I knew that Eisner had a stellar reputation and hoped I would find myself impressed in the way that so many others have been. (I was a bit concerned I might find the material dated, having little sense of when it was actually written.) I needn't have worried. Though the title story of A Contract With God was not quite what I expected (not busy enough for my liking with generally just one illustration per page) after that things took off spectacularly. I got the sense that the first book was sort of feeling the way to a new way of telling stories - the tales subsequent to A Contract With God felt much freer in conception and style and the subsequent full books A Life Force and Dropsie Avenue move almost into a new way of rendering stories - linking themes through recurrent characters who wind in and out of a sort of meta-story centering on the development over time of a whole location. This sounds rather grand, though I'm trying to put it as simply as I can, but the books themselves make for an effortless read, seemingly perfectly natural as, simply, good stories.
Occasionally the dialogue and linking narration can be a bit clunky, but the artwork itself is never less than wonderful. I don't know anyone else who can do rain quite as well as Eisner. One thing though - the characters do have a distinctly 1940s - 50s feel to them, even though the action of Dropsie Avenue brings us to later decades. They also sometimes remind me of Disney characters, I mean the human figures in Disney cartoons - especially the middle-aged ladies and the sort of generic handsome male in his twenties. I wonder which way the influence went; as far as I know Eisner was never employed by Disney studios. Maybe it was just something in the air?
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