Try GOLD - Free
The Secret to Happiness
The Atlantic
|June 2025
Alison Bechdel has spent a lifetime worrying. In a new graphic novel, she finds something like solace.
In the opening scene of Spent, billed on its cover as a “comic novel,” Alison Bechdel’s cartoon avatar, also named Alison, has rearranged her sock drawer in an effort to stave off “the feeling of impending doom.” Ever since she was born on the page four decades ago, Bechdel’s fictional self has regularly journeyed between insecure and panicked, conveyed by the artist through subtle downturns in her tiny dash of a mouth. She perseverates about impending nuclear war, environmental disaster, “patriarchal death culture,” girlfriends cheating on her, the local gay bookstore where she works closing down.
For fans who have followed Bechdel from underground lesbian cartoonist in the 1980s to best-selling author of Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, and then watched with amazement as her life on the page went 3-D in a multiple-Tony Award-winning musical, the doom-tinged update in Spent will not come as a shock: She can still get pretty freaked out.
Bechdel’s latest title refers to late-stage capitalism, the semi-facetious frame for the book (which is broken into “episodes” titled “The Commodity,” “The Process of Exchange,” and so on), but like almost everything else in her graphic storytelling, the title is also self-referential: It describes her age and her state of exhaustion, and perhaps hints at a concern that aging lesbians might not command much of an audience. Cartoon Alison now has lines under her eyes and graying hair, though otherwise she looks more or less as she did 40 years ago: butch haircut, eyes wide and worried, hunched shoulders, and, even in her 60s, the air of a teenage boy who does and doesn’t want to be picked for the team.
So imagine my surprise when, toward the end of
This story is from the June 2025 edition of The Atlantic.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The Realist Magic of Philip Pullman
The Golden Compass author tells us how to love this world. It's not easy.
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
We Are Not One
When it came into view, Doctor Rustin was struck by its size.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE COMING ELECTION MAYHEM
Donald Trump's plans to throw the 2026 midterms into chaos are already under way.
22 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The One and Only Sammy
The astonishing, confounding career of Sammy Davis Jr.
7 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
GET A REAL FRIEND
The false promise of AI companionship
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
PRESIDENT FOR LIFE
Donald Trump is trying to amass the powers of a king.
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Last of the Literary Outdoorsmen
Thomas McGuane—fisherman, hunter, rancher, writer—says “good riddance” to his kind.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE MISSING KAYAKER
What happened to Ryan Borowardı?
44 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Man Who Rescued Faulkner
How the critic Malcolm Cowley made American literature into its own great tradition
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
Patti Smith's Lifetime of Reinvention
Nearing 80, the punk poet reflects on the twists in her story that have surprised even her.
12 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

