cover image The Sacrifice

The Sacrifice

Bruce Mutard. Trafalgar Sq., $24.95 trade paper (256p) ISBN 978-1-74175-117-8

The first of three planned volumes, this heavy (in both size and content) graphic novel explores the Australian experience during WWII. It’s slow going and talky, as various characters converse about world events beginning in 1939, impending war, and continuing economic struggles. The lead, Robert Wells, has a management job and a bent to pacifism. He’s left the Catholic Church although he still believes in God. He’s fascinated by the talented voice of the daughter of German refugee neighbors, although put off by the way she’s been indoctrinated with ideas about the superiority of her type. His brother joins the military; his girlfriend supports communism; the young girl runs wanton during the war. They all debate capitalism, restrictive government policies, the economy, ethics, and religion. A glossary would have been appreciated for non-Aussie readers not familiar with the slang, cultural terms, and local leaders of the time, although much can be determined by context. The art is historically evocative heavy, but sometimes stiff. The story reads as though looking at a series of old photographs, an intriguing personal glimpse of history that rewards those who are willing to learn more of the Australian experience, but probably without mass appeal outside its native land. (July)