Rebecca's Reviews > The Animators

The Animators by Kayla Rae Whitaker
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it was amazing
bookshelves: requested-from-publisher, reviewed-for-blog, best-of-2017, road-trips

4 Reasons to Love The Animators

1. Bosom Friends. Have you ever had, or longed for, what Anne Shirley calls a “bosom friend”? If so, you’ll love watching the friendship develop between narrator Sharon Kisses and her business partner, Mel Vaught. In many ways they are opposites. Lanky, blonde Mel is a loud, charismatic lesbian who uses drugs and alcohol to fuel a manic pace of life. She’s the life of every party. Sharon, on the other hand, is a curvy brunette and neurotic introvert who’s always falling in love with men but never achieving real relationships. They meet in Professor McIntosh’s Introduction to Sketch class at a small college and a decade later are still working together. They win acclaim for their first full-length animated feature, Nashville Combat, based on Mel’s dysfunctional upbringing in the Central Florida swamps. But they see each other through some really low lows, too, like the death of Mel’s mother and Sharon’s punishing recovery from a stroke at the age of 32.
“She was the first person to see me as I had always wanted to be seen. It was enough to indebt me to her forever.”


2. The Value of Work. Whitaker was inspired by her childhood obsession with dark, quirky cartoons like Beavis and Butthead and Ren and Stimpy. Books about artists sometimes present the work as magically fully-formed, rather than showing the arduous process behind it. Here, though, you track Mel and Sharon’s next film from a set of rough sketches in a secret notebook to a polished comic, following it through storyboarding, filling-in and final edits. It’s a year of all-nighters, poor diet and substance abuse. But work – especially the autobiographical projects these characters create – is also saving. Even when it seems the well has run dry, creativity always resurges. I also appreciated how the novel contrasts the women’s public and private personas and imagines their professional legacy.
“The work will always be with you, will come back to you if it leaves, and you will return to it to find that you have, in fact, gotten better, gotten sharper. It happens to you while you are asleep inside.”


3. Road Trips and Rednecks. I love a good road trip narrative, and this novel has two. First there’s the drive down to Florida for Mel to identify her mother, and then there’s Sharon’s sheepish return to her hometown of Faulkner, Kentucky. Here’s where the book really takes off. The sharp, sassy dialogue sparkles throughout, but the scenes with Sharon’s mom and sister are particularly hilarious. What’s more, the contrast between the American heartland and the flashy New York City life Mel and Sharon have built works brilliantly. Although in the Kentucky section Whitaker portrays some obese Americans you’d be tempted to call white trash, she never resorts to cruel hillbilly stereotypes. The author herself is from rural eastern Kentucky and paints the place in a tender light. She even makes Louisville – where the friends go to meet up with Sharon’s old neighbor and first crush, Teddy Caudill – sound like quite an appealing tourist destination!
“I used it to hate it here. How could I have possibly hated this? This is me. I sprang from this place.”


4. Open Your Trunk. This is a mantra arising from Mel and Sharon’s second movie, Irrefutable Love, which is autobiographical for Sharon this time – revolving around a traumatic incident from her shared past with Teddy, her string of crushes, and her stroke recovery. One powerful message of the novel is that you can’t move on in life unless you confront the crap that’s happened to you. As humorous as it is, it’s also a weighty book in this respect. It has three pivot points, moments so grim and surprising that I could hardly believe Whitaker dared to put them in. (The first is Sharon’s stroke; the others I won’t spoil.) This means the ending is not the super-happy one I might have wanted, but it’s realistic.
“Anything that makes you in that way, anything that makes you hurt and hungry in that way, is worth investigating. … When you take the things that happen to you, the things that make you who are, and you use them, you own them.”


I thought the timeline could be a little tighter and the novel was unnecessarily crass in places. For me, the road trips were the best bits and the rest never quite matched up. But this is still bound to be one of my top novels of the year. I think every reader will see him/herself in Sharon, and we all know a Mel; for some it might be the other way around. Like A Little Life and even The Essex Serpent, this asks how friendship and work can carry us through. Meanwhile, the cartooning world and the Kentucky–New York City dichotomy together feel like a brand new setting for a literary tragicomedy.

4.5 stars, rounded up. An early favorite for 2017. Don’t miss it.

Originally published with images on my blog, Bookish Beck.
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Reading Progress

November 15, 2016 – Shelved
November 15, 2016 – Shelved as: to-read
January 12, 2017 – Shelved as: requested-from-publisher
January 12, 2017 – Shelved as: reviewed-for-blog
January 21, 2017 – Started Reading
January 30, 2017 – Shelved as: best-of-2017
January 30, 2017 – Finished Reading
January 31, 2017 – Shelved as: road-trips

Comments Showing 1-7 of 7 (7 new)

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Toni Rebecca, your review is outstanding, and I'm incredibly joyous that someone else loved this book and saw its value as well. I totally agree that it IS a brand nd setting, and so unique. I'd like to include some minutia to your perfect review, only for we baby boomers, (I hate the term too.) but Mel also mentions "Fritz the Cat," from R. Crumb around 1974-5; as inspiration fodder. Many will remember the last name of that naughty cat comic. That's 's Rebecca, and Kayla Rae Whitaker.


Toni Sorry, so many typos. *brand new setting; *the name (not last name); * Thanks (not That's) Rebecca.


Rachel I loved this one too!


Sonja Arlow Loved your summary of the book, it was such a wonderful reading experience.


Rebecca Glad you liked it. Still one of my favorites for this year.


Catie Watson I love how you structured your review and you echoed my thoughts about it. Thanks for putting it all into words so beautifully.


Rebecca Catie wrote: "I love how you structured your review and you echoed my thoughts about it. Thanks for putting it all into words so beautifully."

Thank you, Catie!


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