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Billy Hazelnuts [Hardcover]

Tony Millionaire (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 5, 2006

An original graphic novel from the creator of Maakies and Sock Monkey.

Tony Millionaire, creator of Sock Monkey and one of America's most popular weekly comic strips, Maakies, delivers his first original graphic novel for Fantagraphics, Billy Hazelnuts. Billy Hazelnuts transmutes nursery rhymes and the golem myth into a storybook about Becky, girl scientist, her friend Billy Hazelnuts (who was created from cooking ingredients by tailless mice), and their journey to find the missing moon while battling an evil steam-driven alligator with a seeing-eye skunk.

Millionaire fuses the darker spirit of older fairy tales with an absurdist adventure story, throws gender politics into the mix, and brings it to life with his dementedly charming and meticulous drawing style that is utterly transporting. Billy Hazelnuts features all-new characters, a first for Millionaire after building a tremendous following for his Sock Monkey and Maakies characters, which is sure to delight existing fans as well as introduce an entirely new audience to his breathtaking line and imagination. Black-white comics throughout

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. When the mice infesting a woman's kitchen tire of her efforts to rout them, they create a tough guy homunculus from foul-smelling garbage and turn him loose as their protector. Originally possessing a head full of houseflies, the garbage creature is discovered by Becky, a plucky kid scientist who swaps hazelnuts for the houseflies—thus the sobriquet Billy Hazelnuts. Together, they embark on a dreamlike series of adventures. Bolstered by extraordinary artwork reminiscent of woodcuts crafted by a madman, this narrative evokes the anything-goes child-logic found in darker fairy tales and the Oz stories with a pinch of Lewis Carroll thrown in for the sheer bizarreness of it all. Millionaire sweeps the reader along with the protagonists through encounters with a seeing-eye skunk, a search for where the moon disappeared to and a blistering sea battle between a matter-expanded toy replica of Noah's Ark—complete with two-by-two animals at the helm—and a flying pirate ship crewed by robotic buccaneer alligators. Millionaire is known for his dark yet wistful comic strip Maakies with this irresistible cornucopia of unbridled imagination run rampant, he has created a book with the eerie familiarity of a classic children's tale and solidifies his reputation as one of contemporary comic's great visionaries. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Famous for his bad-boy comic strip, Maakies, and his children's books starring benign versions of the strip's antiheroes, Millionaire here essays a third stream of his peculiar creativity in a graphic-novel marchen, or Germanic folktalelike narrative. The title character is a truculent little manikin made by mice out of garbage. At first he menaces a farm woman, but her budding-scientist daughter, Becky, befriends him after replacing his original eyes with hazelnuts. Enchanted by the moon, impulsive Billy runs after it to find where it sets, with Becky hotly pursuing to keep him from getting lost. As soon as she apprehends him, a flying, walking, sailing ship fashioned by Becky's would-be suitor, Eugene, accosts the pair. After more weird science, a sea battle, and a second breakaway and Peer Gynt-like homecoming by Billy, he, Becky, and Eugene reconcile. Drawing in his established manner, with blocky, medieval-woodcut-like figures in action against intricate, frequently gorgeous land-, sea-, and cloudscapes, Millionaire fashions a tale as disquieting-comforting and psychologically ambiguous as anything the Grimms ever recorded. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 100 pages
  • Publisher: Fantagraphics Books (April 5, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560977019
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560977018
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.5 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #501,579 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born in the fishing town of Gloucester Massachusetts, a town full of fishermen and seascape painters. My grandparents were artists, they taught me how to use ink pens and oil paint. My grandpop showed me lots of old newspaper comics he had saved, old ones, Roy Crane, Lionel Feininger, Winsor McKay. When I was in college I discovered R. Crumb and S. Clay Wilson. I drew a lot of perverted comics, until one day I discovered George Herriman, the grandfather of American comics. The true master. People often ask me if comics are "art." Whatever, I don't care what you call them, but when you're immersed in a collection of Herriman Sundays you understand what they're getting at.
I love funny comics but I love moving, emotional, poetical comics, too. Preferably a mixture of both.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I am a scientist, Eugene, not a starry-headed romantic., April 1, 2006
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This review is from: Billy Hazelnuts (Hardcover)
"Billy Hazelnuts" is the sort of book one can recommend to anyone without hesitation. That is all I really need to say. But I will go further:

While Millionaire's notorious (and acclaimed!) ornate-yet-vulgar weekly strip "Maakies" may not be everyone's cup of tea for the sake of matters of propriety, I have yet to meet anyone who can encounter his wholly accessible yet equally whimsical "Sock Monkey" and not recognize genius, heart, and innovation.

