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The Ghost Script

A Graphic Novel

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Never has the incomparable Jules Feiffer been more eerily prophetic than in this stunning finale to his best-selling Kill My Mother trilogy.

Hollywood is haunted. 1953. Ghosts abound. In particular, the ghost of Detective Sam Hannigan—murdered in Bay City twenty-two years earlier by Addie Perl, the hired assassin who then bought a Hollywood nightclub with her blood money. Among the nightclub's favored clientele is Sam's widow, Elsie. Blinded by a Japanese bullet while on a USO tour in the South Pacific, Elsie has been reinvented into "Miss Know-It-All," a Hollywood gossip columnist. But blind Elsie is haunted by the ghost of her husband, Sam, who asks her accusingly: "If Miss Know-It-All knows so much, why can't she find Cousin Joseph, the man who had me killed?"

Hollywood is haunted. Spooks abound. Agents Shoen and Kline, investigators for the House Un-American Activities Committee, manipulate the blacklisted, buxom, over-the-hill starlet-turned-hooker Lola Burns into working for them and naming the names she had once refused to betray.

Hollywood is haunted. Communist screenwriters Oz McCay and Faye Bloom are noisily plotting, boozing, and laughing their way toward their impending disaster.

Hollywood is haunted. As an inside joke, writer-director Annie Hannigan—Sam and Elsie's daughter—comes up with the idea of a "Ghost Script" that may or may not exist but is rumored to expose the inside story of the Hollywood blacklist and the names of its undercover masterminds, most notably the reclusive philanthropist Lyman Murchison, a superpatriot with a dirty secret.

Hollywood is haunted. Stumbling his way through this maze is private eye Archie Goldman, a tough-talking, nebbishy good guy who's never been in a fight he didn't lose. Archie's single aim is to live up to the memory of the ghost who haunts him: Detective Sam Hannigan. Trail along with Archie into the middle of this muddle, as he tracks the arc of history and finds that it has rounded itself off into a circular firing squad.

In this antic and brilliant assault on our past and present, Jules Feiffer shows us, once and for all, that if there's one thing Americans hate, it's learning from past mistakes. Every twenty years or so, a new generation must address new biases and injustices that are virtually identical to past biases and injustices. But who remembers? Exposing the tragically cyclical path of American history, Jules Feiffer pens the final installment to a noir masterpiece.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 2, 2018
      Feiffer concludes the remarkable trilogy that began with Kill My Mother and Cousin Joseph, inspired by the tropes of film noir and the historical reality of anticommunist witch hunts, in this feverish crime story. In 1950s Hollywood, everyone is talking about the legendary “Ghost Script,” a screenplay rumored to be floating around L.A. that supposedly reveals a real-world conspiracy behind the Hollywood blacklist. Some blacklisted screenwriters decide to turn the legend into reality, adding another maddening level to the confusion between truth and fiction that runs through the plot. Soon an expansive cast of characters is chasing the script, eager to either expose the red baiters or cover them up. Poor gumshoe Archie Goldman, nominally the protagonist, gets hired by interested parties on both sides but is barely able to keep up with the twists and turns. Feiffer has been drawing comics since before the era in which the book is set (one character mentions growing up reading The Spirit, which Feiffer worked on in the 1940s) and he shows off his mastery of the form with grace. The plot loops so often that it’s easy to lose threads, but the atmosphere of paranoia, censorship, and enforced patriotism thrums. Unsurprisingly for Feiffer, the strongest sections are the portraits of individual characters, squirming and dancing out their preoccupations. In this capstone to a graceful three-volume performance, Feiffer has an utterly unique take on crime fiction and crime comics, drawing with an energy that practically hurls the characters off the page. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman

    • Booklist

      Starred review from July 1, 2018
      Feiffer's terrific trilogy, which began with Kill My Mother (2014), continued in Cousin Joseph (2016), and concludes here, was meant to pay a political homage to noir, writes the author in his foreword. But politics found him, and a plotline that originated in the previous book unfolds against a backdrop of union-busting, anticommunist hysteria, and the Hollywood blacklist. Feiffer extends existing story lines while introducing new characters and solving old mysteries. Here, Archie Goldman, of Goldman and Mother, Confidential Investigations, tries to track down a movie script rumored to expose the architects of the blacklist. Fascinating female leads Elsie, Patty, Annie, and Dorothea are still present, still trying to get by, and like most art about repressive times, it's really about how people live (or don't live) with impossible choices. This doesn't have quite as many twists and turns as the earlier books, but Feiffer's fractured funhouse mirror of a plot features plenty of surprises (despite frequent flashbacks, readers new to the series should definitely start at the beginning), and his themes of gender fluidity, doubles and disguise, and divided loyalties are as engrossing as ever. Though the 89-year-old author's page layouts aren't as wonderfully creative as in the previous works, his line work still contains irrepressible energy, and subtly hued, mostly duotone inking explodes like fireworks with bursts of color. A fitting finish to a late-career triumph.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from July 15, 2018
      Feiffer (Cousin Joseph, 2016, etc.) closes out his Kill My Mother graphic-novel trilogy by weaving the Hollywood blacklist into his noir quilt of sex, violence, labor, and media.When we last saw Archie Goldman in Cousin Joseph, the prequel to Kill My Mother (2014), the schoolboy had managed to locate a missing diary that contained lurid details that could derail lives. Now Archie is a grown man working (for his mother) as a detective and, again, in search of a damning document: this time, a screenplay containing revelations about the true motivations behind the Hollywood blacklist. It turns out most everyone in Los Angeles has something to hide--from a pro-American philanthropist eager to be dominated by a Bolshevik beauty to a union organizer with a penchant for fancy socks and choking his lovers to blacklisted writers using fake names and fronts to keep selling their scripts. Some characters have appeared in the previous two books and now have blood on their hands or bones to pick (Feiffer includes "flashback" pages, which are lifted directly from Cousin Joseph); others are new, like a Broadway writer whose unimpeachable integrity doesn't jibe with the Hollywood studio system and the only two people of color in the entire series--one of whom, Orville Daniels, Archie meets while fleeing an angry mob, and neither son-of-socialist-Jew Archie nor African-American Orville is certain which of them is the mob's true target. It all builds to a satisfying settling of scores and a final conspiracy that sends the series off with a wink. Once again, Feiffer has delivered a madcap meditation on love, loyalty, identity, and America that is by turns funny, tragic, and triumphant--and thoroughly weird. Both illustrations and story feel loose and loopy, and the ultimate effect is mesmerizing.A fitting conclusion to a wonderfully outrageous epic.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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