Une maison de Frank L. Wright
Een huis van Frank L. Wright
November 2003

This is Cosey's first short story
collection! Four love stories with 'happy' endings. The album contains 4 romantic stories:
- Une petite tulipe rose (prepublished on
Valentine's Day 2003 in Spirou)
- Une maison de Frank Lloyd Wright
- Only love can break a heart
- Sur l'île
Writing short stories requires other
narrative techniques than Cosey is used to (and his readers of course). No slow
developments of characters and story: these short stories have more 'speed' and some of
them have a dream-like atmosphere.
The first story of the book is called
'Une petite tulipe rose'. It is a story of two elderly people who meet each other many
years after having been in love. Cosey*: 'It is more or less a dream: when I was in love
at the age of twenty, I said passionately to myself that I wanted still to be in love at
eighty'.
In 'Une maison de Frank L. Wright'
Cosey's story almost seems to be a pretext to show one of the famous houses of Frank Lloyd
Wright. The house represents to Cosey the magical America of the 1950s en 1960s, when he
was a little boy and his uncle brought pictures and American products like marshmallows
from the USA. An atmosphere Cosey has never found on his own travels in the USA. 'I have
refound it recently, reading a biography of T.C. Boyle, and I discovered that he had lived
in a house of Frank Lloyd Wright. [...] This is a way for a comics author to overcome his
frustrations!'
'Only love can break a heart' is the most
'traditional Cosey' story. An adolescent, longing for the sister of a friend, due to
circumstances spends a day with the girls' grandmother. The young boy helps the old lady
to live through sad memories.
The last story is Cosey's love
declaration to the comics of his youth. In 'Sur l'île', an adult man thinks back how he,
as a boy, and a girl made their way in stolen cars to a fantastic library full of
comic books. Cosey: 'This is the most autobiographic story of this album on an anecdotal
level: like the boy and girl that I have drawn, I went to the parking lot of La
Blécherette during the football matches, to look for a car that was unlocked, and I
pushed it up to the hill to descend it. But I was alone, there was no nice girl with me.'
The scene in the library has a dreamlike character: 'I have always wanted to say 'thank
you' to all those comics authors who have nourished me in a compelling way, and who have
triggered my love for this wonderful job.'
Cosey's drawing of the characters in this
album differs from the realistic drawing of Cosey's earlier albums. The drawings are
simpler, more 'comic-like'. Cosey: 'The cover has been the object of many discussions, but
it was the direction I wanted to go: to come to a great simplicity, that I also like to
achieve one day in my pages.'
Is it Bob or not?
The male character of the story 'Une
maison de Frank Lloyd Wright' made me think of a young Bob Dylan... Do you agree?

*all quotes are taken from the Swiss
newspaper 'Le temps'. With thanks to Cédric Marzer. |