BOOK TITLE: Preacher, Vol. 6: War in the Sun
AUTHOR: Garth Ennis
YEAR: 1998
GENRE: Graphic Novel
SUBGENRE: Horror
GRADE: Pass
Reverend Jesse Custer, Tulip O’Haire, and Cassidy’s search
for God continues in the Arizona
desert, where the Grail leader Herr Starr and an entire army are waiting for
them. Herr Starr’s rise to power within the Grail has been a long time coming,
complete with backstabbing, politicking, and rubbing shoulders with the highest
authorities. With complete control of this Christian shadow society, Starr’s
power hungriness won’t end until Jesse Custer and the Patron Saint of Killers
are both finally dead and buried in the desert sands. Will nuclear missiles,
tanks, and machineguns be enough for these two powerful entities?
Yes, the Grail is a fictional religious entity that controls
all of the world’s governments and corporations. But despite being fictional,
their portrayal is brutally honest when it comes to how power is traded across
entities. Conspiracy theorists would go nuts with this kind of material. The
Grail moves the money, they keep world leaders under their thumbs, and they do
it all in the name of God. Ordinary people don’t have access to that kind of
power, so all they can do is protest peacefully and most of the time it’s not
enough. If you’ve ever thought there was something out there holding you down
and keeping you from advancing, this is the comic book for you. It won’t give
you the strength you need to carry on, but it’ll be otherwise entertaining and
slightly educational.
Another thing I enjoyed about this graphic novel was the
continuation of the storyline between Tulip and Cassidy. If you remember from
Volume Five (Dixie Fried), a drunken Cassidy confessed his love for Tulip
behind Jesse’s back and that made Tulip despise the Irish vampire for it. While
I won’t say how this storyline continues (you know, because of spoilers and
all), it will reach its climax by the end of the book. Hearts will be broken,
anger will be felt, and everybody comes out of it with sadness in their souls. Maybe
your own heart will break alongside the three characters.
Of course, I’d be remised if I didn’t mention just how
brutal and messed up everything in this comic book is, the violence not being
the deadliest among them. Anybody can shoot a tank cannon or drop a missile
with the press of a button. But can you dine on flesh like it’s Taco Tuesday?
Can you make the strangest requests to prostitutes imaginable? Can you dive
into an eight-hundred pound man’s belly and cause him to throw up? Can you
stomach the inbreeding that goes on to keep the “true savior’s” blood pure? Can
you listen to New Orleans
tunes if they’re unintelligibly sung by a teenaged boy with a grossly deformed
face? Garth Ennis has a vivid imagination and he’s not afraid to use it when
penning copies of Preacher. That’s what I love about his work.
Another awesome volume of Preacher is in the books.
Everything that made the previous volumes great is neatly packaged into this
one as well. It makes me want to finish the final three volumes, which is what
any book should be doing in the first place: making you hunger for more.
Preacher is one of my all-time favorite comic book series and for that I’m
giving this volume a passing grade. I anticipate more greatness in the volumes
to come.
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