The strip, created by Joey Comeau and Emily Horne, is a photo-comic with superimposed text. According to the site, Horne takes the photographs and arranges them into the panels, sometimes spreading a single large image across the panels and sometimes zooming in or out on individual elements of a photo in each panel. Comeau writes the captions, which are basically short, clever free verse poems designed to look like they were typed on a manual typewriter then clipped out and pasted over the photos. The end result can be bleak and pensive or funny.
The "voice" of the comic shifts between characters and an anonymous narrator. The reader is left to imagine or decipher who's speaking in each comic from contextual clues. Sometimes, it seems that it's an off-camera voice, and sometimes it's someone pictured in the strip. There are only two obvious recurring characters: a menacing baby, who has appeared twice in the strip's one-year run, and a cat.
That distanced, moody feeling is only amplified by the fact that no one in A Softer World ever seems to be speaking. The text is set above the panels in a format that consciously recalls printed matter to mind, and no one is pictured mid-sentence. Reading the strip is like listening to a Walkman on the bus: the images seem to be divorced from their sounds. The only thing lacking is a soundtrack by "The Weakerthans", "Death Cab for Cutie", or the moody, half-mournful indie band of your choice.ComixTalk is not responsible for comments, blog and forum posts. News and ComixTalk Magazine articles are copyright by their respective authors.
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Comments
Re: Comeau and Horne's A Softer World, reviewed by Michael Whitn
hurrah! a softer world has been a favorite of mine for a while now, and i'm so glad to see that it has made its way here. your review captured the mood of the comic well. for some reason, i always feel refreshed after i'm done reading each friday's strip.
Re: Comeau and Horne's A Softer World, reviewed by Michael Whitn
a softer world is the only comic i ever read.
period.