***Advanced Readers Copy from Net Galley***
I had no idea who Martin Vaughn-James was until I found this on Netgalley. Graphic novels are a pretty new thing for me, they were never around when I was growing up, and they weren't even called 'Graphic novels', they were simply called 'comic books' or 'pretty cartoon books with pretty colors in it'. Lately I noticed graphic novels are really darn powerful, beautiful, especially after reading a volume of of Neil Gaiman's The Sandman.
This graphic novel is very odd and thought provoking, maybe even a bit disturbing. The artwork is very real, very clean, and it pops out on the pages, because it looks and feels so realistic. The story however, may confuse some readers since it starts out with a pyramid, even though the cage was the one that was really destroying everything and taking everything in with the help of a black blob thing. The writing narrates the story and is the only way to express what is happening, without the text, readers will definitely be clueless.
This book is kind of hard to explain, the story line and everything. It's simply is what it is. It's a very symbolic story in my opinion, a very dystopian story where everything is destroyed by time, except for the pyramid. There is a pyramid, a cage, and a house. The house, from what I can interpret, is suppose to represent something beautiful, and maybe even perfect, but over time, it slowly decays and then the black ink drags it away into the cage, as if the house were human life or the life we desire, and it's is destroyed and dragged away into this miserable cage. Nothing seems to escape the grips of time, everything rots away. Then there is a garden with an abundance of leaves, living organisms, the only living thing that exists, but soon they are destroyed by the black ink. Then a whole abandoned city is destroyed too, and dragged away into this cage. The story kind of has a religious feeling to it, I was immediately reminded of the plague of gnats from the Book of Exodus. I am not religious but for some odd reason I thought of that plague, how it destroyed everything in it's path, like the black ink.
The cage is a horrifying thing in this novel, everything is destroyed and dragged away, to be locked forever, never freed, doomed for an eternity. The cage might be a symbol of evil or the end, a punishment for being too perfect or a form of hell after everything is destroyed by time. The act of existing is punished. It's very hard to explain, my words can't express this, which is what I like, it's very odd and surreal. It doesn't even need somebody else's words to show what makes this graphic novel so thought provoking. Only eyes can tell.
Rating: 3.5/5