brown. Six other characters are also at the center of the plot, and one of them, Franklin Christenson Ware, is none other than the author's double. One of the peculiarities of Rusty Brown is his particularly dense narrative construction. Reading this book is a real exercise that will require special attention.

A gallery of original characters

Chris Ware delivers us more than a biography of Rusty Brown, he delivers his too. Through the character of Franklin Christenson Ware, the author confides to us his fears, his fears, his questions, especially the one at the beginning of the work where he is questioned on the "modern feeling of 'exhausted dislocation'". Rusty Brown begins with a long introduction of a hundred pages in which the author introduces us to all the protagonists who sneak in one after the other at specific times. So we follow the reality of little Rusty Brown while following those of the other characters, as if we were in parallel universes. This introduction takes place during a back-to-school at a Catholic school in Omaha, Nebraska: which are the hometown as well as the school Chris Ware attended during his younger years. In this school, Rusty is cruelly marginalized and morally harassed by other students. This situation changes when a new student appears: Chalky White.

Children's life versus adult life

Several notions are exploited in this work. For example, Walter Brown, father of Rusty Brown but also a teacher in his school, seems to be a man who suffers from depression. it goes through different stages: questioning, the desire to give up everything and suicidal thoughts. All these negative feelings contrast with his appearance. Indeed, Walter Brown has a baldness encircled by two red commas, which gives him a pathetic clown head.

In Chris Ware's work, Walter Brown's reality is mixed with that of Rusty Brown. While reading Walter's moods, from one board to another, we witness the life of Rusty, a little boy who thinks he has a super power, a super hearing. He even found a name: Ear Man. All because while clearing snow from the driveway of his house, he heard an argument going on inside. Shouts and insults erupt, but all little Rusty cares about is his imaginary ability to hear everything from the outside. The double perception of a situation is well highlighted in this scene: a couple at odds with the innocence of a child.

Rusty Brown: an original work

Although the different realities of the seven characters are sad, the author offers us a palette of colors that echoes the 60s and 70s. A universe in which the colors are cold but rather pronounced. The appearance of some protagonists makes you smile as they are singular. They briefly bring to mind the satirical characters of the Spanish illustrator Joan Cornellà. All these elements bring a subtle touch of humor that adds a little lightness to the comic. Chris Ware concludes this masterpiece with a double-page that resembles an intermission. Should we expect a sequel? From one plate to another, Chris Ware delights us with his talent as a writer and illustrator. This propensity to solicit all our abilities to follow the narration of his works makes the draftsman, a true reference in the world of the ninth art. The author plays with the complexity of the characters and with that of the formatting of the comic. To walk around the world of Ware, it requires a certain plasticity from you. What seems to be the first volume of Rusty Brown is therefore a real success. We invite you to discover other works currently published by Delcourt such as Hyperrêve, the new album in Marc-Antoine Mathieu's flagship series.