The title of this volume of American Splendor implies some kind of "best-of" volume to my mind, one that curates the best material from previously published volumes of Harvey Pekar's autobiographical comic. In fact, it's exactly the opposite; this volume seems intended to scoop up all American Splendor stories that had come out since 1991's The New American Splendor Anthology, but had not made their way into 2004's Our Movie Year. If anything in here had been reprinted in a volume I'd read before, I didn't recognize it. This means that the stories reprinted here cover quite a span of time, from 1991 (so before even 1994's Our Cancer Year, which is mentioned in some stories as something Harvey and his wife Joyce are working on) up to 2004, though they mostly seem to be concentrated in the mid- to late 1990s. If you're reading the American Splendor collected editions in publication order (as I mostly am) this has the odd effect that a lot of what's collected here precedes what was reprinted in the previous one, Our Movie Year, which covered 2000 to 2004; I don't think there's a single story in here where the American Splendor film is an actual done deal! In a lot of them, Harvey goes on about how he needs the money from a movie to make up the income he will lose when he retires from his job as a hospital file clerk.
The sequencing within the volume is also weird. In the beginning of the book, there are a couple stories where Harvey references his recent hip surgery; near the end, there are a bunch where he is dealing with his bum hip because he hasn't had the surgery yet. I don't understand why they weren't put into an order that would read more clearly. There's even a point where there's three back-to-back stories set at San Diego Comic-Con and obviously the one that happens last is placed before the other two. Why?
(Maybe someday a publisher like Fantagraphics will do some kind of definitive reprinting in order? That would be nice, and I would buy it, since most of my American Splendor volumes were borrowed from the library.)
Best of American Splendor |
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Collection published: 2005 Contents originally published: 1991-2004 Read: March 2026 |
Art by Dean Haspiel, Josh Neufeld, Joe Sacco, Frank Stack, David Collier, Gerry Shamray, Sam Hurt, Joe Zabel, Gary Dumm, Colin Warneford, Paul Mavrides, Alex Wald, J. R. Stats, Jim Woodring, Carole Sobocinski, Spain [Rodriguez], Scott A. Gilbert
Anyway, how is the actual content?
I think the other reason the sequencing of the book didn't totally work for me is that it begins with some weaker material: stories that are short but not punchy, ones where Pekar recaps the life of someone who did jazz, retellings of things we already know from other Pekar books. At first, I started to worry that the reason some of this material had been uncollected so long was that it wasn't very good!
The first story to really click for me was almost a hundred pages in, "TransAtlantic Comics" (illustrated by Frank Stack) where Harvey has a bad encounter in a parking lot that causes him to freak out, but then in the middle of his bad weekend he receives a package from England, containing the work of an autistic autobiographical cartoonist named Colin Warneford, whose comic is included in the narrative. You can definitely tell how Colin is influenced by Pekar and his artistic collaborators, but his story does a good job of illuminating his own worldview and is actually kind of moving. (It doesn't seem like Warneford has ever published any other work, alas.) Then we go back to Harvey's bad weekend.
After this, I felt the book picked up and became more consistent, nailing that telling of quotidian stories through the comics medium that Pekar is so good at. I liked "Veterans' Rights" (illustrated by Stack), which is all the kind of turf-war bullshit familiar to anyone who works in a large bureaucratic organization: different people squabbling over who will do what when. I also liked "Flight to Chicago" (art by Joe Zabel and Gary Dumm), about the tribulations of trying to fly from Cleveland to Chicago when you have a bad hip, and "Windfall Gained" (art by Stack), where Harvey gets in a minor traffic accident, but actually ends up coming out ahead financially when he finds a guy willing the do the work incredibly cheaply. Harvey is a guy with a lot of neuroses, and I appreciate how much he's willing to demonstrate these to the reader; "Candor" (art by Joe Sacco) is all about an incredibly overcomplicated freakout he has over thinking he lost something he didn't actually lose, which ultimately results in him locking himself out of the house at 6am for an hour in pouring down rain.
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| I love how this captures the anger of the crowd. from American Splendor: Windfall #1 (script by Harvey Pekar, art by Joe Zabel & Gary Dumm) |
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| from American Splendor: Windfall #1 (script by Harvey Pekar, art by Josh '95) |
All three Comic-Con stories are quite strong; two are a type of American Splendor story Pekar does from time to time, where he tells you someone else's story. In this case, it's about a guy who became a phone salesman... but was almost too good at it and began losing himself in it. (He quit to become a cartoonist, hence Harvey bumping into him at Comic-Con.) There's also a funny one where Harvey meets Matt Groening: "See, I noticed a list of yours in a magazine of the 100 greatest people, and I was only number ninety-six on it. You meet a few more people that impress ya, and I'll fall completely off it. So I was trying t'impress ya, to at least solidify my position, and maybe move a few notches up." He then threatens to take out Lynda Barry:
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| I'm guessing Lynda Barry ultimately won. from American Splendor: Comic-Con Comics (script by Harvey Pekar, art by Scott A. Gilbert) |
(A cameo I did not expect: Mike Richardson, who I know as the writer of Star Wars: Crimson Empire, but who was the publisher of Dark Horse, who published American Splendor in the 1990s and 2000s.)
It would be easy to see Harvey as a crank, and that's often how he depicts himself, but one of my favorite stories here shows off his empathetic side. "Interviewing the Interviewer" (art by Stack) is about Pekar being interviewed by a reporter, but then he keeps calling her up because he wants to know how she's doing. It's simple but effective. There's even a story by Harvey's wife Joyce here, "Be Careful Not to Pull Too Hard on Loose Ends" (art by Neufeld), about the writing of Our Cancer Year, and Joyce's own neuroses about the possible return of the cancer. I liked this one a lot too.
It's been around three years since I read my previous American Splendor volume; hopefully it's less than three years before I get to my next one. I have only two to go!
Next up in sequence: American Splendor: Another Day
* They are both credited on the individual stories they write but not the collection's title page.



















