The Night Bookmobile by Audrey Niffengger
April 19th, 2011 by Susie
I picked this book up at the event I attended last week. I have been very eager to read it for several reasons. The first being that Niffengger is one of my favorite authors. Second, this is her first comic, and as you know if you read this blog, I love comics! Lastly, it is about books and the role they play in in a person’s life. And I love books too, of all kinds, pure prose, illustrated, memoir, essays, fantasy, humor, children’s, ebooks, and countless others.
The Night Bookmobile is unlike Niffenegger’s two previously published graphic pieces. The Three Incestuous Sisters and The Adventuress were both stories told in brief poetic sentences accompanied by equally dreamlike, evocative illustrations. The Night Bookmoblie is different to the point that if you did not know who the author of each was and put them next to each other, you probably would not guess they were done by the same person.
The story shares the magic realism themes of the other two, but is told in a far more straight forward manner, and the art is much more precise and grounded. I don’t consider that a bad thing, I think this is the strongest of her three graphic works. The other two are lovely to look at, and to muse on the narrative, but the Night Bookmobile pulls you into the story in a way the other two don’t.
The story is that of a young women who while on a late night walk, after a fight with her boyfriend, stumbles upon an RV calling itself the Night Bookmoblie. She steps inside to discover it is bigger than it appeared and is filled with books. But they are not just any books, these are every book she has read over the course of her life. Not just books she owns, but everything she had ever borrowed from a library or friend, everything read for school, or read and discarded. The Bookmoblie also has a catalog of every magazine, newspaper, pamphlet, road sign or cereal box she ever read as well. It’s not mentioned, but I am sure it also has a database of every email and webpage also. The discovery changes the way she reads, always aware that she is adding to the library each time she opens the book. She becomes obsessed with finding the Bookmobile again.
The art is incredibly detailed and true to life. It compliments the story perfectly. One particular panel, a close up of the a shelf of books in the Bookmoblie was particularly compelling. She recreates the spines of a collection of children’s books with nearly impossible accuracy, it is clear it was done by hand and it is a wonder to behold. I was drawn to examine each one and felt the same tingles of recognition when I spotted one I had read as a child that the protagonist was experiencing.
The story was originally published as a prose story for an anthology. She later interpreted it into a comic for the UK’s the Guardian. I think it is especially suited to the medium, since the imagery is so vivid. The book was published by Abrams, with as much attention to detail and artistry as the material deserves. If you can’t tell by now, I really liked it and highly recommend picking it up
Tags: Audrey Niffenegger, Review