Member Reviews
I thoroughly enjoyed this Guy Delisle title. The art was well done and I found the story engaging. Graphic Novel biographies/memoirs are a great way to learn about an individual's experiences and this author is a talent.
I read this as a Member of ALA's Best Graphic Novels for Adults 2021 Selection Committee. I could not rate or review this title while a member of the committee but I did purchase this book for my library. I enjoyed the artwork, black and white with splashes of yellow. I think many people can relate or feel nostalgic about their first jobs. I would recommend this book to patrons who may not be avid graphic novel readers.
I received an arc of this title from NetGalley for an honest review. Factory Summers is the story of the three summers that author Guy Delisle spent in a paper-making factory in Quebec, Canada. It is during this time that his time in college is redirected into what he is now doing, writing graphic novels.
Guy Delisle details his summers working at a paper mill in Quebec in his time off from college. He's very detailed (to the point I think I could start a job at the mill now). However, none of it is very compelling. I worked similar summer jobs through school and have way more stories to tell about how we'd pass the time and make an extremely monotonous job fun.
On the one hand its a biography of the author's summers working at a paper factory with a pretty straightforward chronological narrative. On the other hand, this is a story about alienation: alienation of labor from profit, alienation from family (the through line of the author's relationship with his dad who works as an engineer at the factory is quietly heartbreaking), alienation from peers and toxic gender roles, and the structural alienation of good trade union jobs from a community. The cartoonish yellow and grey art is very striking as well. Quiet, but a very good read.
Thank you to Netgalley for sending me a free eARC for an honest review.
I honestly really enjoyed this graphic novel. As an artist who also came from a town with a papermill, I felt a kinship to the author and narrator. While our mill wasn't steeped in as much history, I understood much of the lingo and layout he described. The men he writes about meeting felt real and very familiar to me due to a similar upbringing. The story was very well told through detailed artwork, with a limited color pallet, and architectural drawings that show off all of the buildings to great effect.
For anyone wanting to feel some nostalgia for those early jobs and the characters you met while working them, Factory Summers will leave you feeling wistful.
This graphic novel was exactly as described, the author describing his summers working in a paper factory. It was very informative about the process of making paper, with a little bit about the author himself thrown in. However, I kept expecting something to happen to grab my attention. The author describes the dangers of each large machine in the factory, so I figured he is explaining this to prepare me for what was about to transpire. Nope, everything went fine. Reading his story made me feel better about my own summer jobs when I was in college. The illustrations were well done, and I liked the use of just one color with shades of black and white.
Factory Summers really hit home for me. I'm from a town that grew up around a paper mill, had family who worked in the mills, and worked summers in one during college. So much of that experience seems universal to factory work, even 900 miles and 20 years apart: the friction between workers and management, the irrational dislike of anything different (the pony-tail kid was a perfect example), the horrific accident urban legends that sometimes weren't urban legends, the unrelenting sound over a 12 hour shift. While I'm sure that factory work isn't as common a summer job as it once was, I think Delisle's work will resonate with a lot of people.
I loved his art style as well. The physical effort of his younger self's work and the way in which he showed Young Guy tuning out are just a couple of examples of how well Delisle conveys meaning while maintaining such a clean look.
The storytelling is just as engaging as his earlier book Pyongyang, and DeLisle does a great job of communicating it in a simple style which turns out to be quite beautiful in its simplicity. Speaking as someone who had worked my share of blue collar jobs in college, I found the sense of grungy culture at the paper mill fascinating.
I am not usually a fan of books that are character studies, but this one is and I was thoroughly intrigued. We follow the author/artist as he works summer in the paper mill between studying to be an artist. The lesson on how paper mills work was really cool, but following Guy as he wades through life as the young person figuring out what it’s all about is compelling. Try not turning the pages one you start. The entire book is black and white with spots of a yellow or orange color and it creates a perfect setting for this story. This book was a translation so it marks off some reading challenges for me which is good.
