A wild, quirky, and truly original project that delighted fans of Sam Kieth’s previous work on The Maxx, Zero Girl is the story of a high-school misfit coming of age. Young Amy Smootster, weirdness magnet that she is, has never been the most popular girl in school. She can speak to insects and believes that circles are good and squares evil. Awkward and different, she doesn’t quite fit into any social circle, and she likes it that way. But strange things seem to happen when Amy is around, the spontaneous appearance of puddles of water for instance, and it has made her the target of relentless bullies. With the aid of a sympathetic guidance counselor whom she develops a mad crush on, Amy explores the meaning of her surreal abilities and discovers her place in the world.
Kieth first came to prominence in 1984 as the inker of Matt Wagner's Mage, his brushwork adding fluidity and texture to the broad strokes of Wagner's early work at Comico Comics. In 1989, he drew the first five issues of writer Neil Gaiman's celebrated series The Sandman, but felt his style was unsuited to the book (specifically saying that he "felt like Jimi Hendrix in The Beatles") and left, handing over to his former inker Mike Dringenberg.
He acted as illustrator on two volumes of writer William Messner-Loebs' Epicurus the Sage and drew an Aliens miniseries for Dark Horse Comics, among other things, before creating The Maxx in 1993 for Image Comics, with, initially, writing help from Messner-Loebs. It ran for 35 issues and was adapted, with Kieth's assistance, into an animated series for MTV. Since then, as a writer-artist, he has gone on to create Friends of Maxx, Zero Girl, Four Women and Ojo.
Ojo comprises the first and My Inner Bimbo the second, in a cycle of original comic book limited series published by Oni Press. Loosely connected, the cycle will concern the intertwined lives of people with each other and sometimes with a supernatural entity known as the Mysterious Trout. Kieth has stated that other characters from The Maxx series will appear in this cycle of stories. My Inner Bimbo #1 was published in April 2006. Issue #2 was delayed past its original release date; It was finally resolicited in "Previews" in 2007 and hit the store shelves in November 2007.
DC Comics' Batman/Lobo: Deadly Serious, a two-issue prestige format mini-series that started in August 2007, was written and drawn by Kieth. This was followed by 2009's two-issue prestige format mini-series Lobo: Highway to Hell, written by Scott Ian and featuring art by Kieth.
This is an odd book, as everything Sam Kieth does typically is. This is the story of a 15 year old social outcast. She sees squares as trying to get her and circles save her. The shapes shift to and fro monsters. That's the interesting part. The skeevy part is the relationship she has with her guidance counselor. She constantly flirts with him and he's more than tempted. It's icky to put it mildly. It's ultimately why I can't recommend the book. Keith's art is it's usual great, highly stylized self.
Maybe against my better judgement...I did enjoy this collected 5 issue graphic novel.
Everything Sam Kieth produces does have a certain look it...but this was manageable and fun to look at.
The story centred on a 15 year old girls infatuation with her school guidance counselor..that nearly leaps the canyon..and sometimes has an uneasy feeling to it.
The story is actually way more weird than that relationship...but it's probably what people will focus on..
I actually almost cried at the end of book 5, it was like reading my autobiography. When I was 15 like Amy, I was picked on and tormented at school as well and turned to my English teacher with whom I formed a close bond with, I hung around him for 3 years, I was crazy about him and he always kept it professional ,I stuck around till I turned 18 and finally and I finally asked out....and he turned me down, and that's exactly what he should have done and he did, I loved him but I had no idea what sex was,I wasn't ready...Well back to the book, It was intriguing me the whole time what that damn coaster meant (spoiler) and finally in the last panel you find out...this story is simply amazing,it's so beautiful. I'm an amateur cartoonist myself and Kieth happens to be my idol and insperation and he never cesses to amaze me, he's an amazing artist and story teller.
Sam Kieth had a weird, unique, interesting idea - and he threw it all away by focusing on a gross student-teacher romance instead. If this had just been about Amy's powers and the circles-good, squares-evil thing, it could have been quite cool, but Tim makes my skin crawl. The art style is incredible, though.
The art was great. The story was... creative, and clever. But I have an ironclad disgust when it comes to teacher/student love stories, which I didn't realize this was when I picked it up. That, combined with the weird pacing, knocks this book down firmly into the two-star category.
Circles vs squares is a great concept to build a graphic novel on but teen girl & school authority figure romance icked me out too much to recommend this one
I liked the art, and I liked the story enough. It was a lovely, trippy ride. However: the artwork was too inconsistent...for me. Every time each character was drawn, it was slightly, (or sometime wildly!) different. I can live with chaos, but if it's in the same book, then it becomes difficult to 'attach' to the characters and invest in them. The story didn't really seem to ...go anywhere. So I enjoyed it...it was diverting, but it won't stay with me for long.
