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Page 1 of 5 This interview is reprinted in its entirety from MOME Vol. 1.
My first exposure to Paul Hornschemeier's work
was Mother, Come Home, which I read sometime in
late 2003. It impressed me enough to start the gears
churning, and I remember thinking that the three-issue
comics series would make a good graphic novel; I made
a mental note to contact this Hornschemeier fellow and
inquire about the possibility of collecting it. I didn't
know that copies of the collected graphic novel were en
route to America from an Asian printer and would be
in stores within weeks. But at least I was right: it did
make a good graphic novel.

Mother, Come Home is Hornschemeier's most
mature, complete work to date. It is the story of father
and son coping with the mother's death; the mother's
presence — or absence — hovers over the book like a
shroud. Hornschemeier's line work is economical, the
compositions spartan, the pace deliberate and unhurried.
The story is essentially told from the point of view
of the 7-year-old child, Thomas; his narration is unsentimental
and unadorned, his perspective that of an
adult putting the pieces together, fragmentary but
revealing. The father is taciturn, defined more by his
actions.
Paul Hornschemeier was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in
1977. At the age of four he and his older sister moved to
Georgetown, Ohio, a small, rural community, where his
parents practiced law. According to Hornschemeier, his
parents are "the most selfless, nicest people you could
ever hope to meet," in other words, insufficiently
lawyerly. They should probably be grateful that the only
consequences of their decency was a low income; I'm
surprised the American Bar Association didn't have
them publicly flogged or banished to whatever gulag is
reserved for lawyers who aren't greedy enough to pass
muster.
As a comic book aficionado, Hornschemeier was a late
bloomer. He saw his first comic at age 5 or 6 when his
dentist rewarded him for sitting still with a promotional
give-away comic reprinting early Steve Ditko Spider-
Man stories. Which is pretty weird when you think
about it. But, stuck in the middle of nowhere, barn sales
did not yield many comics and his exposure was limited
until his early teen years when he was able to get
"downtown" more often and start visiting a comics
shop. Nonetheless, he loved drawing from an early age
and always wanted to combine drawing with storytelling.
He would read his mother's Edward Gorey
books and collections of New Yorker cartoons lay
around the house. Later, when he started reading comic
books in earnest, he read shitty mainstream comics; he
was woefully ignorant of independent or alternative
comics, which is apparently easy to be in rural Ohio.
But, oddly enough, the kinds of comics he was drawing
in high school were closer to an alternative comics sensibility
— "a story with some guy sitting in his bedroom
being depressed," as he describes his typical comic, and
you can't get much more alternative than that.
At age 18, he attended Ohio State
University (where he eventually
became the only cartoonist of his
generation to acquire a philosophy
degree) when he had a revelation:
Dan Clowes' Ghost World. "Wow,
I can't even believe this exists" is
how he described his epiphany. He
discovered other cartoonists with
which he felt an affinity and started
drawing a comic strip for the
University student newspaper in his junior year. Titled
Squares, "It was Seinfeld except
horribly written and very boring
— with lots of crosshatching." In
1999, he started self-publishing
his own comic, Sequential, which
ran seven issues (ending in 2001),
each issue more sophisticated and
ambitious than the previous one,
the seventh "issue" being a one
hundred and twenty eight page
square-bound book. His next
major project was Mother, Come
Home, which he published in his
next comic, Forlorn Funnies [subsequently collected in Let Us Be Perfectly Clear – ed.]. He's
appeared in a variety of anthologies,
including AutobioGraphix
from Dark Horse and The Comics
Journal Special Edition. He is currently
working on The Three
Paradoxes (due out July 2005) and
his new serial in MOME.
— Gary Groth
Mome Vol. 1 - Summer 2005
Price:
$14.95
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