Comics DIY benefits from multiple threads of history - the undergrounds, minicomics, the wider 'zine scene - going back five or six decades. It doesn't really matter what any one creator's impulses or influences were, though it can be fun to trace them. There's a network of printers who are used to working with lone creators; a schedule of events they could show up at, table, and maybe even sell some units; and an audience that believes "I published it myself" is a badge of honor and not an admission of defeat. All that is to be celebrated; lots of art forms aren't as welcoming, for structural or cultural reasons. (Try to stage your own ballet!)
I'm waffling up front here because I have a cool DIY project today that's probably unavailable to readers right now, and is an anthology to begin with - so it's a collection of all sorts of different things.
Mike Dawson has been making comics professionally for two decades or so, breaking out with Freddie & Me in 2008. He's also a New Jersey guy like me - with a big asterisk, since he was born and spent his first decade in the UK - so I've vaguely kept track of his career for the usual local-guy reasons. Over the past few years, he's published three issues of a 'zine called Fun Time, which he collected into a single book, along with some other material, earlier this year.
The book is Fun Time Omnibus Vol. One, and I don't have a link because it was a Kickstarter and doesn't seem to be otherwise available right now. I bet if you run into Dawson at a comics show, and he's tabling there, he'll have some copies to sell, but that has a couple of big assumptions built into it.
At least some of the stories here have been slightly reconfigured from larger pages - Dawson has published in the New York Times, both in the Metropolitan section and the Book Review, which have much larger pages than this digest-size book - and his new intro here points out that he does often rewrite or redraw his work somewhat to adjust it for later publication, but tends to think of it as locked down once it hits a book page.
This officially collects the three issues of Fun Time, but not in an obvious way - Dawson doesn't include their covers, or run the strips in a clear "this is issue #2" way. He's reconfiguring work that appeared other places - the issues may have done the same thing; I'm not super-clear on how many permutations some of this work went through; and that doesn't actually matter - and presenting it as one anthology of Dawson work, mostly ruminative, mostly non-fictional, often personal in that autobio-comics way.
It's something of a sequel to Rules for Dating My Daughter, that is: more essay-ish comics, about his life and what's going on in the world, anchored in both his normal Jersey-guy life with kids that are I think roughly tweens now and the fact that he mostly made these comics in 2020-21, amid the ongoing fascist hellscape and the very particular global health crisis of that time that the big fans of the hellscape have tried to entirely memory-hole since then.
I think I agree with Dawson politically, at least in broad outlines, which helps for work like this. And he's a thoughtful essayist who has been making comics like this for more than a decade - Freddie, though more personal and backwards-focused, wasn't a million miles away from the same style of work, either.
I hesitate to recommend a book that's a potential reader would have trouble finding, but Dawson is an interesting comics essayist who I expect will keep doing work like this. (Alongside his main gig, which these days are young-reader GNs - I don't want to say every middle-aged comics-maker turns to making kids books when they have kids, but it happens a lot, and even to those who don't have kids.) Check his stuff out when you get a chance: he's thoughtful and has a fun, expressive line - the way he draws noses I particularly amusing.









