Happiness Will Follow
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- $19.99
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
Mike Hawthorne’s mother is left alone to raise her son in New York City, a city that torments them both with its unforgiving nature. But when Mike falls victim to an old world Santeria death curse, a haunting sign from the old country of something his mother could never truly escape—she begins a series of events that drive him away both physically and emotionally.
For the first time ever, Eisner Award-nominated artist Mike Hawthorne (Superior Spider-Man) tells the true and tragic story of enduring abuse, discovering a love of art and a passion that helped him to build the home he never had in this graphic novel memoir about family, survival, and what it means to be Puerto Rican in America.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hawthorne (the Deadpool series) chronicles his white-knuckle relationship with a rage-prone mother through potent graphic storytelling tightly braided with anger, love, and a longing to put sense to a childhood marked by trauma. He portrays his single mother as possessing superhero toughness ("Blanca the unflappable" saves strangers in peril and went out looting in New York's 1977 blackout) and as an unpredictable force of nature, equally suggestible to Santeria and Catholic superstitions from her native Puerto Rico. Convinced a curse has been put on the family, Blanca abruptly moves them to York, Pa., in the early 1980s. There, her carapace of immigrant self-sufficiency begins to crack in the face of racism. Suffering the indignities of the working poor (living on "government cheese," as the package is literally labeled) and Blanca's furious beatings, Hawthorne becomes an anger-cloaked delinquent. Drawn with sharply canted, horror-movie angles and muted, wintry colors that explode into fiery reds, Hawthorne's memoir is unrelenting in depicting how poverty and familial dysfunction turned Blanca monstrous and then left her an "island" filled with a "cancerous loneliness." Despite his drifting away, feeling cursed, and becoming a "ghost relative," Hawthorne finds surprising room for graceful consideration of Blanca's own pain amid this harrowing rendition of his own. Hawthorne doesn't hold anything back in this gut punch of a graphic memoir.