Synopses & Reviews
The acclaimed graphic novelist Jason returns with his most eagerly awaited book yet, thanks to the inclusion of the title story, the world's first (and likely last) chess western, originally serialized in 2008 in the
New York Times Sunday Magazine "Funny Pages" section.
This 216-page hardcover book features five yarns--all brand new with the exception of the aforementioned "Low Moon," which is collected into book form for the first time.
The new stories lead off with "Emily Says Hello," a typically deadpan Jason tale of murder, revenge and sexual domination. Then, the wordless "&" tells two tales at once: one about a skinny guy trying to steal enough money to save his ill mother, and the other about a fat guy murderously trying to woo his true love. The reason we follow these two parallel stories becomes obvious only on the very last page, in Jason's inimitable genre-mashing style.
"Early Film Noir" can best be described as The Postman Always Rings Twice meets Groundhog Day. But starring cavemen. And finally, "You Are Here" features alien kidnappings, space travel, and the pain and confusion of family ties, culminating in an enigmatic finale that rivals Jason's greatest twists.
Funny, poignant, and wry, Low Moon shows one of the world's most acclaimed graphic novelists at the absolute peak of his powers.
Review
"The deadest of deadpan humor. Jason's cartoony, utterly affectless characters interact is ways that are horrible, hilarious and sad--often at the same time." Glen Weldon
Review
"Low Moon is the best work I've seen from [Jason] yet... I don't care that 'Emily Says Hello' is illustrated fiction, because it deserves to be on any year-end list of 2009's finest crime stories, no matter what the format... One and all, these are excellently told tales from a unique talent." NPR.org
Review
"Starred Review. Norwegian-French cartoonist Jason's new book is the first premiered in hardcover in the U.S. and contains his most minimally formatted stories... If you're into genre fiction, have a sense of humor but no time for condescension, and haven't encountered Jason yet, wait no longer." Ray Olson
Review
"There's always a touch of melancholy in everything that Jason writes, but there's a bleakness in some of these stories [in Low Moon] that I haven't seen since Hey, Wait.... All told, this is still a book every Jason fan should read." Ray Olson Booklist
Review
"I don't think I've ever read anything like Low Moon by Jason and I mean that in a good way... Low Moon has a brilliant almost tightrope deadpan mix of sad and funny... Jason is capable of stories with heart like no other; particularly stories with an aura of heartrending and heartbreak. Low Moon might be the second most melancholy book that I've read over the past year... Low Moon by Jason continues to push the medium forward and confound readers expectations with brilliant stories that defy categorization. " Rob Clough High-Low
Review
"There's never been a better time to jump aboard the Jason train. As a fan of Jason, is just terrific, far more new stuff in one place than we've been treated to before...This is as essential as comics gets." Booklist
Review
"At times both bleak and humorous, these beautifully absurd stories will leave you as speechless as one of Jason's silent characters." Marc Sobel The Comics Journal
Review
"Jason is one of the relatively few working artists that even a jaded, cynical, complain-first critic like me will happily declare a true master cartoonist, without reservation. Jason is--how to put this?--good. Really, really, really good... So, ? It's Jason. It's new. It's obviously really, really good, you know?" Bookmunch
Review
"It's been a while since I read a book and thought, 'This is changing the way I think about short fiction.' So, I've been carrying the book around, like a buddy, trying to understand out what makes Low Moon so perfect." J. Caleb Mozzocco Newsarama
Review
"Featuring tawdry sex, alien abductions, existential crises, betrayal, and a hundred and one different varieties of murder, this is a book that pretty much has it all." Mishka Bloglin
Review
"I certainly prefer Norwegian cartoonist Jason to Hemingway. For one thing, Jason doesn't hate women, as far as I can tell. And for another, his new book of short graphic stories, Low Moon, has a bunch of clever touches that made me chuckle out loud." Ian Chant PopMatters
Review
"Jason is sly and brilliant. [Low Moon] is highly recommended." Noah Berlatsky comiXology
Review
"If there is a 'true truth' in relation to Jason it is that the Nordic author can resist no genre. From Western noir to science fiction of manners, everything passes through his own personal, non-transferable filter to offer these stories, parsimonious in words but full of 'depth charge.' Low Moon... is no exception to this maxim." Corey Blake
Review
"Jason's work is something to be revered... His comics are stark and morbid and often hilarious. Low Moon presents five beautifully illustrated stories that show a mastery of the craft... The stories range from violent to funny to sad, and the tragedies, murders, and pratfalls therein never seem out of the ordinary. It all fits into four rectangular panels on each page that seem like they were drawn to make you understand something more." Alita Comics
Review
