Ratings4
Average rating2.3
A quintessentially millennial tale about friendship and the quest for self-actualization This is going to be Frank’s year. He’s going to do it all: find love, become a famous comedian, and responsibly parent his plants. But then, Giorgio gets hit by a bus. Self-assured and utterly entitled, Giorgio has always seemed like “Frank, but better.” Moving in with and caring for his estranged childhood friend quickly starts to chip away at Frank’s sense of self, as well as Giogio’s carefully curated online persona. Is Giorgio’s penchant for overindulgence truly aspirational? Or is it ultimately a red flag? The further Frank is pulled into Giorgio’s orbit, the quicker his existential dread blooms. Expectation and reality soon collide in a singular tale about trust and confidence. Luke Healy’s playful, hilarious third graphic novel uses crisp lines and physical comedy to portray an uneasy friendship between two young men on the cusp of adulting. Snippets from Frank’s middling stand-up routines are punctuated by the subtle farce of Healy’s mise-en-scène and the lively, at times scathingly pointed, banter of old friends. The Con Artists is a stylish character study that asks the question of who fools who once everyone is off-camera.
Reviews with the most likes.
2.5
This was a miss for me. I kept waiting for something to happen.
I don't mind subtlety and I love nuance but also I need substance for it to work and I missed the substance of this.
What did Frank (I struggled to remember his name because he was such a sad, forgettable character) gain? Not money, not friendship, maybe a fashionable bag, a black eye, maybe perspective and maybe some material for his stand up.
The best part of the book for me is the female side characters and for that Healy is getting the side eye from me. And yay you had two female characters briefly talk to each other, twice.
Frank wasn't sympathetic he was pitiable, like I wanted to heave a large sigh or a small slap at him and tell him ‘you know better, grow a spine and set some boundaries and there's a difference between enabling and helping.'
Quiet and funny, dealing with issues like anxiety and deception cheekily, with a layer of suspicion and dread underneath. You can breeze through too quickly though, maybe.