Breakdowns: Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@&*! is a reissue of a 1978 collection of assorted Art Spiegelman strips from the 70s when Art was still trying to figure out how to make a living drawing comics. There is plenty of adolescent self-examination and some truly dark and uncomfortable stuff about his mothers suicide here. Amidst this he managed to craft his vision for Maus from his father's stories of Auschwitz: his parents portrayed as mice, the Nazis by cats, Poles as pigs, Americans as dogs...
(Please click to embiggen comics.)
When Breakdowns was reissued recently I decided that I should read both parts of Maus again. Maus: A Survivor's Tale was published in two parts: My Father Bleeds History (1986) and And Here My Troubles Began (1991). Maus won an Eisner Award and a special Pulitzer Prize in 1992.
You may also want to take a look at Slate's nice slideshow of Speigelman's work.
Comments
Having read millions of lines of text this semester, having information relayed in another manner (via illustrations) has saved my sanity!
Maus is my favorite graphic novel thus far. The Watchmen, 300, Persopolis I and II, and the Black Brothers have all been good, but Maus is by far the best. I'm currently reading The Contract with God Trilogy and am ashamed to say that I'm having a difficult time finishing it : (
I haven't read Black Brothers. Must check it out. Literally. =D