Become a Member
Books

Review: Robert Crumb's Book of Genesis

Let there be pictures

January 14, 2010 11:20
Timely and timeless:  Crumb’s images “a triumph of creativity”

By

Ariel Kahn

2 min read

By Robert Crumb
Jonathan Cape, £18.99

Robert Crumb is the Woody Allen of comics, a hero of the 1960s counter-culture who revelled in the portrayal of the agonies and ecstasies of his liberated libido, while displaying all the angst of Philip Roth’s Portnoy.

Who better then to wrestle with the book of Genesis and bring it startlingly to life? For Crumb, this is “a text so great and so strange that it lends itself readily to graphic depiction,” and he spent five years adapting all 50 chapters. His painstaking research never intrudes on the delights of the reading experience.

Like any great artist, it is the use Crumb makes of his sources that matters. Particularly inspired by Savina Teubal’s Sarah the Priestess, which he mentions in his notes, the author of My Troubles with Women here creates an extraordinary feminist retelling of the greatest story of all.