Author picture

Michael Jantze

Author of The Norm In Color

27+ Works 162 Members 7 Reviews

Series

Works by Michael Jantze

Associated Works

The Big Book of Urban Legends (The Big book Series) (1995) — Illustrator — 332 copies, 3 reviews
The Big Book of Weirdos (1995) — Illustrator — 225 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
Theodore Norman "The Norm" Miller returns for a fourth (apparently?) iteration as a family man, raising a couple of kids with his wife and coping with this crazy thing called life. Familiar gags about coffee and his alarm clock that have been around since his bachelor days now compete for space with games of catch and bedtime stories.

I'm a fan of comic strips that allow their characters to age -- such as foreword writer Lynn Johnston's For Better or For Worse -- and it works well here as we show more see the perpetually juvenile Norm come to terms with being a father even as his inner child just wants to play with his kids' cool toys.

Michael Jantze seems to have moved away from Norm for a bit in favor of a new character called Mr. Lux, but I hold out hope for a v. 5.0 someday.

Contents: Foreword / Lynn Johnston -- The Norm 4.0 [comic strips originally published 2013-2018] / Michael Jantze -- Venture Capital: Indiegogo Contributors/Patreon Patrons -- Bug Report [A gallery of guest artists] / Garrett Hagen, Jerald Lewis II, Frank Cammuso, Jason Chatfield, Scott Wright, Carlos R. Gomez, Shaenon K. Garrity, David Reddick
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Theodore Norman "The Norm" Miller experiences a midlife crisis with a little concussion and a touch of amnesia.

It's gently amusing with a little bit of melancholy, but it's always nice to catch up with familiar characters after a long absence.

FOR REFERENCE:

Contents: 2016 Introduction -- 2006 Introduction -- Chapter 1. Elemental Concerns -- Chapter 2. A Flash in the Brainpan -- Chapter 3. All Downhill from Here -- Chapter 4. Clean Slate -- Chapter 5. Opportunity Knocks -- Chapter 6. show more Complications and Adventures -- Chapter 7. Negotiations and Love Songs -- Chapter 8. Sonic Boob -- Chapter 9. Same Poop, Same Zip Code -- Chapter 10. Getting Better All the Time -- Chapter 11. Bottom of the Ninth -- Chapter 12. Knocked Up and Loaded -- The Norm Decoded [A gallery of guest artists] / Lincoln Peirce, Lisa Naffziger, Caroline Director, Jerry Scott, Jim Borgman, Graham Overby, Jason Clarke, Chris Eliopoulos, Kellan Stover, Erica Hayes, Joe Murray, April Evensen, Kathy Lynn Kissinger, Sergio Aragones, Jose Villena (Jose Manuel Villena Rodríguez), Amy Blicharz, Wes Molebash, Brianna Jones, Cassandra Canete, Norm Feuti, Jordan Rosato, Waymond Singleton, John Hambrock, Cassie Urban, Cheryl Thrower, Mark Parisi, Vee Eaton, Meg Casey, Scott Wright, Steve Beach, Dan Thompson, Eri Kawakami, Joey Nasser, Daphne Hutcheson, Alex Hallat, Fred C. Stresing, Paul Gilligan, Frank Cammuso, Kelly McNutt, Lauren Sparks, Katie Tamboer, Drew Pocza, Anthony Henderson, Corey Scott Alm, Alex Fajardo, Sara Gilman, Ahmad Rashad Doucet, Anton Emdin, Tiffany Petitt, Paige Money, Stephen Beals, Jerald Lewis II, Mikka Stifler, James Arturo, Matt Doering, Brandon Berger, Jeff Pidgeon, Al Best, Harriet-Lane Ngo, Tom Bancroft, Stephen Silver, David Reddick, Krishna M. Sadasivam, Rick Kirkman, Shaenon Garrity, Ray Goto, Kristina Ness, Rachel Brunn, Tony Bancroft, Stefano Frassetto, Charles Yoakum, Jordan Battle, Carlos Gomez, Garrett Hagen, , Tom Richmond, Jason Chatfield -- The Norm Reloaded [The Norm 4.0] -- Thanks to You -- Indigogo Contributors -- Notes show less
One of the earliest webcomics I remember reading was “The Norm” by Michael Jantze. I don't remember how or where I found it, but I remember being hooked instantly. I enjoyed the story and the artwork which (in many ways reminds me of Charles Schulz's work)...but above all the characters, especially Norm and Reine. Michael created characters that felt real, like our friends, co-workers, neighbors, or that crazy guy outside the 7-11 talking to the trash can. In other words his characters show more felt like we could easily recognize ourselves in. The Norm follows the main character, Norm's, life and his journey to try to figure it all out. This particular issue “The 12 steps of marriage,” was a special issue to show what happened during the missing year of Norm’s life when Norm got married. Because in the comic we jumped directly from the proposal into the second month of Norm’s marriage. Michael at one point wrote because he was more interested in telling those stories than what went on (can’t find the post, but I know it’s there somewhere.) Anyway this is an interesting journey.

