Ah, Robert Crumb, or as he prefers to be known—R. Crumb—a man who looms large in the cartooning world like an oversized caricature of a man trying to fit into a text box. Dan Nadel’s biography—dissecting every quirky aspect of this peculiar genius—offers a veritable buffet of oddities regarding Crumb’s life, and, oh boy, is it a buffet you might regret overeating.
For a stretch of the 60s and 70s, Crumb was primarily recognized in mainstream circles for his iconic cover art on the Big Brother and the Holding Company’s album *Cheap Thrills*. You know, the one that seemed to capture an entire generation of beautifully elongated stoners and the catchy slogan “Keep on Truckin’,” which ironically seems a fitting anthem for navigating life’s endless potholes. However, this was merely the overflow of his career; he wasn’t just the grease on the wheels of counterculture. He was the engine, the guide, and possibly the manual you struggled to read while trying to operate the vehicle we call underground comics.
Crumb introduced us to a pantheon of characters that would make your family reunion look like a picnic. His creations ranged from the lustful to the philosophically absurd, and all were highlighted by his distinct hatching style—no, not the one going on at your local egg farm. From Mr. Natural to Fritz the Cat, and more, Crumb birthed a vivid tribe of misfits, all somehow reflecting his own anxieties. The embodiment of neurosis itself, Crumb inflicted upon us his greatest and most recognizable creation: R. Crumb, a lanky man with milk-bottle glasses, seething in a pool of his own resentments.
Crumb’s education in cartooning might as well have involved setting his eraser on the faces of Harvey Kurtzman and Carl Barks, the erstwhile ‘good duck artist.’ Spoiler alert: everyone studied under Crumb. Nadel rightly asserts that without Crumb, we wouldn’t have had the likes of Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, or even Daniel Clowes, who are cartoonists merely flailing around in the shadow of Crumb’s towering legacy. Spiegelman himself has boldly stated, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb. It’s like a rite of passage.” Talk about making an impact—you barely make it out without a Crumb tattoo on your forehead.
Now, if you thought Crumb was just a Sixties counterculture icon, prepare for a plot twist: he’s more complex than that. This is a man who collects old 78 rpm shellac records, proving that nostalgia can indeed be a full-time job. Though his politics lean anticorporate, his self-examination seems to eclipse any critique of the world around him. Yes, folks, it’s ultimately a tale of a man wrestling with his internal chaos amid a colorful cast of cartoonish characters.
Born in 1943 into a family that made *The Simpsons* look like a soap opera, Crumb grew up in a cauldron of dysfunction—anger, violence, addiction, and, let’s not forget, a hint of incest. The drama unfolded so dramatically that one could almost pigeonhole it as an avant-garde sitcom. Crumb’s beloved older brother tragically succumbed to mental health woes and substance abuse, adding another layer of darkness to Crumb’s already noir-esque origin story. And let’s be real: the fact that Robert escaped this ghastly Dungeon of Doom is nothing short of a miracle.
However, spoiler alert: Crumb is what today’s youth would call #problematic. His characters have been critiqued for being overly sexualized and racially charged, and some of his early comics featured content that would make a header for the #MeToo movement, to say the least. His defense has always been that he’s simply holding a mirror to societal flaws—a flawed mirror, perhaps, scratched with fingerprints of his own complexities.
So, while it’s tempting to dive into Crumb’s troubled psyche, let’s not forget he also had considerable success in other arenas. After his marriage to the first woman he slept with awkwardly fizzled, he embarked on a lengthy, at times rocky, relationship with Aline Kominsky. The man had romantic escapades that resembled a sketch gone slightly astray: every flourish meant to be humorous, but occasionally toeing the line between genius and tragedy. When punk music crashed the party, Crumb tried to embrace its ethos but ultimately found himself called out as “a tired-out cartoon has-been”—the equivalent of a bad Yelp review that made him forgo Mr. Natural’s comedic appearances. You can’t help but feel his pain (and perhaps a tinge of schadenfreude for the critics).
Today, Crumb lives in rural France, a widower in his ninth decade. When Nadel approached him for a candid biography, Crumb shrugged, as if saying, “Sure, why not—my life is a comic strip anyway.” It took considerable effort for Nadel to secure that nominal shrug, bringing home the paradox that is Crumb: a complex figure wrapped around his neuroses, yet decidedly proud of his place in the quirky world of cartooning.
