Read Today Will Be Different Online

Authors: Maria Semple

Tags: #Family Life, #Fiction / Literary, #Literary, #Fiction / Contemporary Women, #Contemporary Women, #Fiction, #Fiction / Humorous, #General, #Fiction / Family Life, #Humorous

Today Will Be Different (7 page)

THE MINERVA PRIZE

From my
Looper Wash
days. It was a prize (now defunct) for graphic novelists. I’d been nominated for one in 2003 by Dan Clowes.

That year’s Minerva Prize winner was going to be announced at a dinner at the Odeon. We were in the middle of production on
Looper Wash
and I intended to blow off the ceremony. But at the last minute, I grabbed the gang and walked over. We were horribly underdressed and seated at a good table. Across the expertly lit orchid centerpiece, the wife of the arts commissioner looked askance at our rowdiness and dirty jokes. (Ask anyone: being in production on a TV show turns you feral.) I didn’t expect to win, and didn’t. We each came back with a swag bag: POM Wonderful, a Murakami thumb drive, a mug with the Bear Stearns motto: Ahead of the Curve (!).

And that program.

“I wasn’t invited to the ceremony, of course,” Spencer was telling Timby. “But the next morning I fished a program out of the trash. The other day I was doing some spring cleaning and came across it. I thought your mom might want it.”

Something terrible was occurring to me…

“What?” asked Spencer.

… that program, the one Timby had in his hands. It had profiles of each nominee and their work… which meant
my
work, all twelve illustrations.

“Hey,” I said to Timby, reaching across. “Gimme that.”

He yanked it away. “Who are the Flood Girls?”

The Flood Girls

Eleanor Flood

The Flood Girls

Nominated

by

Daniel Clowes

I first met Eleanor Flood in 1995, back in the olden days of what we once called the San Diego Con (to differentiate it from Dallas Con, Sac Con, Leper Con), a few years before it was gentrified by Hollywood, and comics were still the main focus. Off in the indie/alternative/underground ghetto corner it was me, Peter Bagge, Joe Matt, the Hernandez brothers, Ivan Brunetti; the usual gang of idiots. We’d sit at tables with our art spread out, praying that Matt Groening would come along and buy something. We were strong believers in
noblesse oblige
.

For long stretches, nobody even glanced our way and the only time we got anyone was when the line for Todd McFarlane was so long that the occasional bearded man-child would shuffle a few steps off his path to deliver a disdainful glare or perhaps to use one of my originals as a coaster for his drink.

It was during a soul-numbing moment of career introspection such as this that an anomalous young woman emerged from behind the crowd. She had good posture and wore a dress (an actual dress, not a Troll Queen dress). She was apparently a fan of
Eightball
because she recognized the pages I was selling. “
Ghost World
! That’s the cutest!” and “I can’t believe you’re selling
Ugly Girls,
it’s super-cute.”
Cute
wasn’t a word I usually heard in relation to my art (
Ew
was number one, followed by
Why?
). I saw her turn to survey the now-endless McFarlane line. “I suppose I should feel sorry for them,” she said. “What’s the point in that?” I responded. “They don’t even know they’re sad.” We discussed whether this gave us the right to hate them and agreed that it probably did. Then she picked up my whole portfolio and asked, “Would it be bad if I just bought
everything?
” I told her that would be fine.

She wrote me a check.
ELEANOR FLOOD. NEW YORK, NY.

The next time I saw her was nine years later. I was in New York for something and promised my sister I’d go see my nephew who was answering phones for a production company. She said, “You know the show.
Looper Wash.
The short about girls on ponies that played before
Ice Age
and now it’s a series on Fox?” I had no idea what she was talking about (thank God), so I just said, “What’s the address?”

I went to a building in SoHo, which sounds impressive but surely was not, and walked up to the fourth floor. Apparently, everyone was in a screening down the hall because the place was deserted. In a corner office I saw a drawing board with a big mirror propped in front of it. That struck me as exactly the kind of egomaniacal, solipsistic self-focus I so admire in myself, so I went over to explore further.

On the drawing board (along with viciously mean doodles of Fox executives, which instantly endeared this person to me) were colored-pencil illustrations. They were busy and “pretty,” full of soft tints and delicate expressions, which aren’t qualities I usually go for. But they were also disturbing, and not in the usual ironic Jughead-with-a-crack-pipe way. They were disturbingly sincere.

I heard a bubbly voice. “Dan Clowes!” It was Eleanor Flood. Turns out she was the animation director at
Looper Wash
and my nephew had told her I was coming. She pulled out the portfolio of my art that she’d bought years before.

“Do you want any of these back?” she said. “A lot of them are probably worth a fortune now. I feel bad. I could cry sometimes thinking of how little I paid for them.”

I actually
had
cried thinking the same thing. I told her she could keep them.

She saw me looking at her drawings. “I know,” she said. “Aren’t those super-cute?”

Yes, they were, I said, studying them for an awkwardly long time. “The Minerva asked me to nominate,” I said. “Do you think I could submit these?”

“But isn’t that for graphic novelists?” she asked.

“Put these together and you’ve got a comic.” Even back then, I couldn’t bring myself to use the term
graphic novel
. She got what I meant.

“Oh,” she said.

Unlike many stories about childhood,
The Flood Girls
feels immediate and present-tense urgent. Though it’s dense with period detail, a nostalgia trip it is not. The vantage is frank and unsentimental. That Eleanor Flood is able to infuse these ominous, cryptic images with so much warmth is a rare trick, and I look forward to seeing more.

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