Some Light War Reading

Some Light War Reading

by Gordon Mood Archie Goodwin, DC Comics, Generation Zero, Graphic Novel Review, Pepe Moreno, post-apocalyptic fiction

GRAPHIC-NOVEL COLUMN: Some light war reading By Dan Brown One of the books I’ve been reading during the U.S.-Iran war is Generation Zero, a 1991 out-of-print collaboration between Pepe Moreno and Archie Goodwin. A good chunk of this graphic novel takes place in the same region where U.S. and Iranian forces are vying for strategic advantage after U.S. President Donald Trump chose to attack the longtime thorn in the side of the United States. It’s not clear as of this writing if the war is on or off, but that doesn’t stop the stylish graphic novel from seeming like the right book for the moment. Generation Zero first appeared in serialized form in Epic Illustrated, Marvel’s answer to Heavy Metal, starting in 1983. The monthly featured creator-owned properties aimed at mature readers.  In Goodwin’s words, Generation Zero is a “post-doomsday fantasy adventure.” I found it worth my while to track down online. One of the eight chapters, titled Desert Hunt, takes place in roughly the same area as the Red Sea – which, after a limited nuclear war, has become a desert hell in this alternate future. There’s an eye-popping panel that spreads across two pages of a beached oil tanker on its side – it was travelling on the Red Sea’s waters before the apocalypse. And it turns out, even in the decades to come, oil is still crucial for transportation. The book stars a trio of army deserters who venture from a refuge in Iceland in an advanced aircraft searching for a new home for their burgeoning civilization, the ultimate goal being to re-start human life on a large scale.  Along the way, they encounter mutated giant snakes, topless belly dancers, ancient ruins, redheads, and an evil army with war supplies to spare. All of it is drawn (and coloured) gorgeously by the Spaniard Moreno. His art reminds me of a combination of France’s Moebius and Italy’s Franco Francavilla. It’s that strong. The action sequences pop off the page. Although it’s a post-nuclear war story, I think Moreno had another fantasy series on his mind when he created Generation Zero. The concluding chapter relates a battle on a catwalk above a barely-suppressed volcano in which it turns out – in a stunning surprise revelation – the two combatants are members of the same family. Sounds like Star Wars to me. If you’re wondering what Goodwin did, the Marvel stalwart supplied the dialogue and captions. It’s an intoxicating, pulpy mix that I liked when I read it for the first time in Epic in the 1980s, and I love as an adult in standalone form. The difference between Generation Zero and other post-nuclear comics, like Threads from Raymond Briggs, is that it depicts the aftermath of a limited nuclear conflict.  The far-fetched notion that the superpowers wouldn’t try to completely annihilate each other was a novel one in the Cold War, as now.  Even given that faint glimmer of hope, this graphic novel remains a nightmare vision of a possible tomorrow for humankind that isn’t entirely off the table.  Dan Brown has covered pop culture for more than 33 years as a journalist and also moderates L.A. Mood’s monthly Graphic-Novel Group book club.

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