Meet Andy, a quiet, lonely boy growing up in the 70s who has one friend and is being raised by his grandfather who is likely developing Alzheimer's. One day by chance Andy smokes a cigarette and discovers that nicotine activates "super powers" where he gains super strength. Couple that with his father's legacy leaving Andy a handheld "death ray" once he realises his super powers, and Andy goes from being an awkward teen to having the power of life and death in the palm of his hand.
Andy is your typical Clowes-ian character - awkward loner, angry at the world, cynical yet disarmingly open about their bizarre world views, and prone to strange acts in public. Quirky in a word, and Andy is very much in the vein of other Clowes characters from Ghost World, Ice Haven, Mr Wonderful, Wilson, and so on.
The book follows the story of Andy and his strange friend Louie as they try to find real world applications to Andy's Death Ray, at first picking out school bullies, then moving onto targets in the wider world. It can be read as a straight story with Andy actually having real super powers and the death ray really is a death ray but Clowes seems to be inviting interpretation in these incidents. Andy "blacks out" when he gets super powers, realising afterwards that he's pummelled someone's face into a bloody mess and the death ray works by "popping" someone out of existence in an instant - are the two connected? Is Andy in fact just an out and out psycho "popping" people out of existence with his hands?
Or maybe it's a far more depressed version of "Kick Ass", especially as Andy makes a costume to wear, and Clowes is showing how lonely and empty being a superhero is and how superpowers don't make you happy.
Either way it's a pretty interesting, if gloomy, read with Clowes' great art and imaginative layouts. A must for fans of Clowes, though this appeared in his comic book series "Eightball" a few years ago so if you're a subscriber to that you've already got this, but fans of indie comics will find plenty to enjoy here as well.