"It's impossible not to love Jason's hapless cartoon characters; they're dog-faced descendants of Charlie Chaplin in that way, usually placed into situations far beyond their control or understanding... The five stories that make up Low Moon, Jason's newest collection of comics, hark back to the classic golden age of film... Each story reverberates with the little eccentricities that Jason has built a career on (instead of gunfights, the cowboys in the title story battle over long games of chess). Remarkably, none of them seem over-the-top or manipulative." Gabe Bullard PLAYBACK:stl
Review
Low Moon: New Jason, from Fantagraphics. All I need to know...This guy's a treasure.[Low Moon] has filmic moments and comic pathos that have set a new standard for me for short fiction.Once again, Jason squeezes an abundance of tension from scenes stripped of background noise and faces drained of emotion.... count me among those who feels lucky to return time and again to Jason's cartoons. -- Steve Duin
Review
"Like many mysteries, there's something initially frustrating about the end of 'Emily Says Hello,' but it's the best by Jason for a while... it's in the new Low Moon collection... Worth it for 'Emily' alone." Steve Duin The Oregonian
Review
"All of Jason's tales in play like a black comedy, tragic yet humorous. Maybe it's his protagonists blank eyed stares or the fact the characters are all cute animals being put through some troubling things that give these outwardly simple and light cartoons a heavy feel. If you're a comic fan looking for a change of pace from the tired summer/blockbuster/epic/crossover comic events then this one's for you." Michael Buntag NonSensical Words
Review
"Jason seems to delight in building firm plots, only to swiftly tug them out of sync. The resulting offbeat dynamic is punctuated with deadpan verbal, narrative and graphic punch lines, which pin the stories down at the same time that they suggest grander meanings. 'Where am I?' asks a prisoner. 'I think I'll do some gardening,' says a murdered man. 'Which way?' a son asks his father in 'You Are Here'--the heartrending emotional core of the collection--as they search for his mother on a barren planet. Each line and frame could mean nothing or could mean everything in this quiet, gripping book." Mishka Bloglin
Review
"Unmistakably Jason's work: minimal dialogue, mixture of comic/serious/absurd/emotional moments, and populated by anthropomorphic animals. He uses crisp, clear lines, and despite the low number of words and the use of animals, conveys a wide range of expressions and emotions. He also effortlessly jumps, blends, and frustrates genres." Omnivoracious
Review
"It's hard to think of a modern cartoonist with a more recognizable drawing style than Norway's Jason... But Jason's storytelling is just as distinctive as his drawing style... [and] the artist's narrative approach has grown more adventurous over the years. Jason's latest collection, , is evidence of this trend... The reader, meanwhile, just lapses into a giddy comics coma." Dave Lartigue Dave Ex Machina
Review
"Known for his ability to convey melancholic, deadpan humor, Jason is as on top of his game as ever with this release... Each story expresses a different degree of the author's range, mixing dark or mature themes with absurdity to varying degrees... Since it demonstrates Jason's range and is priced fairly modestly... makes for a great starting point for those unfamiliar with Jason's work." Casey Jarman Willamette Week
Review
New Jason!...I'll read the hell out of them. I love Jason. -- Matthew J. Brady
Review
"Jason is an immensely skilled artist capable of manipulating his self-restricted vocabulary to stretch space and time. moves in a slow burn as the two antagonists move closer to their eventual showdown." The Onion A.V. Club
Review
"The longest American book to date from Norwegian comics master Jason, is actually a collection of five marvelously deadpan short stories. The expressionless anthropomorphic animals who populate his comics milk understatement for all the laughs it's worth...The core of Jason's breed of humor is his protracted silences--the uproariously uncomfortable moments when his characters are standing around waiting from disaster to strike." Anthony Farruggia Chicago Examiner
Review
"Although the five stories in appear to have very little in common, the glue that holds them together is Jason's sublime artwork... He is an artist who understands the mechanics and timing of visual storytelling, and his highly simplified style has a grace and elegance that makes it aesthetically appealing." Ian Chant PopMatters
Review
"Now, with , [Jason] has clenched his fist around me and won't let me go - this is easily my favorite of his works to date... Top to bottom, I enjoyed very much... A worthy addition to one's bookshelf." Richard Gehr The Village Voice
Review
[T]he furtive griminess that Jason wrings from his stock character designs is impressive to behold... [Y]ou'll enjoy any number of his typical moments of storytelling grace. -- Tom Spurgeon
Review
Though Low Moondoesn"t have the slow-building impact of Jason"s longer works, he"s still one of comics" best storytellers, and it"s always a treat to spend time in his world of off-brand pulp clichs and not-always-so-funny animals. [Grade] B+.There"s no other cartoonist who matches Jason"s somber deadpan and this serves as a great introduction to his work. -- John Mitchell
