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Daddy's Girl
 
 
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Daddy's Girl [Hardcover]

Debbie Drechsler (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 9, 2008

A new edition of a long out-of-print Fantagraphics classic.

Fantagraphics Books is proud to re-release one of the most powerful and moving books in its distinguished publishing history: Debbie Drechsler's first collection of short comic stories, Daddy's Girl. Originally published in 1995 and distributed only to comic book specialty stores, Daddy's Girl was ahead of its time: Two years before The Kiss, Kathryn Harrison's critically acclaimed story of her incestuous relationship with her father, Dreschler's account of her abuse at the hands of her father, told from the point of view of an adolescent, is one of the most searingly honest, empathetic, and profoundly disturbing uses of the comics medium in its history.

Rendered entirely in black and white, Drechsler's meticulous brush lines gather into heavy textures that suggest the claustrophobic tension of the environment that threatens her pre-teen and adolescent female protagonists. Characters such as Lily, who can't escape her father's abuse, and Franny, a girl whose desire to be accepted leads her into dangerous territory, struggle not to be visually and emotionally overwhelmed. Both girls are rendered in chunky, rounded lines, as if they've been shaped by the oppressive weight of their blandly suburban milieu, where pretending that everything is all right and maintaining the status quo is prized above truth and upheaval. However, Drechsler's characters also have wide-open eyes, suggesting that they still maintain their innocence, and their world does contain some beauty and hope, as long as the characters have the resolve to look for it: art and creation is offered as a form of salvation. Central to this quasi-memoir is Lily's relationship to her father—a confused jumble of fear, trepidation, and love.

Drechsler's book was nominated for an Ignatz award the year it was released, and she went on to create the critically acclaimed The Summer of Love. With the critical and commercial success of mature and uncompromising works by women cartoonists such as Fun Home, Squirrel Mother, and Persepolis, Daddy's Girl should receive serious media attention and find a responsive readership.

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Daddy's Girl + Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art + Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Drechsler’s expressionist style both enhances and contrasts with her characters’ attempts to cling to innocence and identity in the face of personal horror.” (Karin L. Kross - Bookforum )

“An excoriating piece of work, which manages a miraculous marriage of the brutal and the innocent… The artwork…is a visual feast, while the emerging portrait of a family and growing up is note perfect.” (Neel Mukherjee - The Times Online )

“By turns chilling and poignant.” (Publishers Weekly )

“Brutal and beautiful.” (Philadelphia Weekly )

About the Author

Debbie Drechsler lives in Northern California.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 86 pages
  • Publisher: Fantagraphics Books; First edition. edition (April 9, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560978945
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560978947
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 8.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,318,632 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars disheartening subject matter, September 3, 2008
By 
Steven E. Higgins "vacuumboy9" (Florissant, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Daddy's Girl (Hardcover)
Daddy's Girl is a collection of short stories which deal with the frank subject matter of a girl's sexual abuse at the hands of her father. These individual stories - mostly centering around a young girl named Lily, though another follows a different young girl named Fran -- add up to create a fictionalized account of Drechsler's own experiences. Because the author has created these characters through which to tell her stories, it creates distance between the reader and the author which allows us to view the stories with a kind of emotional detachment. Yet each of these stories is still told intimately through first person narration, leaving the reader wondering where the line between truth and fiction lies.

The abuse in the stories is treated matter-of-factly, which makes it all the more shocking. The very first story of the collection, "Visitors in the Night," introduces us right away to this approach to the subject matter, as it begins with Lily and her sister Pearl in bed one night, arguing back and forth before they go to sleep. As they are drifting off, their father comes in to wake Lily up and undoes his robe. Before the reader even has time to process what is happening, the girl is forced to commit a sexual act for her father, and her reaction to what happens hints that this instance was not the first time her father molested her.

But the abuse itself is usually not central to the stories in this collection, which mainly deal with the girl's attempts to cope with this abuse. At various points throughout the book, she is left paralyzed on her bathroom floor after her father bursts in on her, she contemplates suicide to avoid having to deal with the situation ever again, and she begins laughing uncontrollably at one point while her father is molesting her, leading him to beat her.

These varied reactions to the abuse she is undergoing illustrate her fractured state of mind and the psychological damage done to her as a result of the continued molestation. In one story called "Marvin," Lily is less concerned with her father's abuse than she is with the fate of her dog, who tries to protect her from the abuse and is thrown across the room into the wall. In "Drummer Boy," Drechsler shows how abuse affects the other relationships in an adolescent's life, when Lily begins to fall for a boy at school but doesn't know how to react when the boy looks at her in a romantic way, because she equates that look with her father's sexual assaults.

Throughout each of these stories, Drechsler's art is thick with detail, both in the characters and in the backgrounds and scenery around them. The deep black line work criss-crosses every page heavily, filling every last corner of each panel with ink. These powerful brushstrokes add weight to the subject matter, making each image resound and seem more real to the reader.

The ominous darkness of the artwork makes each scene even more wrought with tension, so you feel as the main character feels, always waiting, when the father appears in a scene, for the other shoe to drop. The tension is particularly palpable in the only color story in the collection, "Constellations," when one of Lily's friends spends the night with her so they can look at the stars. The early scene with her friend's arrival is happy and bright, but as night falls the colors fade ever so slightly, and her father's presence looms forebodingly.

Daddy's Girl is not an easy read or a fun read. Its subject matter is as heavy and dark as the artwork, and the harsh reality found in its pages could make some readers uncomfortable. But it is a worthwhile read, for it portrays a subject that the author clearly feels strongly about so brilliantly and elegantly that readers cannot help but empathize.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Decent story leaves you hanging, April 15, 2008
This review is from: Daddy's Girl (Hardcover)
I enjoying reading this even though that dark subject (a sexually abusive father and others). The book is well written and interesting I just feel kinda like at the end, you want more. What happens next. It follows Debbie from youth to midway through high school, then just stops. I would have liked to know what happened next once she left her abusive house and went off on her own.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars sickening subject - well done, May 19, 2008
By 
This review is from: Daddy's Girl (Hardcover)
I want to kill this woman's father for what he did to her.... Art reminds me very strongly of Lynda Barry.
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