<p><b>The legendary cartoonist aims his pen and paper toward his high school summer job</b><br><br>For three summers beginning when he was 16, cartoonist Guy Delisle worked at a pulp and paper factory in Quebec City. <i>Factory Summers</i> chronicles the daily rhythms of life in the mill, and the twelve hour shifts he spent in a hot, noisy building filled with arcane machinery. Delisle takes his noted outsider perspective and applies it domestically, this time as a boy amongst men through the universal rite of passage of the summer job. Even as a teenager, Delisle¿s keen eye for hypocrisy highlights the tensions of class and the rampant sexism an all-male workplace permits. <br><br>Guy works the floor doing physically strenuous tasks. He is one of the few young people on site, and furthermore gets the job through his father¿s connections, a fact which rightfully earns him disdain from the lifers. Guy¿s dad spends his whole career in the white collar offices, working 9 to 5 instead of t