Blue Monday (comics)

This article is about a comic book entitled "Blue Monday". For other uses, see Blue Monday.
Blue Monday

Cover of Blue Monday: The Kids Are Alright TPB
Publication information
Publisher Oni Press (2000-2015)
Image Comics (2015- )
Schedule Monthly
Format Multiple one-shots and limited series
Genre Slice of life story
Publication date 2000
Number of issues 15
Main character(s) Bleu L. Finnegan
Clover Connelly
Alan Walsh
Victor Gomez
Erin O'Neill
Creative team
Writer(s) Chynna Clugston
Artist(s) Chynna Clugston
Creator(s) Chynna Clugston
Collected editions
The Kids Are Alright ISBN 1-929998-07-4

Blue Monday is a comic book title by Chynna Clugston.[1] It is published by Oni Press in the form of one-shots and several miniseries, which have also been collected into trade paperbacks, with the first four-issue mini-series being published in 2000. The series follows the adventures of Bleu L. Finnegan and her friends as they attend high school during the early 1990s, specifically between the years 1991-93.[2]

Plot summary

The series follows the main characters through several scenarios, which include high school events such as dances and detention. The first volume has Bleu and Clover seeking revenge on Alan and Victor for putting them in detention over the two boys giving them cookies that had been baked for a fundraiser. Other storylines in the series include the guys filming Bleu naked while she takes a bath; masturbation; Alan trying to get Bleu to go out with him; and a murder mystery dinner gone haywire after three different attendees independently spike the punch. There is also an overlying story arc of Bleu's crush on one of her teachers and the romantic tensions of several of the other characters interacting.

Main characters

Influences and background

Clugston has stated that her own personal experiences from high school have helped shape the series, with a scene surrounding Bleu's attempt to mascot for her school being almost identical to her real life experience in school.[3] Manga has also affected the series, with Clugston listing Rumiko Takahashi and Adam Warren as influences.[4] The Mod subculture is prevalent throughout the series, with Christine Feldman writing in her book We Are the Mods that the series reconceptualized Mod feminity.[5]

Of the series, Clugston initially had difficulty finding a publisher to carry the work until the series was noticed by Jamie S. Rich and got picked up by Oni Press.[6]

Collected editions

The chronology of the collected editions is different from the numbering. Timewise, the volumes come in the order: one, two, four, three. As several stories make reference to past events, this order can become confusing. In an add-on comic in volume four, Clugston addresses this issue.

#ChronologyTitleISBNRelease dateCollected material
1 1 The Kids Are Alright ISBN 1-929998-07-4 Dec 8, 2000 The Kids Are Alright #1–3 and the short stories
2 2 Absolute Beginners ISBN 1-929998-17-1 December 12, 2001 Absolute Beginners #1-4
3 4 Inbetween Days ISBN 1-929998-66-X Oct 13, 2003 Dead Man's Party, Blue Belles, Lovecats, Nobody's Fool, Everything's Gone Green, Everybody Plays the Fool
4 3 Painted Moon ISBN 1-932664-11-4 Jun 14, 2005 Painted Moon #1-4

Germfree Adolescents

In July 2015, Image Comics announced that it had acquired publication rights to Blue Monday and would be releasing a single-volume anthology containing all previously published miniseries and one-shots, entitled Germfree Adolescents.[7] Continuing the Blue Monday tradition of music-related titles, this volume is named after the 1978 album and song by British punk band X-Ray Spex.

Thieves Like Us

A fifth miniseries, entitled Thieves Like Us, was scheduled for release in 2009,[8] but only the first issue was published. In an interview conducted at WonderCon 2012 (March 16–18, 2012), Chynna Clugston Flores stated that she was working on "finishing up" Thieves Like Us after its extended hiatus.[9]

In January 2013, Clugston Flores stated that she had finished scripting Thieves Like Us, was in the process of drawing it, and had many more Blue Monday stories left to tell.[10]

In July 2015, Image Comics announced that it had acquired publication rights to the Blue Monday series and would be releasing Thieves Like Us as a series in 2016.[7]

References

External links

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