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    David Boring (Paperback) By (author) Daniel Clowes

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    Short Description for David BoringDavid Boring is a 19-year-old security guard with a tortured inner life and an obsessive nature. When he meets the girl of his dreams, things begin to go awry: what seems too good to be true apparently is, and what seems truest in Boring's life is that the primal nature of mankind will come inexorably to the fore.
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    David Boring3

    Mark Thwaite

    One of the most important - and best - writers in the comic field working today, Daniel Clowes is probably best known for his book Ghost World (made into a film by Terry Zwigoff and starring the now ubiquitous Scarlett Johansson, as Rebecca, memorably supporting Thora Birch's perfect Enid). David Boring tells the story of our "eponymous narrator" and his struggle against his mother, to learn more about his father (the creator of the Yellow Streak comic, of which David has but one Annual) and to find love (in the very particular shape of the women pasted into his "perverse scrapbook"). After the perplexing death of his friend Whitey, after his hard-won girlfriend Wanda leaves him for no clearly apparent reason, and after being shot for reasons that, again, are not made immediately clear, David spends time recuperating at the family summer escape of Hulligan's Wharf.


    The central part of the book details the (often sexual) tensions that well-up on the island, particularly after the appearance of Uncle August who claims that a germ warfare attack has widely contaminated the North American mainland. In the final part, an increasing melodrama infects the comic overtaking David's life (the very antithesis of his moniker). And whilst this gives the final frames a slightly rushed feeling (with an over-neat, if provisional, ending) Clowes' writing and drawing combine beautifully.


    David's sexual proclivities form an important theme throughout the book and Clowes plays this very well. But are "big asses" really David's sole motivation? Initially the search for his father seems like it will be a key narrative thread, but David himself curtails this arc. This renders him rather flatter as a character than he should be and he never quite comes alive for us as clearly as do Enid and Rebecca in Ghost World. Indeed it is Dot who feels the more rounded character although she is only glimpsed compared to how much via the first person we get from David; which throws up the interesting insight that, perhaps, Clowes is actually better at characterising women than he is men. Notwithstanding these criticisms this is an excellent read. Clowes is a good writer who is able to address a number of important issues within a form hardly renowned for its ability to question as well as it undoubtedly entertains.


    Mark Thwaite

    by Mark Thwaite

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