Review
Despite the funny animal surface, Jason's actually one of the best crime writers of this generation, and three of these pieces are very dark crime stories, with a sort of science fiction story about estrangement from love and the title story, a very funny parody of western movie clichs that doesn't require any knowledge of the originals. If you're feeling bleak about the bleak underbelly of human existence, this probably isn't your best relief, but if you can see the humor in it, there's pretty much no better guide working today. -- Steven Grant
Review
"[] is downright silly...as usual with Jason's work, it entertains with delicate absurdity...Jason's books have always has a cinematic feel, and he seems to examine this more than ever with direct tie-ins to film concepts playing major roles in several of the stories...entertaining, and fans of Jason should be more than happy to digest five new comics from one of the best in the business." John Mitchell Worchester Magazine
Review
"Jason is a painfully good comic creator - the man has a phenomenal knowledge of pacing, a sense of humor that's darker than Darth Vader in a mine at midnight and deceptively simple figurework that says a shitload with very little." Edward Kaye Hypergeek - "The Best Graphic Novels of 2009"
Review
Low Moontakes 'funny animals' comics in a disturbingly deadpan direction. The bipedal canines and birds that populate these five short tales somehow convey with their blank eyes, flat expressions and minimal movements a whole seething current of emotional subtext. The title story, first serialized in the New York Times Sunday Magazine, mixes Gary Cooper frontier heroics with chess, and it is no less strange or hilarious than the other vignettes, which play with tropes lifted from science fiction, film noir and Jazz Age romance. -- Michael Berry
Review
It's funny, poignant, and, as always, full of insight about humanity, even though everyone is a strange animal creature. There can never be enough Jason. -- "The Best in Comic Books"
Review
"Low Moon: New Jason, from Fantagraphics. All I need to know...This guy's a treasure." Paul Constant The Stranger
Review
"[] has filmic moments and comic pathos that have set a new standard for me for short fiction." Corey Blake
Review
"Once again, Jason squeezes an abundance of tension from scenes stripped of background noise and faces drained of emotion.... count me among those who feels lucky to return time and again to Jason's cartoons." Omnivoracious
Review
"Jason is sly and brilliant. [] is highly recommended." J. Caleb Mozzocco Newsarama
Review
"A collection of mostly wordless comedic pleasures." Publishers Weekly
Review
"There's no other cartoonist who matches Jason's somber deadpan and this serves as a great introduction to his work." Marc Mason Comics Waiting Room
Review
"Though doesn't have the slow-building impact of Jason's longer works, he's still one of comics' best storytellers, and it's always a treat to spend time in his world of off-brand pulp clichés and not-always-so-funny animals. [Grade] B+." William Jones Graphic Novel Reporter
Synopsis
The acclaimed graphic novelist Jason returns with his most eagerly awaited book yet, thanks to the inclusion of the title story, the world"s first (and likely last) chess western, originally serialized in 2008 in the
New York Times Sunday Magazine'Funny Pages' section.
This 216-page hardcover book features five yarns'"all brand new with the exception of the aforementioned 'Low Moon,' which is collected into book form for the first time.
The new stories lead off with 'Emily Says Hello,' a typically deadpan Jason tale of murder, revenge and sexual domination. Then, the wordless '&' tells two tales at once: one about a skinny guy trying to steal enough money to save his ill mother, and the other about a fat guy murderously trying to woo his true love. The reason we follow these two parallel stories becomes obvious only on the very last page, in Jason"s inimitable genre-mashing style.
'Early Film Noir' can best be described as The Postman Always Rings Twicemeets Groundhog Day. But starring cavemen. And finally, 'You Are Here' features alien kidnappings, space travel, and the pain and confusion of family ties, culminating in an enigmatic finale that rivals Jason"s greatest twists.
Funny, poignant, and wry, Low Moonshows one of the world"s most acclaimed graphic novelists at the absolute peak of his powers.
Synopsis
Five yarns from the Norwegian master: the titular serial collected for the first time and four all-new stories featuring murder, cavemen, sex, and alien abduction. Funny, poignant, and wry, this is Jason at his best.
About the Author
Jasonhails from Oslo, Norway, but currently resides in the south of France. The Harvey and Eisner Award-winner continues to create new books at a breakneck pace'"his books include Werewolves of Montpellier; Low Moon; Pocket Full of Rain and Other Stories; Hey, Wait...; Sshhhh!; I Killed Adolf Hitler; The Last Musketeer; The Left Bank Gang; Why Are You Doing This?; The Living and the Dead; Meow, Baby!; You Can't Get There from Here; Tell Me Something; and Almost Silent(collecting the previous four volumes).