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Mother, Come Home Hardcover – May 5, 2009

3.8 out of 5 stars 16 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Fantagraphics (May 5, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560979739
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560979739
  • Product Dimensions: 7.1 x 0.8 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #866,040 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By J. N. Brandel on September 5, 2006
Format: Paperback
Hornschemeier is not the type of guy or author to go for the easy, in-your-face type of story-telling. He's in it for the more interesting subtleties that emerge from the space in between. He is masterful with the moments of intense, complicated, nameless emotions that arise from the interaction with sparse dialogue and stark illustration. He allows the reader to figure out what the reader feels, he does not condescend. I loved it.
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Format: Paperback
I'm not sure what a lot of this complaining is about. Paul Hornschemeier doesn't draw like chris ware or tell stories like Chris Ware. For that I'm glad, because his is a more direct storytelling style than Chris', who has a more design first manner to his work. Hornshemeier is far more fluid and almost ambient. That said, it was not a surprise to me that part of the soundtrack to this book's creation was Sigur Ros. He is able to keep up a mood of melancholy and foreboding throughout this book that isn't something that you can enjoy in the same way as the maniacally glib Bendis, but is good and worth reading.
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By A Customer on March 29, 2004
Format: Paperback
Phenomenonal book! The drawings are clean and crisp, but there is something about the way that the prose manages to be at once straight-forward and surreal that reminds me of Edward Gorey. Great, sad, compelling.
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Format: Hardcover
I'm a fan of Paul Hornschemeier's visual versatility. While it heavily references all of the demigods of the indie comics scene--Charles Burns, Chris Ware, Daniel Clowes, and many of the other creators who are the defining voices of the genre--his style acts like a chameleon, never seeming to settle into any one of these aesthetics for too long. So, when Hornschemeier takes this entire visual lexicon that he has at his disposal and simplifies the heck out of it, you get some interesting results.

Mother, Come Home serves as an introductory volume to a collection of related stories that are presented in subsequent volumes that are listed in the beginning of this second edition but do not seem to actually exist. Whether or not the nonexistence of these books listed in the bibliography is part of the overarching narrative is something I'm not going to venture a guess at, but either way, this book works to construct a portrait of a severely traumatizing childhood that would undoubtedly create a very surreal, gray life if the story were actually pursued beyond this volume.

The parallels between the lonely, inwardly lived lives that Chris Ware writes about and the tale told here are very obvious, but they are not told with the same quiet subtlety. They both pick apart the tiny moments that make up tragedies, but Mother presents these in a much more obvious fashion, which may appeal to those who become impatient with deciphering little visual mysteries. This in itself is a very effective introduction to the significant depth the other comics in the genre present, which isn't always the easiest thing to dive right into.
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Format: Hardcover
"Mother, Come Home" is Paul Hornschemeier's first graphic novel. I've read two of his previous books "Let Us.." and "Paradoxes" which were interesting and enjoyable with shades of Clowes and Ware. It follows the breakdown of the family once the mother dies leaving the father and son shattered. The father seems hardest hit - he is unable to function properly and the 7 year old boy soon assumes the day to day running of the household and acts as secretary to his father. Soon it's found out that the father has had a complete breakdown and he's taken away to be treated while the boy is taken in by his uncle and aunt.

The story is unremittingly tragic as we initially see the boy standing before his mother's grave wearing the last two gifts she gave him - a red cape and a lion's mask, two items he wears constantly. From then on we see the boy having to grow up and see too much for a child, made all the more difficult as he wears the lion's mask. He tries to keep what little there is left of his childhood only to have to put it aside to help his father. The ending contains a devastating revelation and an even sadder ending.

It's basically one very long and difficult cry of sadness throughout. It's hard to read but equally hard to put down. The vivid colours of everyday scenes and imaginative methods of storytelling contrast bleak, dulled colours of unbridled misery. It's straightforward and a very depressing read.
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Format: Hardcover
If you have any interest in reading the graphic medium, this story is an essential one. Please be aware it is a dark subject, but this is what people have to experience at times. It is the story of a son and father who have lost their mother/wife. It is not a daring fight against evil, or the neighborhood kids whiling away summer days. The characters have been deeply changed, and are fighting to regain any parts of themselves they can still find.

While I am still learning more about the graphic novel medium, Mother, Come Home stood out among those I've read. The art style lands far closer to Will Eisner's command of the page, and draws you into the surreal, then stark world you accompany Thomas in. Hornschemeier uses an ornate, tragic palette, and attention to Thomas' focus. Through these the reader understands just how Thomas feels.

Death is a tragic event. It changes everyone it touches. Now, Thomas must survive. I highly recommend this story, because there are others who must survive.
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