
Cruse's tale of homosexual identity in the Kennedy-era 1960s American South may not be a memoir, but the inner turmoil, visceral cruelty and web of relationships that unfold in Stuck Rubber Baby bring his small, fictional town of Clayfield to life during a time when race relations and the nation's future were anything but simple.

A frigid, unresponsive local police force acts as a blockade to justice, rather than enforcing the law when victims are black or gay. As Toland crawls toward the point of publicly speaking out, as well as being honest about who he is, the intimidation he feels is just as potent as the support he receives from friends and loved ones.
That's where this book becomes something transcendent in the world of graphic novels and comics. Cruse tells his story with chunky, masculine figures while portraying the fragility of life in a world where masked Ku Klux Klan execution squads roam the night freely, pulling innocent people from their homes and turning them into public warnings.
The bigotry of the American South in the 1960s has been depicted time and again, but Stuck Rubber Baby gets inside of the human experience like few other works you'll find as a document about growing up gay during that period. It's a book for comics lovers and an honest look at an individual in a world of complicated human beings.
Stuck Rubber Baby is on sale now in finer comics shops, bookstores and online retailers like Things From Another World.



























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