The Babysitter Collection by Andy RistainoWith his new The Babysitter Collection, Andy Ristaino shows that his mind's eye is a limitless anti-void, constantly surprising us at its reach. Sure, some of his work takes work to figure out. But it's always worth it. And for those who can't summon the synapses to focus on the story can just peel back their eyelids a page at a time, suck a thumb and get lost in the purty picture spreads at a measured pace.
In Babysitter, Andy grabs the now common "japanese schoolgirl" theme and holds it at ransom. As ristaino approaches the comic format like no other, at least not since the days of Little Nemo in Slumberland. His Boxes aren't just storyboard containment devices, so much as constructed boxes, platforms with dimension: portals from which his stories constantly spill out and borders off of which his characters bounce their diatribes. This makes the nature of his projects more Charlie Kaufmanesqu than anime-inspired. The characters are conscious enough of these boxes to physically use them, but don't care to "wink" at us.
Ristaino's Previous Slave Labor Graphics series Life of a Fetus, a graphic novella about a um...runaway fetus, always left me wide-eyed, bewildered and awestruck. And i'm guessing I wasn't alone, as SLG decided to print a Guide to Life of a Fetus to reveal the series' many Naked Lunch - type turns and narrative trickery.
With literally hundreds of character extras, guest cameos, and multi-dimensional planetary chaos, a Ristaino book shows the universe to be a very crowded place and his babysitter's world expands just as the story does. And like the real world, if you focus to hard, you'll miss something.
-Attaboy
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