All Quiet on the Western Front
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Hailed by many as the greatest war novel of all time and publicly burned by the Nazis for being “degenerate,” Erich Maria Remarque's masterpiece, All Quiet on the Western Front, is an elegant statement on a generation of men destroyed by war. Caught up by a romantic sense of patriotism and encouraged to enlist by authority figures who would not risk their lives to do the same, Paul Bäumer and his classmates join the fighting in the trenches of the Western Front in World War I. He is soon disenchanted by the constant bombardments and ruthless struggle to survive. Through years in battle, Paul and those he serves with become men defined by the violence around them, desperate to stay as decent as they can while growing more and more distant from the society for which they are fighting. This graphic novel recreates the classic story in vivid detail through meticulous research. The accurate depictions of uniforms, weapons, trenches, and death brings the horrors of the Western Front to life in a bold new way.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This disappointing graphic adaptation of Remarque's classic novel, by Vansant (The 'Nam), dutifully relays the chronicle of Paul Baumer, who, along with three of his friends, enlists in the German army shortly after the start of WWI and is sent to the Western Front. Like its predecessor, the comic concentrates on the depressing realities of war and the alienating effects of fighting for a homeland from which the soldiers feel a growing sense of distance. But the adaptation reads like a sketched-over executive summary of the brilliant original; the long stretches of narration drag on, and often omit the best parts of Remarque's use of language, such as his ability to turn a phrase. The realist-style art also missteps, for example where the naive young soldiers, introduced at the outset as "all 19 years old," can look as grizzled as the veterans, and their awkward proportions occasionally stretch the limits of credibility. The coloring also puzzles, with changing monochromatic backgrounds used without apparent thought or narrative import. The effort feels rushed; educators and fans of the original looking for a quality graphic adaptation would do well to wait for a worthier venture.