BOOK TITLE: Ghostbusters: Spectral Shenanigans, Vol. 1
AUTHOR: Erik Burnham
YEAR: 2018
GENRE: Graphic Novel
SUBGENRE: Paranormal Comedy
GRADE: A
Sometimes a piece of literature doesn’t have to be super
complex in order to earn an A grade from me. It can just be good simple fun
like this one was. That’s really all I want from the books I read: to enjoy
them and recommend them to anyone else who might be listening. And really, what’s
not to love about the Ghostbusters franchise? If you’ve seen the 1980’s films
or the cartoon that came out in the same decade, you know what you’re going to
get with this series of comics: witty dialogue, paranormal goodness, slime
(lots of slime), and main characters who play off each other’s flaws and
strengths perfectly. Yes, Peter Venkmann is a creepy ladies’ man, but he’s a
likeable creepy ladies’ man with friends who will keep him in check. He’s also
a bit whiny when it comes to hard work, which is actually quite relatable. I
can’t find any major flaws in this graphic novel, or maybe I really did want to
enjoy it and I got my wish.
Even with the simplicity of the various plots, there’s one
story that managed to stick out in my mind as kind of a heartbreaker. It’s the
one where Egon Spengler tracks down an old college friend who carries death in
a little pocket dimension. The friend was killed in a major car wreck, but you
wouldn’t know that by the fact that he’s still walking around. The thing is, he
doesn’t want to be transported to the other side. He wants to live his life and
do all the things he wanted to do before the crash. We as the audience are so
used to slimy creatures getting zapped with nuclear lasers that we don’t often
see little nuggets of philosophy like this one. Will Egon send his friend to
the netherworld like his job entails or will he just let it slide out of
sympathy? That’s something you’re going to wrestle with for a while even after
that particular story ends.
Another story that caught my attention was the final one where
one of the Ghostbusters (I don’t remember which one) picks up a strange woman
on the side of the road and tries to take her home. The only thing stopping him
from doing that, of course, is the truck driver ghost who keeps stalking her.
Nobody ever drove on these roads and lived to tell about it. Even if you
believe this story has a happy conclusion, you still get chills from how it ended.
You want to learn more about what the hell happened. You might want to pick up
volume two to figure things out. These stories are too funny to be legitimately
frightening, but this ending story comes pretty close once it draws to its
conclusion. I won’t spoil the ending, but you’ve been warned.
One last note before I go: there’s a series of stories that
take place when the Ghostbusters drive around America looking for jobs to do. They
go to places like Detroit, New Orleans, Area 51, and a city close to where I
live, Seattle. The attention to detail and the accuracies of how these cities
are portrayed is one way for the author to flex his research muscles. Seattle
actually looked like Seattle, Pike Place Market and all. Area 51 had all the
aliens you could ask for, but the Ghostbusters knew that they were really
ghosts. I love that even in a supernatural environment, aliens are treated with
the same skepticism that they are in the real world. That made me chuckle on
the inside. New Orleans was a metaphorical gold mine for ghosts given the city’s
history with necromancy and voodoo, which is again accurate. These details go
to show how important research is to an author’s success. I’m jealous!
As I said at the start of this review, this graphic novel
and all the stories within don’t have any flaws that jump out at me. Yes, it’s
not the most philosophical or groundbreaking thing I’ve ever read, but then
again, it doesn’t have to be. Sometimes I just want to have a good time.
Sometimes I just want to escape my reality for a little while. Is that alright with
everyone here? This book gets a perfect five out of five. It’s a nice return to
reading for me and that’s all I really need.
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