Likewise, I cannot imagine "Billy Hazelnuts" will do anything less than expand Millionaire's acclaim into far wider circles, finding itself nestled on children's shelves between A. A. Milne and Peggy Parish as well as on the bedside tables of readers marked by more advanced years.

Milne's influence is clear, as is the light-hearted cheer of Mark Twain (who, along with Shakespeare, Herman Melville, and Julia Ward Howe, is thanked before the story begins). In regards to the influence of the Hundred Acre Wood and "children's literature," Millionaire has openly sung the praises of Ernest Shepard, as well as the beloved Beatrix Potter. It is therefore no surprise to feel their spirits hovering around each page. "Billy Hazelnuts" is a story in the spirit of revered children's books that never talks down to its audience or loses the interest of older readers. One would imagine this to be a difficult tightrope to walk, but Millionaire does it effortlessly again and again.

Millionaire's art and roaming story also call to mind the so-called "glory days" of comics, when the full-color escapades of Little Nemo, etc. actually drove the sales of the papers that contained them. Millionaire's work manages to feel modern while still reaching to that era, to feel self-aware yet comfortable with itself instead of ironic. It is almost as if Al Capp had decided to cut out the politics and just write about Shmoos - "Billy Hazelnuts" is engrossing and honest.

The story depicts a child scientist named Becky whose love of the starry sky leads her to build fantastic inventions in order to better view her beloved stretch of space. She resides with her mother on a farm populated by mischievous mice, and finds herself the object of a young poet's affection. But after attempting to tolerate his courting presence for the sake of her mother, she spurns the affections of said wordsmith Eugene while dealing with the mounting crisis of a maddened and misguided garbage golem named Billy who was assembled and enchanted (with little fanfare) by the mice of Becky's house. Billy's head filled with houseflies is emptied by the girl, and his new eyes become a pair of hazelnuts. Then, it's off to a rollicking and captivating adventure involving a hunt for the moon and a battle with a ship of automatons whose existence traces its roots to the spurning of Eugene.

The dialogue is classic Millionaire, as the thieving mice declare "Have you tried this 'Swiss' cheese?" & "Why, the holes are as good as the cheese." It is nigh-impossible to suppress a grin when Billy (pre-Hazelnuts) declares a housecat scratch to be the work of a "lion," and asserts "I gave him back as good as I got!" And Becky is a likeable protagonist, confronting those around her with bold cries of "meddlesome goofball" and "You sound worse than blackboards rubbing on balloons!"

The world of "Billy Hazelnuts" truly unfolds - the opening panel shows the detailed depiction of a farmhouse that makes anyone familiar with Millionaire's catalogue settle back for another "Sock Monkey"-esque romp at the turn of the century. But Millionaire has more in mind, as the talking animals familiar in his work become alchemist/warlocks and maritime warriors, and the inventions of Becky and Eugene pile impossibility upon impossibility to create a wild blend of steampunk science fiction and fairy tale magic. Perhaps most amusing to those familiar with Millionaire's work is a fellow much like the "trumbernick" of the "Sock Monkey" books, who is shown here directing the retirement of broken planets floating over a beautiful, Herriman-esque landscape.

It gets weirder, but it nevers becomes self-indulgent, never becomes obsessed with its absurdity instead of the story. The final page, recalling Volume 3, Issue #2 of "Sock Monkey" is sure to warm the heart of innocent children and informed adults as well.

More adventures of Billy and Becky would be welcome, as the core of the book is how Becky helps Billy find his true self, and in the process takes her next step of maturity. Billy is a diminutive monster whose lessons learned on temper and society never become the by-the-numbers prattle of children's morality plays, but they also keep from being the "hidden meaning," wink-to-the-reader default that keeps so many independent cartoonists from writing as openly and unironically as Millionaire.

As I said at the opening, this is a book for everyone. It is difficult to say it is among Millionaire's best, because it is hard to rank his captivating and beloved work. But this will be the book that draws an even wider legion of fans to his empire, and should certainly enthrone Millionaire among the greats of cartooning.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unaffected whimsy, March 9, 2009
This review is from: Billy Hazelnuts (Hardcover)
Plenty of graphic novelists have attempted to capture the freewheeling spirit of the old adventure strips. Most sabotage themselves in their determination to demonstrate their cleverness and assure the audience that it's all a joke; they're too self-conscious to abandon themselves fully to the whimsy of the genre.

In BILLY HAZELNUTS, Tony Millionaire not only abandons such self-consciousness but abandons sanity itself in pursuit of the weird and woolly. The totality of his devotion adds the strength of sincerity to the book. His few winks from beyond the Fourth Wall are subtle and impish and are integrated naturally into the plot. Indeed, natural plotting is one of the book's distinguishing qualities: Millionaire has a delicate grasp of visual pacing; he always seems to know exactly how many panels should cover a page and how much action and dialogue each panel should contain. Although these layouts are not ostentatiously experimental in format, their unfussy precision is compelling. The story, too, has an air of quiet, folkloric melancholy, with the titular gnome chasing the moon over the hills in fear that it has fallen from the sky. But the book does a good deal more than just capitalizing on the resonances of its genre tropes.

