Thursday, September 11, 2025

Night Drive by Richard Sala

This was Richard Sala's first book; this edition is (at least for the moment) Richard Sala's last book.

Sala died in mid-2020, alone at home, of what turned out to be a heart attack. He didn't die of COVID, but I have to believe he's one of the many, many people who would have had a much better chance of surviving that horrible year - getting better health care, being seen by more people who could notice something was wrong, etc. - if it hadn't happened. But that's the deal with the past: it's already happened, its horrors and unfairnesses already baked in. And that's a pretty solidly Richard Sala thought, frankly.

The original Night Drive was self-published by Sala in 1984, a 32-page comic in 500 signed copies. It got appreciative reviews, sold a decent number of those copies, and was useful for Sala to open doors to get illustration work - and then the long last story, "Invisible Hands," was picked up by MTV's Liquid Television, which gave Sala another paying gig to help get his career started.

This expanded edition of Night Drive came out this May, just about doubling the size of the original and turning it into a small hardcover book. It includes a foreword remembering Sala by his friend and fellow comics writer Dana Marie Andra, an interview section with answers from Sala about this book over the span of several decades, and a number of stories and illustrations from the same era - some almost made it into Night Drive, some were for the potential follow-up that was shelved when his work on Liquid Television and illustration jobs got too busy.

The art is both deeply Sala - scratchy, black-and-white, with scrawled lettering and quirky misshapen faces - and deeply 1980s, full of design-y borders and title panels. His work got somewhat easier to visually "read" later, when he moved into working most commonly in watercolors, but this is Sala at his darkest and most cryptic, all of his old horror-movie and noir influences coming out in a flood of tropes and dialogue and ideas. The pieces here are more vignettes than stories, as if Sala was trying to get down all of his inspiration and his ideas his way as fast as he could. He got clearer than this, he told more complete and satisfying stories than this - he definitely got better at his craft and I think moved closer to doing exactly what he wanted to do - but this package is full of pure unfiltered Richard Sala, early in his development and heady with the possibilities of comics.

"Invisible Hands" is still the standout here - long enough to give Sala room to maneuver, full of fiendish plots and mysterious characters, shocking reverses and new complications, quirky and entirely Sala but close enough to a normal narrative for the parallax to be deeply satisfying. But the whole package is fun, a deep dive into the beginnings of a unique artist and the style of a very distinctive, and now long-gone era.

No comments:

Post a Comment