BOOK TITLE: Truth Is Fragmentary
AUTHOR: Gabrielle Bell
YEAR: 2014
GENRE: Graphic Novel
SUBGENRE: Travel Memoir
GRADE: Pass
Gabrielle Bell is a struggling comic book artist who puts
herself on a schedule to draw every day despite her mental exhaustion. Her
travels around the world give her more than enough creative fuel for an
autobiography, both because of the experiences and the exhaustion. She
specifically travels to places where other comic book artists meet, as a way to
not only better her own style, but to market herself to the public. With a shy
personality and an emotionally wrecked mind, putting herself out there becomes
increasingly difficult as the graphic novel marches on.
The themes of shyness, stress, and depression are all
relatable topics that most readers can get behind. The ways in which Miss Bell
shows them are creative and razor-sharp, to say the least. For example, when
asked about her shyness, the next panel shows Miss Bell morphing into a
two-headed creature as she wracks her brain thinking of an answer. Being
stressed out also takes its toll on her as evidenced by her sarcastic “cat
riding” vacation photos. It gets so maddening at times for her that she pops
Xanax on airplane rides and chews cocaine leaves just to numb the pain. While I
don’t recommend going too hardcore with the medication you take, it’s certainly
understandable.
Of all the places Gabrielle has traveled to, her visit to Columbia has to be the
most eye-opening. We all have this image of Columbia being a corrupt place where guys
like Pablo Escobar can run roughshod over everyone while the police do nothing
about it. To some extent, that could very well be the case. But Gabrielle also
knows that beneath all the violence and drugs, there’s a spark of humanity and
a cry for help. As an open-minded liberal, she knows not to judge an entire
culture based on the actions of a few people. That’s a lesson we all need to
understand at some point, especially with our current politics the way they are
now with the Donald in charge.
If there’s one complaint I have about this graphic novel,
it’s that the themes I care about the most took too long to kick in. At first
it seemed like Gabrielle was having a good time with all the traveling she did.
Then you scratch beneath the surface and find that nothing is okay and she
needs help. I wish that was more prevalent in the opening chapters of the book.
Maybe it was already there and I missed it, but it just seemed to be a
deviation from the near end of the story. If you don’t have a lot of patience
as a reader, I can see how this would be a turn-off. But I must advise you to
keep going until the very end. I did and I’m grateful for it.
It’s easy to tell that Truth Is Fragmentary was a labor of
love for Gabrielle Bell and she should be rewarded for soldiering through the
stress and depression. Buy a copy of her book and give her your undivided
attention. If you like what you see, keep buying her works. She’ll be grateful
for any attention she gets, as are many up-and-coming writers and artists.
That’s what you have to remember as you go through this book: everybody starts
somewhere and it’s the journey, not the destination, that matters the most.
Thank you, Gabrielle Bell, for giving me something worthwhile to read! A
passing grade for you, my dear!
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