I was happily surprised at the sentimentality in this piece of Delisle's work, which usually has macabre undertones and dark histories. It was a pleasure to head home to Quebec City, and get a glimpse into his late childhood. Very much a coming-of-age graphic novel - the story of an artist's beginnings that left me wanting more. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC.
The story of a boy working a summer job at a paper mill, balancing his life goals of becoming a comic book artist, and the lessons he learns along the way from the older employees. A great slice of life comic, this was both cozy and somehow nostalgic, even though I’ve never been to Canada, let alone worked in a paper mill.
Another winner from Delisle. My only complaint is I wish it was longer with more on his family and the city.
Factory Summers continues the comics about Delisle's own life by now focusing on his times working summers in a paper mill when he was younger. I also live in a city where there's a paper mill and thus reading this was interesting. Delisle draws and explains the factory work well and easily enough so that everything seems quite easy in a sense. I also liked that he decided to write this from his own point of view and what he saw. His times at the mill were interestingly mirrored in his relationship with his father, although I wished we had seen more of that. The style is so him and the rhythm is good once again, so reading this was quite pleasant.
The art is great, since Delisle's slightly naive style works with the topics he presents. I like the color world of greyish green and light yellow. It's an odd and hollow combination, but somehow pinpoints the time well. I just wish there had been some kind of a plot in the comic so that the factory could have been a story. Perhaps I also wished for more history of the factory too, which made Factory Summers a slight letdown. This is a good comic, but this could've been better.
This book had an interesting premise and a really fun art style. Unfortunately it was just missing something extra. I wanted to get invested in the plot but I just couldn’t. It’s a bit disappointing. There were some threads of interesting themes (for example the main character’s distant relationship with his father) but nothing really comes to fruition.
Guy Delisle has previously taken readers along with him on his journeys around the world to Myanmar, North Korea, Israel, and China. Now in his latest work, “Factory Summers,” it’s quite a change of pace as readers are taken to a place that they've never been to before - to Delisle's native Quebec City.
This latest graphic novel specifically details his summers spent working in a paper mill as he begins his studies as an animator. Now I confess that initially wasn’t sure this would be on par with his past works, but it didn’t take me long to completely disregard such silly thoughts. I quickly found myself fascinated by everything that Delisle had to share about the ins and outs of working on the factory floor amongst titanic roles of paper set atop equally gargantuan rollers. And not only did he cover his various odd jobs or explain the enormous roaring machinery he cautiously worked alongside, but there was plenty else of interest for him to mention and detail. There are close calls around the machinery, some curious characters who he worked side by side with, and a range of various divides between part-time workers like him and the full-timers and the blue-collar factory floor workers and the white-collar engineers, and also an opportunity to detail his somewhat awkward relationship with his own father, an engineer working for the mill. There were even little snippets of insight about growing up and living in Francophone Canada, which I gobbled up as quickly as I did everything else.
Fans of his past works will not be disappointed in the slightest, for Delisle does it once again. I genuinely believe that this man could write a graphic novel about a sandwich that he had once, and it would be nothing short of delightful.
This was a fascinating biographical look at Guy Delisle's summers working in a the same paper factor his father called professional home. Although there is not much to say for a plot, the way Delisle's relationships with his coworkers and his position in the factory develops makes each page flow smoothly into the next. It provides some interesting commentary of the difference between those we know and those we happen to spend time with.
Factory Summers moves away from Guy Delise’s usual travelogue form and into graphic memoir, with tales of teenage employment labouring in a paper mill, where his somewhat absent father worked as an engineer. It touches on themes of class, masculinity, and coming-of-age.
Delise’s style is always a delight, and he delights in new ways here, bringing us nostalgia instead of tales from a foreign world. Delise’s nostalgia is not rose-tinted, it instead evokes a relatable awkwardness. Many readers will understand the hazing involved in being the new kid at a new job. Especially in work where there is a physical element, a requirement to develop a toughness like a second skin to survive. It is not only his age that makes young Guy stand out, but also his status as a temporary summer hire, the older labourers knowing he is an art student with aspirations towards animation.
