What It Is
Thu May 29 2008
Time Out Ratings
<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5Lynda Barry's latest book is both an instruction manual on creativity and an outpouring of questions about the nature of memory, imagination and art. What It Is begins with a comic about Barry, best known for her weekly strip Ernie Pook's Comeek, struggling with the uncontrollable, compulsive tendencies of her thoughts-but we soon learn it is the mind's very independence that allows images and stories to come to us effortlessly if we'd just stop "trying."/>
Much of Barry's advice involves losing the self-consciousness of adulthood and recapturing the way you thought as a child. Kids play and create with purity of intent-not unlike Barry, whose work has an undeniable sincerity.
The book interweaves pages of comics and collage. The comics chronicle Barry's relationship with art throughout her life, including a heartbreaking story in which 10-year-old Barry earnestly applies to a "Do You Have Hidden Artistic Talent?" scam ad in the back of a magazine. Meanwhile, the collage pages jump-start the imagination with questions ("Did you ever have a toy that scared you?") and sentence fragments varying from the surreal ("Locomotive is my name") to the insistent ("Pretend you are a writer").
The book suffers a little from the frequent shifts between mediums: The comics themselves are a mesmerizing Disneyland ride, but looking at the collages is often more like just walking around the park. The various sections also contain quite a bit of repetition. Still, Barry composes with such urgency-you need to break free and start creating now or it will be too late-that it builds into an inspirational chant. And to answer the most important question: Does this book make you want to sit down and start creating? Absolutely.
