Kirkus Reviews QR Code
ATTACK OF THE STUFF by Jim Benton

ATTACK OF THE STUFF

by Jim Benton ; illustrated by Jim Benton

Pub Date: May 26th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5458-0498-8
Publisher: Papercutz

When objects begin speaking to him, Bill realizes that now he doesn’t own his stuff: His stuff owns him.

Awakened from a dream by the fart of his alarm clock, Bill, a talking white duck, experiences a moment of strange awareness when he enters his bathroom and his toilet tells him, “Forget it. Not today, Bill,” and declares its showbiz ambitions. From then on, he is enveloped in an endless litany he hears from every object within earshot, including a jar of peanut butter, salt-and-pepper shakers, a blanket, and a baseball hat, all of whom needle Bill constantly. Overcome and exhausted by the unrelenting chatter, Bill decides to move to the forest and live in nature, where he befriends a den of musically ambitious red-and-yellow–striped snakes. When the internet (depicted as a satellite in a pink cowboy hat) decides to quit, only Bill and his quirky powers can save the day and bring the world back online. Benton’s lively and outrageously imaginative graphic novel feels like a sugar rush manifested into comic panels, with its fast pacing and big, bright, simple cartoons. Suffused with ample humor—both general silliness and slapstick—this will resonate with those who like their humor in abundance alongside a hearty dose of weirdness. Bill’s world is populated by an array of anthropomorphic animals, including a duck, a pig, a bear, and a surly cat (wearing a purple T-shirt that says, “Poo,” of course).

As fizzy and zippy as a Saturday-morning cartoon.

(Graphic fantasy. 7-12)