Ah, Robert Crumb, or “R Crumb” as he prefers to sign, is not just a cartoonist; he’s the towering figure of modern cartooning and, let’s face it, an oddball of epic proportions. Dan Nadel’s meticulously detailed biography serves as an all-you-can-read buffet that feeds your curiosity on both fronts—his genius and his eccentricities.
For many, Crumb is synonymous with the iconic cover illustration for the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album Cheap Thrills. But that’s merely the cherry on a very bizarre cake. He’s the guiding light of underground comics from the Sixties and Seventies and the mastermind behind Zap Comix. If you had a dorm-room poster of “Keep on Truckin’,” you were unwittingly partying with Crumb’s legacy.
Crumb served up a psychedelic smorgasbord of characters—Mr. Natural, Angelfood McSpade, and Fritz the Cat—that oozed with neuroses and existential angst. He birthed a universe of absurdist figures with his signature hatching style that made them instantly recognizable… and a little unsettling. The pièce de résistance? R Crumb himself, a lanky fellow with milk-bottle specs who seemed like one existential crisis away from creating a new genre called ‘self-loathing comics.’
Drawing upon the likes of Harvey Kurtzman, the anarchic genius behind Mad, and Carl Barks, aka “the good duck artist,” Crumb forged his own path. He played the role of cartoonist’s cartoonist; an artist so influential that, according to Art Spiegelman of Maus fame, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb.” It’s like a rite of passage: encounter Crumb, discover your own voice, and possibly question your life choices.
While Crumb may have been the poster child of Sixties counterculture, let’s not kid ourselves—his vibe is more 19th-century hoarder than Woodstock dreamer. His obsession with collecting 78rpm shellac records is a quirky footnote that hints at a backward-looking worldview. Sure, he’s got anti-corporate politics, but his greatest critique is, bizarrely, a relentless examination of himself. It’s a bit like diving into a rabbit hole of neuroses while the world swirls in chaos around you.
Born in the gritty environment of Philadelphia in 1943, where familial happiness seemed as rare as a unicorn, Crumb’s upbringing was fraught with drama. His family tree was more like a haunted house—full of anger, addiction, and the occasional incestuous whisper. As for his beloved older brother? He tragically succumbed to the darkness in 1992, leaving Crumb to bear the weight of the family’s traumatic legacy with a pen and a lot of dark humor.
But let’s get real: Crumb is what today’s youth would call “#problematic.” His characters often flirt with absurd, hyper-sexualized stereotypes, and we’d need a whole seminar to unpack his early comics that trivialized serious issues. He defends his work by claiming honesty—he doesn’t create cultural stereotypes, he merely holds up a funhouse mirror to reflect them, tacky mustache and all.
Finally, we arrive at the money—or lack thereof. The artist who turned down offers like a 20 grand licensing deal for a line of Mr. Natural plush toys probably wasn’t in it for the cash. A recluse in rural France, Crumb now embodies the irony of life: he’s become valuable, just as he’s stopped producing work. But really, in a world obsessed with celebrity and wealth, this “child in matters of money” turned down opportunities like they were leftover pizza, proving that sometimes, integrity is just a quirky way of saying, “I don’t care if you think I’m washed up.”
