Robert Crumb, affectionately known as “R Crumb” (which is quite a relief because “Robert” is just a bit too formal for a man who drew Fritz the Cat), emerges as a colossus in the realm of modern cartooning while simultaneously being one of the quirkiest folks you’d ever have the misfortune of meeting. Dan Nadel’s meticulously detailed biography serves as an exhaustive guide to both the man and the myth.
For an eternity, Crumb was often recognized in polite society for illustrating the iconic cover of the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album, *Cheap Thrills*. You know the one: the stoned characters that seemingly passed through a funhouse mirror exhibit, and the ever-optimistic slogan “Keep on Truckin’,” which could effortlessly beautify anything from dorm-room walls to truck mudflaps. Yet, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. In the underground comic realm of the Sixties and Seventies, Crumb was the visionary Dynamo behind Zap Comix, and the cartooning scene was undeniably influenced by his flamboyant imagination.
From the psychedelic abysses of LSD, Crumb gifted us a pantheon of bizarre and morally dubious characters, showcasing his distinct hatching style. Enter Mr. Natural, Angelfood McSpade, and a plethora of other figures who would make even Salvador Dalí raise an eyebrow. And, of course, there’s Crumb himself, the lanky fellow with glasses like milk bottles, brewing an inner storm of anxieties and mundane resentments—talk about relatable content.
Crumb’s influences weren’t just drawn from eerie inspiration but from the likes of Harvey Kurtzman—Mad magazine’s resident anarchist—and Carl Barks, better known to Crumb as “the good duck artist.” And here’s the kicker: without Crumb, icons like Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Joe Sacco, and Daniel Clowes might not have even existed. As Spiegelman famously put it, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb, like you must pass through the gauntlet of living with your great uncle’s questionable collection of memorabilia to find out what your voice might be.” Talk about a rite of passage!
While Crumb captured the essence of the Sixties counterculture, he was also a nostalgic soul, deeply enamored with collecting old 78rpm records. His politics might brand him as broadly anticorporate, but let’s not kid ourselves: his real focus was an unflinching inventory of his own eccentricities. Born in 1943 to a family that could easily star in a tragedy, Crumb’s childhood was a delightful cocktail of anger, addiction, and enough family drama to fuel multiple daytime soap operas. His older brother—whose companionship served as a double-edged sword—left this earthly realm by way of suicide in 1992. Who knew neuroses were the secret ingredient for a successful cartooning career?
Ah, Crumb’s work can certainly baffle the modern reader. With absurdist caricatures like Angelfood McSpade, Crumb didn’t just ride the fine line of satire; he stomped all over it. His early comics feature rape played as humor alongside delightful gems like “Jail Bait of the Month, featuring Honey Bunch Kaminski, age 13.” In a shocking twist nobody saw coming, Crumb’s defense was that he was just holding a mirror to the cultural zeitgeist—who couldn’t use a little self-reflection through crude cartooning?
Crumb’s honesty about his own peculiarities extends to depicting his sexual exploits, wherein his proclivity for women with “great strong legs” takes center stage. Forget the traditional romantic notions—suddenly it’s all about “the ass boldly thrust out behind, like two basketballs.” And if you thought hugging for too long was an issue, just wait till you read about Crumb who didn’t exactly wait for consent before a piggyback ride; but I guess that was just the norm back then.
In a twist of fate melodrama, while dodging the trouble of cancel culture, Crumb surprisingly had a fair amount of romantic success. His first marriage, as lovely as a stack of pancakes gone cold, fizzled out as he neglected his only child. But then came Aline Kominsky, a partnership that sounded akin to a circus act—messy, loud, and oddly fulfilling. Eventually, hit hard by the counterculture’s disillusionment, Crumb strived to reinvent himself post-Sixties, even finding a bit of solace in illustrating Harvey Pekar’s *American Splendor* series.
In the twilight of his career—where the irony of success struck late—Crumb’s work fetched serious cash right when he decided to stop producing much of it. But he was no materialist; Crumb once turned down a whopping $20,000 for a line of Mr. Natural plush toys simply because he found them absurd. So there you have it: while he may have been “a child in matters of money,” Robert Crumb remains a monument to creative integrity, which is a rare find in today’s cash-crazed world.
Now, a widowed grandpa, Crumb resides in rural France. And just so you know, when Nadel proposed this candid biography, Crumb nonchalantly shrugged, as if to say, “Why not? What’s a bit of personal exposure on a Tuesday?” It took a four-month journey for Nadel to summarize Crumb’s wild odyssey, but hey, that’s just the price of entry to the cryptic world of R Crumb.
