Forget That Day
The Difference Is
March 2001 75p
20 pages A5 B&W
Calum, Thena and Milo's road trip takes an unexpected turn, as an angry Jack confronts Tara and Mal.
McGee's work is becoming more accessible for the single issue reader, although why anyone would want just one issue of this piece is beyond me. A lot is explained here as this exceptional UK mini-comic creator continues his tale of optic restraint and constriction and pairing it off with wide open spaces. Solid geographies, fluent movements: art that is built by the multipage. Every artifice becomes orifice around rocky grounds. And aspiring cartoonists there, may cross their terra firma.
Forget That Day's just a song title I liked, although Jack and Thena are both trying their best to forget. I'm not sure what the difference is. I was really on form artwise in this issue.