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Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth

Chris Ware

Plot Summary

Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth

Chris Ware

Fiction | Graphic Novel/Book | Adult | Published in 2000

Plot Summary
Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth is a graphic novel by American author and artist Chris Ware. First published in full in 2000, it originated as a serial in the Chicago newspaper Newcity. It follows Jimmy Corrigan, a hermetic and shy middle-aged man who secretly meets his estranged father for the first time in a fictional Michigan town, Waukosha. As he gets to know his father, the many idealizations about him that he has formed over his life quickly break down. For its sardonic portrait of middle-aged humility and the gaps that stretch between expectation and reality, the graphic novel has received positive criticism.

Jimmy Corrigan is only sometimes linear, making liberal use of flashbacks and even parallel realities to explore the contingency of Corrigan’s life. Ware makes sparing use of words, often relying on a page with an illustration and no text to move the story forward. Some images, such as those of a defective superhero doll, a robot, and a bird, appear numerous times, building associations with Corrigan’s emotions. Corrigan’s story is semi-autobiographical, matching Ware’s relationship with his estranged father, whom he met as he worked on the book. Corrigan is strange and morose, without much of a social life, and constantly dealing with the demands of a controlling mother.

When Corrigan speaks to his father on the phone, he jumps at the opportunity to connect to him for the first time in his thirty-six years of life. However, when they meet, Corrigan’s father communicates with him with a strained and awkward sense of humor. Corrigan also has difficulty opening up to people; his awkwardness, combined with his father’s, frustrates his desire to glean meaning from their encounter. They end up having a rather boring day, and Corrigan is irked at his father’s general rudeness and racist microaggressions.



In a parallel timeline set in 1893, Jimmy’s grandfather is depicted as a small child wandering the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. This story adds context to Corrigan and his father’s, suggesting that their loneliness might be cyclical and inherited. Jimmy’s grandfather suffered abuse from his father, causing trauma that still endures in Corrigan’s father’s and even Corrigan’s own consciousness. Despite the demonstrated history of emotional trouble and failed parenting in Corrigan’s family tree, Corrigan learns from the mistakes around him, emerging a more complete person at the novel’s end. Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth does not suggest that we can deny our histories, but offers hope that we can depart from them by learning from the mistakes of the past.

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