Big Nate: Great Minds Think
Alike. By Lincoln Peirce. Andrews McMeel. $9.99.
Confessions of the World’s Best
Father. By Dave Engledow. Gotham Books. $18.
Someone Could Get Hurt: A Memoir
of Twenty-First-Century Parenthood. By Drew Magary. Gotham Books. $17.
The ongoing adventures of
preteen Nate Wright, detention-getting champion and all-around hero of
cluelessness, continue in the latest full-color compilation of Lincoln Peirce’s
comic strip. As always, Peirce makes elements of the strip self-referential –
that is, a comic strip about comic strips (and including some “drawn” by Nate
himself). At one point, Nate’s friends discover him reading a “lame comic
strip” called “Bethany,” which could represent any one of a variety of strips
that continue to take up newspaper space (yes, newspaper space) although long past their prime. “I read ALL the
comics, even the ones that STINK,” Nate explains to his friend Francis. “Do you
know what it’s LIKE to read a comic strip you HATE?” Elsewhere, Nate – who is
the champion of Prank Day outlandishness at school – scans a picture of the
head of his teacher nemesis, Mrs. Godfrey, “onto the body of a sumo wrestler”
and sends it everywhere around the school district “disguised as an urgent memo
from the superintendent.” Unfortunately for Nate, there is little call in
school, or out of it, for most of his particular talents, with the result that
he finds he needs tutoring in math – and is assigned to be helped by Artur, the
super-nice guy who speaks oddly and is unrelievedly good at everything and
liked by everybody, and of whom Nate is therefore overwhelmingly jealous. Nate
actually has nemeses everywhere – there is also “brainiac” Gina, regular winner
of the school’s “Outstanding Scholar” medal. So of course Nate sets up a
contest between Gina and Francis, who is almost at Gina’s level; and of course
things do not go quite as Nate plans. They rarely do, which is one charm of the
strip. But Nate’s failures are never overwhelmingly humiliating, and his
willingness to bounce back from anything and everything is a major element of
his attractiveness as a character. Somehow Nate comes across as basically nice,
even when tormenting his father about dad’s diet or repeatedly calling local TV
weatherman Wink Summers to complain about or comment on his forecasts: “You
keep RAISING my hopes, then DASHING them to PIECES with your METEOROLOGICAL
INCOMPETENCE!” The comic strips “by” Nate are an added and always-amusing
feature, too, such as the ones in which he totally misinterprets pretty much
everything about Thanksgiving. Actually, Nate misinterprets a great deal, but
manages to recover from the consequences and keep readers laughing – quite an
accomplishment.
What Dave Engledow is trying
to accomplish in Confessions of the
World’s Best Father is laughter, too, but it is laughter with a
photoshopped edge – lots of them, in fact. This is one of many recent books
based on material that has proved popular on the Internet; and like many such
books, it has a mixture of genuinely funny and genuinely cringeworthy elements
– getting an overall (+++) rating as a result. The idea here is to trace the
first years of Engledow’s daughter’s life in a ridiculous way, making Engledow
himself into the butt of repeated jokes based on the “World’s Best Father” mug
that appears in every photo. The photos are carefully staged, and of course the
extremely dangerous things going on are intended only to amuse; and on the
Internet, seeing one or several of these constructed images would be fun – a
glance here, a glance there, and then on to something else at some other site.
But a book is different: it invites focus, allows and even encourages close
examination of pages, and lets readers dwell on the elements of a scene – and lots
of the ones here do not stand up well when considered for more than an
“Internet second” or two. There is “Day 258,” with a blazing fire in an outdoor
grill, Engledow adding more lighter fluid to the flames and encouraging little
Alice Bee to roast marshmallows from her high chair. There is “Day 341,” with
Alice Bee brandishing an electric carving knife at Thanksgiving as Engledow
explains that “she is going to have the honor of carving her very first bird
today.” On “Day 462,” Engledow is wearing a blood-spattered apron while stitching
up a gash above Alice Bee’s eye, “since 911 no longer responds to my calls
(long story).” On “Day 477,” Alice Bee is standing inside an outdoor hibachi within which flames burn merrily. On “Day
580,” Alice Bee has cut off Engledow’s finger with a pizza cutter, and the
little girl is smiling happily at the blood all over. On “Day 669,” Engledow
describes and shows a tandem bathroom break, with himself sitting on the
commode while Alice Bee sits atop the tank behind him. A little of this – a
very little – goes a long way, and that is often the case with Internet
attractions, which are designed for the shortest possible attention span. Engledow
obviously intends readers to see that the scenes he has created are so outlandish that they could not
possibly be real, and he even includes a back-of-the-book “Behind the Scenes”
section to give an idea of how he put some of the photos together. And that is
all well and good, but the fact remains that any reader, parent or not, who
spends more than a split second or two looking at the pages of Confessions of the World’s Best Father
will be at least discomfited, at most appalled.
Intended to be all in fun, the book requires more than the traditional “willing
suspension of disbelief” to be what it claims to be.
And then there is Drew
Magary’s Someone Could Get Hurt: A Memoir
of Twenty-First-Century Parenthood, which has much the same sensibility as
Engledow’s book, but no pictures. Originally published last year and now available
in paperback, Magary’s is actually a better book than Engledow’s, leavening the
sarcastic humor with some seriousness and even a few touching scenes. But it is
overdone and does not wear particularly well, getting a (+++) rating as a
result. For one thing, Magary thinks four-letter words are cool, and he uses
them incessantly. So one has to admire the comparatively mild
bonding-with-his-daughter scene in which the two exchange “butt” jokes at bath
time rather than ones using stronger language. In fact, Magary’s agreement to
stop those jokes – at his wife’s insistence – shows more maturity, even if
unwillingly, than most of the rest of what he writes about. Magary overdoes
pretty much everything: when his wife is sound asleep, he says, “She was down
like a gunshot victim” – just one of many tasteless and inappropriate remarks
in Someone Could Get Hurt. Yet the
book is periodically a pleasure to read, if only because Magary seems so
clueless about just how clueless he is, or was. “You’re supposed to leave a
baby in a crib alone, with no other accoutrements around, because it can roll
into things like pillows and suffocate. If I propped her up on a pillow, she
might die. Then again, I was very, very tired. I propped her up on a pillow.” Stylistically,
Magary often manages to combine tastelessness with a rant within a page or so,
as when there is a possible issue of flat head syndrome involving his son: “I
kept running my hands along the boy’s head, checking for imperfections as if I
were a Third Reich phrenologist. …When your child is in danger of having a flat
head, you quickly learn that the money-grubbing executives at Big Helmet have
gone to great lengths to make baby helmets seem like a normal, even fashionable
thing.” But then, as if accidentally slipping into sensitivity, he actually
comes up with an occasional touch of insight: “We live in an age of remarkable
sensitivity, where other parents go to great lengths to appear tolerant and
accepting of ALL children, not merely their own. But deep down, we’re just as
judgmental and catty a species as we were decades ago. The patina of niceness
almost makes it worse.” Magary’s nearly inadvertent thoughtfulness is displayed
to its greatest and most affecting extent at the end of the book, when his
third child is born and is at risk of dying – and is placed in the hospital’s
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. This chapter, which immediately follows one
filled with slapstick about making a “masterpizza” at home, finally shows that
Magary is a real human being who is not always putting on a “how cool I am”
act. Someone Could Get Hurt becomes,
at the end, a real, affecting and memorable narrative that overcomes some of
the snarkiness of earlier chapters. But not all of it, and the after-reading
impression of an odd mixture of the nice and nasty is not a particularly
pleasant one.
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