Meet Robert Crumb, or as he prefers to sign his masterpieces, “R Crumb.” This guy is a cartooning giant and a certified eccentric, creating a perfect cocktail of artistic genius and oddball behavior that only a biographer like Dan Nadel could dive into with microscopic precision.
For ages, Crumb was a familiar face—albeit a quirky one—thanks to his iconic illustration for the Cheap Thrills album by Big Brother and the Holding Company (Janis Joplin included, just in case you were wondering). Beyond that, he’s the guy behind the virtually stretched-out, stoned figures, with the old-school slogan “Keep on Truckin’” that somehow ended up on dorm-room walls and the backs of 18-wheeler mudflaps everywhere. But let’s not be fooled; he was the undisputed OG of underground comics, strutting his stuff in the Sixties and Seventies as the head honcho of *Zap Comix*.
Crumb conjured up a psychedelic pantheon of lust-driven, absurdist characters, all rendered in his unmistakable hatching style. We have Mr. Natural, the Snoid, Angelfood McSpade, and Fritz the Cat gallivanting along, not to mention his pièce de résistance, R Crumb himself—a lanky, anxious ectomorph sporting milk-bottle glasses, practically oozing neuroses.
He learned his craft from the anarchic genius Harvey Kurtzman of *Mad Magazine* fame and Carl Barks, who rendered Donald Duck with the anonymity of a ninja artist. In full circle irony, though, everyone learned from Crumb. As Art Spiegelman, the mind behind *Maus*, puts it: “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb.” Encountering him is akin to a cosmic evolutionary experience, where your artistic journey takes a sharp turn after stepping through his peculiar, rabbit hole of wit.
Crumb may have donned the mantle of a Sixties counterculture icon, but he’s really more of an idiosyncratic time traveler, continuously spinning tales inspired by the glories of yesteryears. His penchant for collecting old 78rpm shellac records points to an obsessive nostalgia that feeds into his cartooning, transporting the viewer to the 19th and early 20th centuries. Despite his broadly anticorporate politics, his greatest critique always circled back to a relentless examination of the man in the mirror. And, spoiler alert: That guy has issues.
Born in 1943 in the charmingly dysfunctional atmosphere of lower-middle-class Philadelphia, Crumb had a childhood that could fuel an entire season of reality TV. His family history flaunted a parade of anger, violence, and good old-fashioned madness. Tragically, his talented elder brother, who was supposed to be his artistic partner-in-crime, succumbed to mental illness and addiction in 1992—leaving Robert somehow emerging from that storm with what some might call a miracle: he became a renowned cartoonist in spite of it all.
Now, here’s the kicker: Crumb is a textbook case of what today’s youth might label as #problematic. With characters like Angelfood McSpade— a grossly hypersexualized caricature—his creations dance on the fine line between edgy commentary and blatant insensitivity. Rape, which is often used as a comedic device in his earlier works, could make a modern reader squirm—a stark contrast to today’s cancelling culture. Defending himself, Crumb insists he merely reflects the world’s quirks, not creates them. Bravo for honesty!
Candid to the core, Crumb holds a magnifying glass to his own eccentricities, exposing his desires and dialogue in a way that brings more than just a chuckle. One memorable panel shows him shamefully listening to an angry woman’s rant on male privilege, with him sheepishly promising, “I’ll be good, I promise!” while internally grappling with not-so-flattering thoughts. Ah, the comedy of life, or is it tragedy?
Rather than being thrown in jail or facing #MeToo repercussions—thank you, 1970s—Crumb actually enjoyed a fair amount of romantic escapades. His first marriage, a hasty affair with his initial love interest, was like a classic sitcom that went haywire, ending in neglect with a sprinkle of heartbreak. However, he found a much happier connection with Aline Kominsky, forging a lifelong partnership that still defied the conventions of exclusivity.
As the Seventies waned, Crumb saw his life as more of a slow descent, like a punk rock song played by a cover band long past their prime. He wrestled with the shifts in his artistic landscape and tried shedding his Sixties skin but never quite found the last shred that helped him embrace a new, more realistic tone introduced by Harvey Pekar’s *American Splendor*. And when punk came along, crushing hopes like a misplaced mosh pit, he melodramatically “killed” Mr. Natural, declaring himself a washed-up has-been.
These days, Crumb is living the rustic life in rural France, far removed from the chaos that once defined him. Nadel chased him down for this biography, traveling a great distance that culminated in a shrug of indifference and the words, “I’m not opposed to it.” That shrugged response encapsulates the essence of Crumb—a mix of depth and absurdity that leaves us both in awe and disbelief.
With Dan Nadel’s meticulous detailing in *Crumb: A Cartoonist’s Life*, you can expect an engaging exploration of one of the most fascinating figures in cartooning history. But don’t forget—the financial integrity that defines him doesn’t always translate into good money sense. A monk-like persona in a decidedly non-monastic career, Crumb made the audacious choice to decline offers that would have fattened his pockets, like the chance to decorate a Rolling Stones album cover. Now there’s a story for the ages!
So whether you’re reading for the comic history or the peculiarities of Crumb’s personality, it’s a hodgepodge of insightful absurdity that makes for a fitting tribute to this cartoonist who still revels in the chaos of life, 80s punk, and all the neuroses in between.
