Product Details
Diary of a Mosquito Abatement Man

Diary of a Mosquito Abatement Man
By John Porcellino

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Product Description

Diary of a Mosquito Abatement Man is the first in a series of books from La Mano collecting the work of John Porcellino. Over the course of 15 years and 64 issues of his much-loved, self published 'zine KING-CAT Comics and Stories, John has chronicled his life and the world around him with honesty, grace, and intelligence.

"Diary" compiles stories from a decade's worth of KING-CAT on the subject of his years spent as a mosquito exterminator. From early, scratchy punk drawings to later, more refined work (as well as 30 brand-new pages created specifically for this edition...), John examines his time on the job, and how it affected his life, his health, and his view of the world.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1342229 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 104 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
Porcellino's graphic novel about his last year in high school, Perfect Example (1999), will be reissued in style this fall by high-toned graphic-novel publisher Drawn & Quarterly. Expect much the same for this micropress effort about some of Porcellino's subsequent life. But don't wait. Porcellino's autobiographical comics rank with the best because of their unpretentiousness and candor. In a prose introduction, Porcellino says that he and his childhood pals thought the "mosquito men" they saw in suburban Illinois "got paid to do what we did for fun." At 20, he became one and for several years in Illinois and then Colorado hunted larvae, sprayed insecticide, and eventually changed his mind about the job. The 1- to 20-page pieces in Diary range formally from a list of "Inhuman Bastards of the Deep" (microfauna in a drop of water) to an essay on a typical workday ("Mountain Song") to conventional narratives. Porcellino's usual Matt Groening-simple drawing style becomes denser according to affect as much as subject (see the piece on spraying at night); it's always perfectly pitched. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
... in its modest way, this "Diary" becomes a meditation on memory and creation... -- Ed Park, The Village Voice, July 27 2005

Although "Diary" was written as a series of anecdotes...it adds up to something more. -- Joshua Glenn, The Boston Globe, July 24 2005

John Porcellino creates some of the most thoughtful, intelligent, sympathetic and yes, beautiful comix in America... -- Andrew Arnold, Time.com

About the Author
John Porcellino has been self-publishing his exquisite, beautiful 'zine KING-CAT Comics and Stories since 1989. His work has appeared in small press publications too numerous to mention, and his work has been translated into French, German, and Swiss editions. He currently resides in San Francisco with his wife Misun and their cat Maisie Kucoc.


Customer Reviews

Great book5
I loved this book. It was a quick read (great for communtes) with humorous stories to which I related.

Poetry in the form of comics5
If you haven't gotten around to John Porcellino's monolithic King Cat Classix, Diary of a Mosquito Abatement Man is a condensed version of his best work. It's a bizarre slice of midwestern American life: comics dealing with Porcellino's experience doing just what it sounds like ... pouring chemicals into swamps/waterholes containing mosquito larvae. It begins with his strange encounters with hitchhikers, in twister-torn country, Con Edison structures, getting attacked by wasps, and continues with why he gives up mosquito-abating. The evolution of Porcellino's artwork is also fascinating, starting with scrawled, almost crude, "punk" drawings and evolving to a gorgeous, minimal, clear-line style. Porcellino's landscapes are something to behold in their haikulike simplicity and beauty.

The comic is funny, but also touching, pensive and absolutely in love with nature. The writing evokes Hemingway and Kerouac, and I highly recommend this book and his other work to people interested in finding beauty in humble things, the blue-collar American experience, poetry, nature.

Seriously impressive work5
Some of the finest and most considered autobiographical comics in an absurdly glutted field. Keep your eye on John Porcellino.