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131 pages, Paperback
First published October 25, 2017
More reviews (and no fluff) on the blog http://surrealtalvi.wordpress.com/
The big problem I have been experiencing with science fiction graphic novels is that they tend to ultimately be alienating (pun intended). It's hard to get into the characters and characterization is often jettisoned at the expense of inane philosophizing. Science fiction novelists often get it right: 2001: Space Odyssey or Contact is what Golgotha attempts. But where novels can build characters whose crisis of identity are convincing, I rarely find a graphic novel that can do it in pictures. Ultimately, the books feel barren of identity and oddly disenfranchising. Big questions of humanity are fascinating in print or movies but hackneyed in a graphic novel. Here, Golgotha feels like it is treading familiar sci fi cliches of first contact problems, evil greedy corporations, and the nature of religion and humans. But it does so with a cast of fully white Christian characters all with biblical names such as David, Julie, Michael, etc. Apparently, the future has been white washed into being young, handsome/beautiful, American, Christian, and Conservative Republican.