Monday, May 21, 2012

Book 45: The Walking Dead, Compendium 1, by Robert Kirkman

I've come back around to the graphic novel genre and decided to catch up a bit with the Walking Dead series.  Of course, I'm a fan of the show and I'd read a few of the comics quite a while ago but I was quickly approaching the point where the show would catch up to my reading.  I saw that this compendium was on sale on Amazon for about $30 and it contains the first 48 issues of the comic.  I quickly picked it up and am now reading through them.  It's about 1000 pages but illustrations take up quite a bit of the page.  The series is now around issue 96 so we should see another compendium any time now containing the next 48 issues.

1008 pages means 144 gory, violent pages per day.  Can't wait...


REVIEW:   Holy crap.  This book is a real rollercoaster of emotions.  Never have I been so affected by a comic.  In the beginning, you have a sense of hope and optimism as Rick explores this new world in search of his family.  Very soon, however, things start to get more and more complex and more and more dark.  But let's start with the good stuff.

The art in the book is amazing.  There are great depictions of zombies and they are so detailed that you can tell what they were before the apocalypse from the details of their clothing, etc.  The characters and settings are also equally detailed which adds a lot of realism to the book.  Some of the individual drawings, in particular, a couple of the two-page spreads are works of art.

As good as the art was, however, the story really takes the prize.  The realism of the settings is echoed with the plight of the survivors.  They are reduced to a nomadic lifestyle, struggling to find food and survive against bitter odds.  As soon as someone lets down their guard, they die.  Ultimately, the story ends up being less about zombies and more about what happens to society when the morals and laws of civilization are lost.  It's an epic story and and both the story and art heighten the experience.  Roads choked with abandoned cars, the ruins of suburban housing tracts, empty hospitals and prisons, etc. really bring home the state of the world.

It is also, however, a seriously depressing book.  Following all these people through their troubles and learning to understand their individual situations only to have them killed a few issues down the road is demoralizing.  You feel as the survivors feel, that maybe it's not worth making connections when any of them could die at any time.

Overall, I will definitely pick up the series again (it's already on issue #98) but it will take a little while to get over the trauma of this book.  It's depressing to see the world crumble around you only to watch it built back up through painstaking effort only to have it crumble again worse than before.  It's a masterpiece of human drama in extraordinary circumstances just for the emotional rollercoaster Kirkman takes us on.

9 out of 10.

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