Enjoyed the very original take on superpowers and villains. Had complicated feelings about the 15yr old girl/guidance counselor romance storyline. Actually, not sure they were that complicated, it really just felt icky. Wish that hadn't been a part of this, and we could have just had an Amy Smootster story, cause she is pretty awesome.
A typical, strange, and mind boggling Sam Kieth novel. In other words, awesome but definitely not for your average reader. However, if you're interested in literature, psychoanalysis, and the unconscious, this is the graphic novel for you! What a weird ride.
A lady friend recommended this to me, so I checked it out. Sam Keith is one of my favorite comic book artists/writer, and I loved The Maxx, so I figured I couldn't go wrong. Fortunately, I was right!
This comic, while short, is crammed with all of the wild artwork, erratic paneling, and a surreal plot twists that I have come to expect from Kieth's warped mind. The main character, Amy, is a strange loner, not unlike Julie in The Maxx, and I think I can understand why my lady friend (ok, let's just go ahead and call her my "ex") enjoyed the comic so much: she could relate to Amy's feelings of isolation and social anxiety. I have a feeling a lot of girls would probably relate to this character. Sam Keith almost has a Tim Burton-esque fascination with outsider character types.
It's funny, although the crazy, metaphysical aspect of "circles vs squares" was certainly very interesting (not to mention original), I was much more invested in the story of Amy's relationship with her guidance counselor, Tim, who is about ten years older than her. On a personal note, I can relate to a significant age gap being a huge impediment to a budding relationship (although it wasn't the same scenario - my situation was *legal*, and didn't involve the awkwardness of a teacher/student relationship). That being said, I think the way the story ends is very appropriate and realistic.
Anyway, if I have a complaint, I suppose it's that Keith goes a little overboard with his writing, and had issues deciding if he was telling a story about a student and teacher falling in love with each other, or a story about an odd student with inexplicable powers, being stalked by squares. Perhaps had he expanded the story a bit, he would have had more room to let both storylines breath a bit. As it stands, there's just a lot of shit to take in. Needless to say, though, his artwork was amazing.
Anyway, good book, definitely worth checking out, but maybe just read this on your lunch break at Borders or something. Save your money to buy the collected volumes of The Maxx!
As a Sam Kieth fan, it came as no surprise that my friends would get me the first issues of this comic as a gift---and it delivered! It's a wildly offbeat characterization of every outsider teen. Portraying enemies as squares and circle shapes as friendly, only validates, in my mind, the uniqueness that is Sam Kieth's imagination. While exploring very real and adult topics of peer pressure, unrequited love, and the inner workings of the teenage brain, Kieth successfully translates Amy Smootser's experience into a very creative and quirky story. I highly recommend this book!
truly wonderfully weird wacky and awesome, but not in any obvious way, surreal dark great, brilliant metaphorical reflection of teen high school life, and of the idea of turning you fears and that which makes you different into your greatest strength, but enough warbling, zero girl is probably my favorite non mainstream super character, and that's all i actually set out to say............oh and i love sam kieth.
I enjoyed this book, even though it was a little strange. It was the end that really irked me.At the time, I didn't realize that there were any other books,(I think there are, right) so it was extremely anticlimactic and abrupt. You may say I can't handle reality, but I don't like a sad ending. Other than that, I liked this book.
Amy Smooster's a great character for those drawn to powerful, awkward, quirky geek nymphets. The unexpected dashes of horror enlivened this teen-angsty comic. Definitely one of those books that makes you wonder how the author came up with the idea for the story.
Picked this up when a local comics shop had a sale. It's ok. The hot-for-teacher theme seemed to come out of nowhere, and was an unconvincing motivation. Stroyline aside, though, the drawing/inking/color's fun. I love how her lower body gets cartoonish while her face is in sharp relief.
I started reading this on the bus and it made me nauseous. Then on the train, still nauseous. Then at home....still nauseous. The drawing style is too all over the show and the stroy line didn't keep me engaged. Ick.
This is a tough one. I really like Sam Kieth. I love how rough the artwork is, but there are some huge plot holes in this that take me out of the story. I mean, it still works because it's your typical Sam Kieth fantasy world, but it could've been something really special.
I had high hopes when I started reading this; the first issue of it was a really good lead-in. While the story was interesting enough in itself, I just found it pointless, to be subjective. Everything felt incredibly rushed and the side story with her and the teacher - just dull.