Agony
By (Author) Colson Whitehead
By (author) Mark Beyer
The New York Review of Books, Inc
The New York Review of Books, Inc
15th April 2016
21st April 2016
Main
United States
General
Fiction
741.5
Paperback
176
Width 127mm, Height 127mm, Spine 13mm
180g
Mark Beyer's inimitable self-taught style - mixing off-kilter imagery and boldly geometric compositions - has been featured in newspaper strips and album covers, Art Spiegelman's RAW and MTV's Liquid Television, but Agony is its most essential expression. Originally published in 1987, this East Village Candide is an eccentric, grimly hilarious delight. Amy and Jordan are just like us: hoping for the best, even when things go from bad to worse. They are devoured by fish, beheaded by ghosts, menaced by bears, and hunted by the cops, but still they struggle on, bickering and reconciling, scraping together the rent and trying to find a decent movie. The perfect solace for anxious modern minds, courtesy of one of the great innovators of American comics. Now if only Amy's skin would grow back...
Mark Beyers 'Amy and Jordan' was one of the great underground comic strips of the late 80s and early 90sthe Candide-on-PCP misadventures of a seemingly accursed New York City couple. Douglas Wolk, The New York Times Book Review
"Almost childlike in its energy and lack of story logic, this is a charming explosion of grotesque comedic misfortune, exactly as the title promises ... Beyers calamitous comedy has aged well, its geometric, densely patterned imagery recalling fine art as much as comics and still packing a punch among todays alternative cartoonists. Publishers Weekly, PW Picks
"Exquisitely, gleefully hopeless." The A. V. Club
"I couldnt get enough of their misery: I finished it in one sitting and flipped back to the beginning. The Paris Review Daily Blog
"Mark Beyers Agony is a highlight of the 80sart comics movement ... Now available in a new edition as the first release of the New York Review Comics line, the abstract, absurd, and bleaklyfunny comic book returns, and its just as oddly beautiful and relevant as ever.... Throughout Agony, Beyers artwork is odd, alienating, and remarkably effective. A self-taught artist whose work could easily be classified as outsider, raw, brut, or nave art, Beyer strikes a balance between simple, even childlike figure-worksupported by a verydynamic and complex design." Comics Alliance
"Gorgeously madcap and brutally inspiring.Kirkus Reviews
Agony by Mark Beyer is an otherworldly pocket-sized jewel thats bound to be rediscovered. BlouinArtinfo
Beyers work is universal at its heart ... One of the masters of the form. Publishers Weekly
Mark Beyers are some of my favorite comics of all time, and surely the most perfectly realized vision of urban despair ever to hit the comic page. A must for any fan of bleakness and misery." Daniel Clowes
Hes one of the flukiest geniuses in comics." L.A. Weekly
Exquisite poems of urban despair, dreamy and nightmarish. Chip Kidd
Perhaps the ultimate urban nightmare comic ... Mark Beyer [is] not only an extremely funny cartoonist, but one of the most progressive as well. Time
A childhood hell palpitating with adult neuroses. The Village Voice
Beyers seminal strip is a terrifying New York of the mind. Dash Shaw
I hope Mark Beyers work will find a place in the canon ... A treasure of the comics medium. The Millions
A complete and total original. Kaz
[A]n exemplar of [the] eightiesalternative' comics movement. ...Agonyis a book filled with pain, misery, brutality, and hopelessness, but our unexpected laughter reminds us that we must carry on, regardless.Ivan Brunetti,The Paris Review Daily
Mark Beyer is a self-taught artist who began making comics in 1975. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Village Voice, and many other publications, and was a mainstay of RAW magazine. He created a series of animated shorts for MTV's Liquid Television, designed album covers for John Zorn, and collaborated with Alan Moore. Amy and Jordan, the stars of his graphic novel Agony, were also featured in a newspaper strip that ran from 1988 to 1996, collected in Amy and Jordan in 2004. His paintings and drawings have been exhibited around the world, including in Europe, Japan, and the United States. Colson Whitehead is the author of five novels, including Zone One, Sag Harbor, and The Intuitionist. His latest book is The Noble Hustle, a non-fiction account of the 2011 World Series of Poker. A recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur Fellowship, he lives in New York City.