A young man accepts a job in Kabul as an illustrator. His first project is to draw comics that explain the new constitution. The second project is to create recruitment material for the new (American- and Western-trained) army. He's often clueless, careless, immature. He's young and inexperienced in life, so most of this is understandable. He usually learns the hard way (by putting his foot in his mouth) with his bosses, co-workers, and locals. The rest of the expat community is divided into two groups: people who are very aware of their privilidge and have many ethical/moral principles, and people who are living the expat life without much care for what's going on. Our hero is usually in the latter camp, though he has one very big moral crisis when he's told he's supposed to work on the army recruitment project (he tries to resign, but his resignation is rejected). No matter what, though, everyone's presented as caricatures or archetypes, which seems to be on purpose. So the story has an undercurrent of cynical humor.
It's hard not to compare this work with Guy Delisle's work. Delisle's older. He's already a father, for example, in Burma Chronicles. His humor is more focused on the actual political situation going on where he is and his interactions with the locals, while Wild's story mostly concerns his work life (kind of like The Office in Kabul!) Kabul Disco is one young man's adventure in Kabul, but also reads like a cautionary tale of what those Westerners are up to in places like Afghanistan.
Recommended for those who like expat restaurants, caviar, grumpy coworkers, and language lessons.