As I mentioned above this issue covers the courtship, the proposal, planning of the wedding, and the wedding itself. See Michael decided to skip all of the above. We knew Norm and Reine were in love (and frankly I think most of the readers had been waiting a good while for the characters to realize that,) but what happened after they got married? And that’s what this covers. While it would have been interesting to see everything play out in the comic, Michael was right, it is much more interesting to see what happens afterwards rather than seeing them go on dates and what leads up to it (although I do remember at the time going “wait...what?? I want to know what happened!” And so this short comic gives us the inside scoop of how Norm and Reine got married.

I think what attracted me to the comic most of all is the fact that The Norm is everyman. There’s something about his character that everyone can find something to relate to and how he handles his world around him. Yes of course he’s an artist so he’s a bit different (in one series in the strip he storyboarded his entire day...which put him way behind when he was storyboarding lunch and it was time to go home) but even so he functions as the rest of us. Which is something that at the time was difficult to find in the comic strip world (still is in some cases.) Even better Norm had his...inner characters...that he could talk to, most famous of them was Boy Norm, his inner child, that he could talk problems through (of course at the 6 year old perspective.) And the other characters that show up were also ones that we could recognize.

I like Michael’s simple line drawing style. it captures just the right amount without being overwhelming. I think one of my favorite things about his depictions of the characters though are that we never really see Norm’s parents. We see them as off body voices, the backs of heads, or even in one case in the series as Norm’s childhood crayon depictions of them. For me, it meant that it was easier to imagine they were my own parents, or at least aspects of them. Because by being off body voices it was very easy to see my own parents there.

The Norm was, and still is, one of my favorite strips. Michael has moved on to doing other projects but the book collections can still be found on Amazon and the strip is still running in repeats on gocomics.com. If you’re looking for a quirky, funny, daily strip that has characters that represent you then this is one that you’ll enjoy.
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I'm a huge fan of Michael Jantze's comic "the Norm" and I've missed it greatly since he ended it a few years ago. Luckily I have this collection to feed my Norm addiction. The artwork, while simple, is always excellently drawn and the strip is consistently funny day after day, which is high praise for any comic strip. In this collection we get to the see the continued development of the characters, and watch as Norm and Reine grow together. If you've never read the strip before pick up this show more collection and give it a try. You won't be disappointed. show less

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Associated Authors

Carlos Gomez Contributor
Scott Wright Contributor
Garrett Hagen Contributor
David Reddick Contributor
Jason Chatfield Contributor
Jerald Lewis II Contributor
Frank Cammuso Contributor
Harriet-Lane Ngo Contributor
Steve Beach Contributor
Eri Kawakami Contributor
Katie Tamboer Contributor
Lisa Naffziger Contributor
Graham Overby Contributor
Caroline Director Contributor
Kristina Ness Contributor
Amy Blicharz Contributor
Cassandra Canete Contributor
Cheryl Thrower Contributor
Joey Nasser Contributor
Kelly McNutt Contributor
Paige Money Contributor
Corey Scott Alm Contributor
April Evensen Contributor
Tiffany Petitt Contributor
Sara Gilman Contributor
Daphne Hutcheson Contributor
Vee Eaton Contributor
Cassie Urban Contributor
Jordan Rosato Contributor
Jordan Battle Contributor
Alex Fajardo Contributor
Rachel Brunn Contributor
Ray Goto Contributor
Brandon Berger Contributor
James Arturo Contributor
Mikka Stifler Contributor
Fred C. Stresing Contributor
A. L. Best Contributor
Lauren Sparks Contributor
Kellan Stover Contributor
Shaenon K. Garrity Illustrator
Wes Molebash Contributor
Joe Murray Contributor
Mark Parisi Contributor
Lincoln Peirce Contributor
Stephen Silver Contributor
Lynn Johnston Foreword
Chris Eliopoulos Contributor
Tom Richmond Contributor
Tony Bancroft Contributor
Tom Bancroft Contributor
Paul Gilligan Contributor
Shaenon K. Garrity Contributor
Jim Borgman Contributor
Sergio Aragonés Contributor
Rick Kirkman Contributor
Jason Clarke Contributor
Dan Thompson Contributor
Waymond Singleton Contributor
Norm Feuti Contributor
Brianna Jones Contributor
Meg Casey Contributor
Jerry Scott Contributor
hallatalex Contributor
Jose Villena Contributor
Stefano Frassetto Contributor
yoakumcharles Contributor
Anton Emdin Contributor
poczadrew Contributor
Jeff Pidgeon Contributor
John Hambrock Contributor
Erica Hayes Contributor
bealsstephen Contributor
Anthony Henderson Contributor
Matt Doering Contributor

Statistics

Works
27
Also by
3
Members
162
Popularity
#130,373
Rating
3.9
Reviews
7
ISBNs
21

Charts & Graphs