“Kid, if I had something snappy to say, I would. But I don’t.” – S, Heavy Liquid Chapter 4.
That line comes at the end of a scene full of snappy dialogue. It breaks a rhythm seemingly designed to lull the reader into a sense of security in order to break it before launching into a new set piece, shattering our expectations as it takes us somewhere completely new.
It happens a lot in this book. Just when Pope lulls the reader into thinking he knows what he’s looking at and can relax, he comes out with a line like that. Or the image of a Cubist hitman walking down the middle of a crowded street, coming to pull our protagonist out of a cab stuck in traffic and blow his head off. This is Chandler by way of Philip K. Dick through a dirty Eisner lens.
We’re big fans of his later Vertigo work, 100%, in my house, so I knew I would love whatever this presented me. I should have known it would be just as challenging. Although both start from a future New York City and both follow a group of starving and desperate young people, where 100% turns romantic, Heavy Liquid turns urban crime fantasy. Pope runs us through a dark, grimy, yet hip and alluring NYC just long enough for us to get comfortable there, then he sends us flying to a Paris out of our twisted dreams, then, by way of a black-as-ink tunnel, he sends us to the stars. I’m not giving anything away by laying all that out because the journey is the point itself. Heavy Liquid, like Pope’s other work, is to be savored as it’s consumed, like a red wine so dry and deep you have to drink it slow.
About the art: Pope’s art always reminds me of an artsy underground punk band. Educated and trained to the point of boredom with form, Pope flies into wild and scratchy experimentation, keeping his layouts and his linework just grounded enough to never sacrifice story. The use of pinks and blues is evocative of the drug addiction and paranoia at the center of the book, keeping the reader sublimely unnerved. I could go on for pages. I’ll just end by saying it’s gorgeous and always pleases this reader.