THIN ICE
COMING OF AGE IN CANADA
BY BRUCE MCCALL  


RELEASE DATE: JUNE 1, 1997

Bruce McCall, wasone of America's leading comic artists and writers, grew up in Southern Ontario, crammed into shabby quarters with five siblings, a father angry when he wasn't absent and a mother who used alcohol as a refuge from the poverty that surrounded her. This book recounts the author's setbacks, sometimes as high comedy, sometimes as pure agony, and shows how he transcended them. In this hilarious memoir, a remarkable humorist recounts a story of adversity overcome.

New Yorker humorist McCall effectively cauterizes his own dysfunctional family with his trademark red-hot, rapier wit. In short chapters that give a madcap serial reconstruction of a hardscrabble, emotionally deprived childhood in Simcoe, Ontario, circa 1945 (and, later, Toronto and Windsor), McCall, son of an absentee father and alcoholic mother who conveyed the impression that kids had ruined their lives, evokes a young Canadian's sense of inferiority to his US peers in the glory years of WW II and the postwar boom. Lacking its own Empire State Building, Hoover Dam, or Golden Gate Bridge, explains McCall, ``Canada declined to soar in any way.'' Canadian underachievement, combined with McCall's low family self-image, provides ample fuel for his rabid drollery: ``A rotten start,'' he muses, ``I don't know where I'd be today without it.'' Drawing at the refuge of his bedroom desk, McCall exercised a dawning artistic consciousness fed by comics, cartoons, and magazine illustrations, and reveled in the grand entertainment of the war, a ``triple header'' of news and propaganda streaming from Ottowa, Washington, and London; in news about ``flash'' American fighter planes; and in his own noble sacrifices on the home front, including the use of Soya Spread (a ghoulish synthetic peanut butter substitute). He loses momentum in reviewing his gradual departure from the wondrously twisted family nest to spend the mid-'50s as a failed commercial illustrator for Detroit—a waste, he says, but probably inevitable; it was a safe place to lie low while sorting things out and waiting for the master plan of his career to be revealed. Ultimately, a passion for automobiles led to a succession of editorial jobs with the Canadian car rags, and- -presto!—to this keen subversive's inevitable discovery of a writerly vocation that fits like a glove. McCall is always amusing, but his survivalist comic viewpoint is instructive, too, as a model for overcoming truly miserable circumstances.



Please see and examine all pictures for details, they are considered part of the description. 
 
Items are sold “AS IS” and NO RETURNS unless otherwise listed with conditions. 
 
Everything is packed with extreme care. We bubble wrap to reduce/eliminate damage during shipping.

We used recycled boxes to help keep shipping rates as low as possible, we will always try to use suitable boxes for your item, but may have company logos, writings, or markings. 

Visit our store for many more items like this!
  
CHECK OUT OUR STORE, Burman's Basement, HAS MANY UNIQUE TREASURES, WE ARE HAPPY TO COMBINE SHIPPING WHEN POSSIBLE