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 True Story, Swear To God: Chances Are...

Beland is a cartoonist and page designer for a California newspaper when he
receives an invitation to an all-expenses-paid media event in Disney World. On
his last night in Orlando, he almost goes to sleep early, but then decides to
head to catch a ride to a Stevie Wonder concert. At the bus stop, he meets Lily
Garcia, a radio personality from Puerto Rico. The two strike up a conversation
and wind up talking long into the morning. Once home, they continue to call each
other; over the course of those phone calls and a few all-too-short visits, they
fall in love.

If you read one autobiographical humorous romance comic this year, it should
definitely be True Story, Swear to God. Not only because it's one of the
few autobiographical humorous romance comics out there, but because it's funny,
touching, and even inspiring. Beland takes a story that's almost too good to be
true - his own - and quickly makes the reader connect with the real people who
have lived that story.

It's a truth-is-stranger-than-fiction tale that makes the title wholly
appropriate. Fortunately, Beland is a skilled storyteller, and the
too-good-to-be-true elements of the story are balanced by the tragedies that
he's endured and by his own nagging sense of doubt and anxiety. Rather than
scoff at the unlikeliness of his story, I found myself quickly rooting for
Beland to find the happiness that finally seemed within his grasp. There's an
emotional honesty in the storytelling that's critical to making this kind of
autobiography work.
I called this a humorous romantic comic, but it's far from a romantic comedy
as most people understand it. The humor doesn't come from the wacky hijinks that
ensue as our hero and heroine stumble around and finally realize their feelings
for each other - we know Tom and Lily are a good couple by the end of the first
chapter, and more importantly, so do they. The humor is more situational,
slice-of-life stuff, with a conversational tone that makes it feel like Beland's
an old friend telling you about the wacky thing that happened to him that
day.
Beland also makes a lot of the humor work through pacing and contrast; he
definitely has a strong command of comics' particular storytelling strengths.
Comics can effortlessly switch location back and forth between panels, without
even the sense of disorientation that film cuts would produce, and Beland puts
that to use in this tale of a long-distance relationship. In one sequence, Tom
and Lily send each other copies of their favorite books - she sends Paulo
Coelho's The Chemist, and he sends Frank Miller's The Dark Knight
Returns. In one panel, Tom sits reading The Chemist, with multiple
caption panels that convey the rush of emotions he's feeling. In the next panel,
Lily sits reading Dark Knight, with a single thought balloon that says
"Bruce Wayne needs therapy." The ease with which Beland makes the
visual transition seem like it's not a transition at all strengthens the effect
of the change in verbal tone and rhythm, which gives the joke that much more
oomph.
I met Tom and Lily at the 2003 San Diego
Comic-Con, where they're still having these disagreements on comic icons.
(Lily: "This guy has some serious anger issues." Tom: "He's
the HULK!") So there's clearly plenty more of this story for Beland
to tell. (This book collects the first four issues of Beland's series, a fifth
issue is out with a sixth on the way.) I'm looking forward to reading it.
Reviewed by Dave
Thomer
theLogBook.com Assistant Editor



- Year: 2003
- Author / Artist: Tom Beland
- Genre: comics / non-fiction
- Length: 176 pages
- Publisher: AiT/Planet Lar
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