BILLY HAZELNUTS is not a slavish imitation of the old comics, but the scale and strangeness of its innovation capture their atmosphere with unusual acuity. The frequent plot twists are unpredictable, constantly confronting the reader with escalating absurdity, yet each feels wholly organic. Its wonders have an amorphous, dreamlike continuity. Whether mice are constructing a golem out of suet or a girl genius is riding her rocking-horse across a celestial junkyard full of broken planets, there's never a whiff of contrivance about the proceedings. Even the deliberately stilted dialogue rolls nicely off the tongue.

This easy and complete suspension of disbelief results from Millionaire's emphasis on the macabre over the cute. After all, our most enduring fairy tales are often the darkest in their underpinnings. The Brothers Grimm never pulled any punches, and nor does Tony Millionaire. BILLY HAZELNUTS contains all manner of death and destruction. The fact that most of the violence is comical - as when Billy chases a cat with a meat grinder or holds a cannon in each hand like a pistol - does not lesson its impact. But the book is tastefully illustrated with a minimum of visible gore.

Millionaire's fine-lined, somewhat frenzied style perfectly fleshes out the warped atmosphere of the book -- its hulking Southern estates and teetering steampunk machinery. (I'm restraining myself from calling it "Burtonesque", because the analogy is too obvious but only superficially accurate. Tony Millionaire is Tony Millionaire-esque, and that's the end of the matter.) Despite the plastic appearance of his shapes, careful consideration is obvious in every composition. The designs for a crew of robot pirates are particularly striking. They're appropriate stage-dressing for a comic of such technically impeccable structure.

BILLY HAZELNUTS may be silly, - masterfully silly, in fact - but it has serious literary merit both for its craftsmanship and for the unsentimental magic that illuminates its dark Gothic landscape. It is a childhood nightmare perfectly captured and a delicious alternative to the squeaky-clean assembly-line fantasies that populate most of the children's literature market.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The guy we have to worry about is that skeleton-robot I made from the meat grinder when I was insane..., November 8, 2006
This review is from: Billy Hazelnuts (Hardcover)
Wow, I'd heard of Tony Millionaire, but never seen any of his stuff until I picked this up the other day. All I can say is don't be put off by his reputation for comic book ribaldry. This is a great weird story that I'm definitely going to be reading to my as-yet-unborn child when she turns around seven or eight. Which also happens to be roughly the age of Becky, a pigtailed little girl who lives in a ramshackle mansion where she's built a strange contraption to view distant planets. Downstairs, her mother's campaign against the kitchen mice leads the little creatures to construct a kind of garbage-based golem to be their champion. When the mother counters this construct with a housecat, it is Becky who tracks the creature down, heals his wounds with honey and gives him hazelnuts for eyes and a proper name.

The ornery little creature and Becky are soon enmeshed in a series of surreal adventures, sparked by a tedious little boy named Eugene. One hesitates to reveal too much of what follows, but just to give a taste: clockwork alligator pirates, seeing-eye skunk, mad scientist, matter enlarger, Noah's Ark, a whale, a rousing sea battle, and a planetary junkyard all come into play. It's a wonderfully inventive weird story, filled with great lines. For example, Billy stands on the back of a motorized rocking horse, yelling defiance at pursuers: "I'm a barrelful of hate! Come open me up!" Or a villain coolly considers the wreckage wrought by Billy: "Hmmm... The little fellow is tougher than he looks... a regular brass cupcake!" Or my favorite line of all: "The guy we have to worry about is that skeleton-robot I made from the meat grinder when I was insane..."

This strays into some pretty dark stuff, and as one reviewer very correctly points out, follows the "marchen" (German folktale) template in many ways (marchen are typically characterized by elements of magic or the supernatural, such as the endowment of a mortal character with special powers or knowledge), and the artwork definitely fits the tone. One of the reasons I'd never checked out any of Millionaire's work before is because I just wasn't into his rather crude style of drawing. I tend to like clean, crisp work, and his stuff made me think of the Katzenjammer Kids or something like that. However, it totally works in this story. One kind of strange thing is that none of the characters have pupils, Becky has solid black eyes, and everyone else has solid white eyes, or else glasses that cover their eyes. Not sure if this is a tribute to Harold Gray (of Little Orphan Annie fame), or what, but it definitely adds to the overall mood. Some may find this is too dark or weird for their taste (although it pales in both respects next to the original Grimm stories and Dr. Suess), but don't be fooled -- it's a modern classic.
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