The Cardboard Kingdom #2: Roar of the Beast. By Chad Sell. Knopf.
$20.99.
The wonderfully innovative Cardboard
Kingdom created by Chad Sell for a 2018 graphic novel reappears with
considerable fanfare in Roar of the
Beast, although a certain level of preachiness and “cause mentality” make
this sequel less entertaining and enjoyable than the original. It really is a
sequel, taking place in autumn, right after the summertime of the first book –
and since the characters are not introduced and the concept not explained or
made particularly clear here, Roar of the
Beast is really only suitable for readers familiar with the previous
volume.
That first book was quite marvelously
inventive, featuring Sell’s concept with characters and cartooning by Vid Alliger, Manuel Betancourt, Michael Cole,
David DeMeo, Jay Fuller, Cloud Jacobs, Barbara Perez Marquez, Kris Moore, Molly
Muldoon, and Katie Schenkel. The
Cardboard Kingdom name comes from the abundant use of cardboard boxes to make
costumes and props for the ongoing role-playing of a group of suitably diverse
(indeed, exceptionally diverse) neighborhood preteens – although, like so much
else, the matter of the name was much clearer in the first book than it is in
the second.
What
is clearer in The Roar of the Beast than in the previous book is that Sell’s
setting, for all its apparent “typical suburbia” appearance, is actually an
LGBTQ+ universe – reflective not only of the life of Sell and his husband but
also of the lives of the contributors, most of whom are also LGBTQ+ (Moore died
after the first book was published, but his partner, Weston, gave permission
for continued use of Moore’s characters). For example, the character Jack not
only dresses up as The Sorceress but also specifically tells his family and
readers that he is “not just making
myself more like the Sorceress” but
is “making myself more like me,”
which includes purple hair dye and taking his mother’s rings to wear (which is
fine with her). Elsewhere, The Roar of
the Beast is packed with characters reassuring each other that whatever
they may be or pretend to be or be in the process of becoming, it is just fine:
“You’re great the way you are,” says one, adding, “Honestly, I
wish I was more like you,” which
elicits the reply, “You’re always
there for everyone else… I wish I was more like that.”
There are also several scenes focused on
the importance of simply listening to each other rather than trying to help or
change things in any overt way: “When I was sad last summer, I talked to my mom
about it. She couldn’t fix
everything, but she was there for
me. She listened.” In fact, parents
are more present in the second book than the first, and this is not to the
book’s benefit: a scene in which the father of Connie, a girl whose cardboard
costume turns her into a robot, also
dresses up as a robot, is particularly awkward and irrelevant to the plot,
although loosely tied to it because it is autumn and Halloween is coming, after
all.
Halloween is the thread that loosely knits
the elements of The Roar of the Beast
together. The drama comes when one character, Nate, sees a monster in his
backyard in the middle of the night, or thinks he does – immediately rushing to
rescue his stepbrother, Elijah, from it, but instead tumbling downstairs and
breaking his leg. In addition to sending all the kids into conniptions about a
mysterious monster – variously hunting it, fearing it, or avoiding it – the
incident makes Elijah feel so bad that he makes some questionable choices that
lead to lies and that cause him to fear that Nate and his father will leave if
the lies are ever uncovered. Interwoven with this story is one involving the
“bullying” theme that also appeared in the first book, this time leading to a
setup for a climactic scene in which the two bullies (teenagers rather than
preteens) get their comeuppance with some turning-of-the-tables Halloween
frights.
The content revolves to a greater or lesser extent among the various artists, based largely on how many characters they contribute. The cartoonists live in different areas, so it is clear that Sell is the one pulling and entangling the many strings of the book to weave the overall narrative together. Fuller, for example, lives in Brooklyn with his husband and is responsible for three characters (Jack is one of them); Cole, on the other hand, teaches LGBTQ+ courses at Wichita State University and brings just one character to the Cardboard Kingdom. Thanks to the layering-on of multicultural, multiracial tropes in Roar of the Beast, young readers who want to find characters who “look like me” should have no difficulty doing so here – as was also the case in the first book. However, the original The Cardboard Kingdom excelled in making it clear that what kids care about is characters with whose experiences and feelings they can identify, even if the physical resemblance is not exact. This second book is less successful on that basis: it will certainly resonate with kids who are searching for a gender identity as part of their quest for who they are, but with perhaps 5% of the U.S. population identifying as LGBTQ+, that somewhat limits the book’s reach. Similarly, showing children with parents of different races definitely helps normalize families headed by interracial couples – but, again, that represents a small percentage of all marriages (about 8%, mostly involving Asian or Hispanic partners). There is inherent tension between the “ordinary suburbia” feeling of The Roar of the Beast and the characters and events in the book, and in some ways that is all to the good and often helps the story flow. But the underlying “agenda” nature of this book, and the need to have read its predecessor in order to make sense of what is happening and to whom, mean that the sequel does not quite measure up to Sell’s exceptionally creative original.
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