There is a very honest class tension in this book, which I’m glad Delise explored, where other workers assume young Guy is going to be a stuck-up, entitled kid. Partly because of his education, partly because of his father being an engineer upstairs in the same factory, away from the danger and better paid. Young Guy isn’t stuck up or entitled, but at the same time, most of the younger workers and those that stand out (one is into bodybuilding, another has a hair braid) are wary of getting ‘stuck’ working in such a place, where working conditions can lead to deafness over time, or sudden death at any moment. They might not look down upon the more senior workers, but they don’t want to become them. Delise explores these tricky themes with finesse and honesty.
This is an engaging graphic novel about the author's summer job that he did when he was 16 years old. The author, Guy Delisle, worked in a pulp and paper factory for three summers until he managed to find work as a comic artist.
The novel is quite simple but powerful in its telling. We get to explore daily working life in the mill through the eyes and experience of a sixteen year old. Guy gets to experience the instability of working life, the ups, downs and quirks of teammates, the risks and rewards. The story shows him learning factory life and fitting in with the different characters. He doesn't really enjoy the factory but at the same time he doesn't hate it either. It is a hot, noisy, weird place with weird characters who are his colleagues but in a strange way his life is enriched by his experience.
The story also portrays his relationship with his father who has a senior role at the mill. Guy hides this from his team mates so that it doesn't jeopardize his realtionships with them. Guy immerses himself in life at the mill while aiming for college. It shows that he doesn't settle for factory life, but instead hopes for something different. His factory life is temporary, just a place to pause and earn money which will hopefully support him while he studies.
What struck me was his analytical observation of life in the mill and the way he does his best to do his work and not stick out, knowing that he is already visible because he is so young. Working in the mill is a means to an end for him but at the same time he becomes part of the team there. He is both part of the team and an outsider. It is a story about growing up and how people move through the ebbs and flows of life.
The story is also a reflection on choices, life and career. It made me think about my own career and how I have never settled, always wanting to move and experience other roles, other work and meet other people. At the same time there are those people who are quite happy with where they are even if the place they are is unpleasant. Some people are happy with the same job forever. Other people need to move, take risks, and experience change. There is stability and familiarity at the mill but there is also change and the workers there experience change happening around them.
I enjoyed this. It was a very satisfying reading experience. The artwork and colouring is simple and in that way it doesn't distract the reader from the story. We find ourslves experiencing life in the mill as a 16 year old and we have the same questions and observations.
The best aspect of the story is the way 16 year old Guy copes with the mill, he has ear plugs and books for when there is nothing much to do. Working in the mill does not quench his creativity but instead has a way of enhancing it. I really enjoyed this memoir.
Copy provided by publishers via Netgalley in exchange for an unbiased review.
A straightforward graphic novel which is unshowy in its visual style. My main comment on this book is that it's light on story, simply coming across as the author's recollections of working at the same paper mill over three successive summers. Little is done to give the narrative structure. Intriguing themes are hinted at, though never explored. He's a teenager working in a factory, with all the reflection you'd expect from an adolescent.
The most interesting aspect of Factory Summers for me is its population, though these secondary characters struggle to penetrate further than the periphery of the narrative. For instance, Delisle introduces one worker with a pony tail who doesn't fit in and is mistreated, yet this question of conformity is almost immediately dropped. This episode takes its place in what would be more aptly described as a series of brief vignettes, very loosely connected together.
It is some of the more quirky characters who create more of an impression. Like our protagonist, these are the ones who dream of bright futures beyond the mill, those who's dreams stretch further than the finishing department where the worn down workers finish up as they wait for retirement. These young people with bright hopes are typically the seasonal workers who aim to become police officers, psychologists or animators. Some of these individuals manage to break free, some meet a tragic end, and for some they just disappear. Perhaps DeLisle is making a point about the promise of youth and the grey and uninspiring future which looms over them, from which they long to escape.
It's an unstructured nostalgic take on times gone by, with some potential to move the reader, yet likely to be quickly forgotten.