interrogation
columns
- Reagan in 100 Pages
A discussion with Andrew Helfer, the writer of Ronald Reagan: A Graphic Biography.
David Greenberg
posted Sept. 5, 2007 - Behind The Wire
David Simon on where the show goes next.
Meghan O'Rourke
posted Dec. 1, 2006 - The Trouble With Drawing Dick Cheney
Ernie Colón and Sid Jacobson, the comic-book vets behind The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation.
Julia Turner
posted Sept. 10, 2006 - Philip Seymour Hoffman
The actor talks about Truman Capote's moral ambiguities and supposed lies.
Meghan O'Rourke
posted Jan. 31, 2006 - The Worst Day Ever
A 24 writer talks about torture, terrorism, and fudging "real time."
James Surowiecki
posted Jan. 17, 2006 - Search for more interrogation articles
- Subscribe to the interrogation RSS feed
- View our complete interrogation archive
Reagan in 100 PagesA discussion with Andrew Helfer, the writer of Ronald Reagan: A Graphic Biography.
By David GreenbergPosted Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2007, at 3:37 PM ET

This week, Slate is serializing Ronald Reagan: A Graphic Biography, a 100-page comic-book account of the 40th president's life, to be published next week by Serious Comics and Hill and Wang. Slate's resident historian David Greenberg spoke with Andrew Helfer, who wrote Ronald Reagan—Steve Buccellato and Joe Staton drew the art—and co-founded Serious Comics.
Slate: Whom do you see as the audience for this book?
Helfer: It's either a good reminder of this bygone era—of 1986!—if you're an adult who's forgotten these things, or it's a good first reading if you're a high-school kid. By now, Ronald Reagan is one of these people that the dominant generation knows only in death. We started with his death because that's what most people remember—the 21-gun salutes, the images of the wife lying on top of the casket. You saw that on TV so much, we put Nancy crying over the casket in the book three times. Now, she truly loved that man, but at the time, it seemed like such a strange show.
If anything, the relevance of Reagan has increased because of the current administration. They clearly revered Reagan as president. A lot of this administration has been an effort to reopen those wounds of the Reagan years, or those glories, depending on how you see it. Bush has a lot of surface idiosyncrasies that are like Reagan's. But what I saw in reading about Reagan, and what you see in this book, is that Ronald Reagan was in a different league from George Bush.
Slate: Journalist Lou Cannon has written an 800-page book about Reagan's presidency. How do you do it in 100 pages?
Helfer: We're not saying it's an authoritative volume. We could've done hundreds of pages. You could probably do a whole book just on Reagan and the firing of the air-traffic controllers. That was a very important part of his presidency. So, you tip your hat to it, and you move on. The idea is to convey a sense of the sweep of his life and give the reader enough of an interest to pick up something else.
Slate: I was pleased to see that you had at least a mini bibliography in the back.
Helfer: I'm not an expert on Ronald Reagan. I'm enough of an expert to have written this book. What I bring to the table that's different is I can do a comic book of it. But I must have read 15 or 25 books. That Lou Cannon book [President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime] was like an appendage of mine for weeks. But I think Cannon was too close to Reagan. He would make a negative point about Reagan, and another negative point, and another negative point, but then draw a positive conclusion. Richard Reeves' book [President Reagan: The Triumph of Imagination] was the first one I found that added up all the points to come to some critical conclusions. And Garry Wills' book [Reagan's America: Innocents at Home] covers his early life and the years as governor, and then kind of skips ahead to his presidency. In terms of getting a glimpse into someone's brain, that's the best one.
Slate: What advantages do you see to writing Reagan's life in graphic form?
Helfer: Reagan is a particularly interesting subject for this kind of book because, first of all, he reinvented himself so many times. He was a radio broadcaster, a movie actor, the work for General Electric [hosting a TV series and making speeches], governor. And second of all, because almost every phase of his life was so picturesque. There are not too many sitting-around-talking shots until he becomes president.
Slate: The drawings of Richard Nixon by Herblock in the 1950s really did a lot to shape perceptions of Nixon. Were there illustrators who drew Reagan that influenced you or your colleagues?
Helfer: I would say that the editorial cartooning inheritance we have is really a satiric institution. When you have pictures that can comment on the action, you can have the words saying something very straight, very objectively, and then the pictures provide another angle, maybe a less objective angle.
Slate: Can you give me an example?
Helfer: Well, I'm looking here on Page 59. Reagan has these Little Orphan Annie eyes showing this kind of vacancy, hearing the age difference between him and Giscard d'Estaing. It's kind of a subtle comment. Or look at Reagan when he's giving the speech after the Challenger goes down. It's a great image of Reagan, in a speech when he said all the right things. I really like what he said then, and the goodness comes through.
Slate: The flip side, though, is that the use of comic-book drawing might reinforce some of the same mythmaking that Reagan engaged in. Overall, I think this book casts a refreshingly critical eye on Reagan's mythmaking. But the images of Reagan's family struggling financially might be seen as giving those days the same romantic gloss that Reagan did in his own accounts of them.
Helfer: Well, in the childhood, you have a lot of different images. It seemed to me there was a failed father, a mother he relied on a lot. His mother had a bit of the acting bug and she pulled him in her direction. But I don't think it's romantic. We show him finding his father passed out on the front steps. We're always looking for little moments in time that are revealing.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- [audio] 134-Year-Old Man Attributes Longevity To Typographical Error
Sat, 26 Jul 2008 01:00:36 -0400 - Can't Go Wrong With A Cheeseburger, Area Man Reports
Fri, 25 Jul 2008 10:00:21 -0400 - Courageous E-mail To Boss In Drafts Folder Since December
Fri, 25 Jul 2008 08:00:05 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Let the Oil Deals FlowRaad Alkadiri | Congress should not interfere in the oil industry's contract negotiations with the Iraqi government.
- Ronald Kessler: Happy 100th Birthday, FBI!
- Colbert I. King: More D.C. Incompetence
- Binder & Evans: How to Teach Evolution
- Today's Headlines
- Alter: How History Shapes Coverage of Candidates
Sat, 26 Jul 2008 00:01:40 GMT - Obama’s Paris Visit Captivates French Minorities
Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:26:56 GMT - Did a Test Company Mess Up Its Hopes to Go Global?
Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:03:32 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Over the Rainbow: Angie and Jo
Tue, 22 July 2008 16:21:23 GMT - The New Tavis Smiley, Beware!
Tue, 22 July 2008 16:27:58 GMT - Go for the Bronze
Fri, 25 July 2008 4:18:27 GMT - » More from The Root

interrogation









