First serialized in The New York Times Magazine "Funny Pages"
The celebrated cartoonist and New Yorker illustrator Seth weaves the
fictional tale of George Sprott, the host of a long-running television
program. The events forming the patchwork of George's life are pieced
together from the tenuous memories of several informants, who often have
contradictory impressions. His estranged daughter describes the man as
an unforgivable lout, whereas his niece remembers him fondly. His former
assistant recalls a trip to the Arctic during which George abandoned him
for two months, while George himself remembers that trip as the time he
began writing letters to a former love, from whom he never received
replies.
Invoking a sense of both memory and its loss, George Sprott is heavy
with the charming, melancholic nostalgia that distinguishes Seth's work.
Characters lamenting societal progression in general share the pages
with images of antiquated objects--proof of events and individuals
rarely documented and barely remembered. Likewise, George's own opinions
are embedded with regret and a sense of the injustice of aging in this
bleak reminder of the inevitable slipping away of lives, along with the
fading culture of their days.