In 1970, William S. Burroughs and artist Malcolm McNeill began a
small collaborative project on a comic entitled The Unspeakable Mr.
Hart, which appeared in the first four issues of Cyclops, England s
first comics magazine for an adult readership. Soon after,
Burroughs and McNeill agreed to collaborate on a book-length
meditation on time, power, and control, and corruption that evoked
the Mayan codices and specifically, the Mayan god of death, Ah
Pook. Ah Pook is Here was to include their character Mr. Hart, but
stray from the conventional comics form to explore different
juxtapositions of images and words.
Ah Pook was never finished in its intended form. In a 1979 prose
collection that included only the words from the collaboration, Ah
Pook is Here and Other Texts (Calder, 1979), Burroughs explains in
the preface that they envisioned the work to be one that falls into
neither the category of the conventional illustrated book nor that
of a comix publication. Rather, the work was to include about a
hundred pages of artwork with text (thirty in full-color) and about
fifty pages of text alone. The book was conceived as a single
painting in which text and images were combined in whatever form
seemed appropriate to the narrative. It was conceived as 120
continuous pages that would fold out. Such a book was, at the time,
unprecedented, and no publisher was willing to take a chance and
publish a graphic novel.
However, Malcolm McNeill created nearly a hundred paintings,
illustrations, and sketches for the book, and these, finally, are
seeing the light of day in The Lost Art of Ah Pook. (Burroughs text
will not be included.) McNeill himself is an exemplary craftsman
and visionary painter whose images have languished for over 30
years, unseen. Even in a context divorced from the words, they
represent a stunning precursor to the graphic novel form to come.
Sara J. Van Ness contributes an historical essay chronicling the
long history of Burroughs and McNeill s work together, including
its incomplete publishing history with Rolling Stone s Straight
Arrow Press, the excerpt that ran in Rush magazine, and the text
that was published without pictures.
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