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[(The System)] [ By (author) Peter Kuper, Preface by Calvin Reid ] [July, 2014]

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Actions speak louder than words in this wordless, fully painted graphic novel. If every action has an equal and oppostie reaction, get ready to run for A corrupt cop is shaking down drug dealers, a serial killer is slaughtering strippers, a political scandal is about to explode, the planet is burning and nobody's tal

Hardcover

First published May 1, 1997

3 people are currently reading
401 people want to read

About the author

Peter Kuper

141 books139 followers
American alternative cartoonist and illustrator, best known for his autobiographical, political, and social observations.

Kuper's work in comics and illustration frequently combines techniques from both disciplines, and often takes the form of wordless comic strips. Kuper remarked on this, "I initially put comics on one side and my illustration in another compartment, but over the years I found that it was difficult to compartmentalize like that. The two have merged together so that they're really inseparable."

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5 stars
114 (30%)
4 stars
154 (40%)
3 stars
86 (22%)
2 stars
20 (5%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews
Profile Image for Dave Schaafsma.
Author 6 books32.1k followers
October 4, 2014
A wordless graphic novel by Peter Kuper first released in 1997, now re-released in 2014. With brightly colored stencil and spray painted drawings that sort of bleed across panels, this is an impressively told story, though the story itself is pretty grim, with what seem to me some pretty stereotypical images of the New York he know and loves well. I think of the silent Charlie Chaplin and Eric Drooker's Flood and Franz Masereel's wordless work, though Kuper seems to me grimmer. Maybe Drooker is equally grim, but there is complexity in his tale… I guess the appeal here is in the artwork, and the very wordlessness of it, that much gets accomplished without the words, and so much gets told. It'e exuberant in its grimness, in a way, maybe calling forth the love/hate relationship many New Yorkers have for their City...
Profile Image for Henry.
174 reviews7 followers
February 1, 2015
A graphic novel, no words, showing a "dark side" to NYC. The standard evil corporation goons with dark glasses doing shady deals, fat white cops taking money from skinny black drug dealers, family loving strippers getting butchered by religious nuts, all the "real stuff" like that. I did enter the world, enjoyed it, but it said nothing to me, and when I put it down I even forgot how it all ended for the characters.
Profile Image for Drew Canole.
3,108 reviews41 followers
April 5, 2023
Another silent comic borrowing elements from Ward and Masareel.

The cool thing is instead of b+w woodcut print, this comic is drawn as though Kuper used spray painted stencils. It's a fun way to modernize those old woodcut graphic novels to the subway art gritty 90s.
2,705 reviews
August 18, 2019
Felt completely current and relevant today.
Profile Image for Maryna Ponomaryova.
679 reviews61 followers
November 15, 2020
Прикольний комікс без слів (майже - тільки газетні заголовки), про те, як пов'язані прошарки суспільства, від бідних до багатих, від злочинців до поліції і тд, доволі похмура картина, але ефектний і круто перегукуються панельки. Хотілось би більше. Зараз читається за 15 хв і ок. Але напевно на 97 рік і в сша ваще бомба пушка був.
Profile Image for K.
255 reviews
May 29, 2018
A graphic novel very light on text that will assault your senses. It paints a picture of a city driven by corruption, greed, and dark needs tempered with the lives of those who are trying to rise above the dark underbelly of their home. Jarring images drive the point home without the need for text in this raw gritty graphic novel.
Profile Image for Stephanie H.
268 reviews11 followers
January 15, 2011
After years of trying to read "The System" I finally managed to read it all the way through. Read is the wrong word as the book as no text, merely pictures.

They say a picture is worth a thousand words, illustrated perfectly in this story. It tells the story of greed, corruption, murder and adultery in a world that is falling apart at the seams. The book opens with the William Blake quote "I must create a system or be enslaved by another mans". The same can be said about the process of writing, social expectations, and what we are trained to think of as "literature" or even "a book."

Within the plot itself, "The System" creates an enjoyable albeit predictable story and characters. However, the format of the book is the only thing that differentiates The System from any other system.
Profile Image for Pavel Pravda.
603 reviews9 followers
April 16, 2019
Geniální a strhující! Peter Kuper vám poodhalí systém života ve velkoměstě. Tento příběh, vyprávěný v komiksu beze slov, se stal legendou po právu!
Celá recenze zde: vlcibouda.net/komiks/system
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Brilliant and exciting! This has all rights to be called legend!
Profile Image for Rick Ray.
3,543 reviews37 followers
June 6, 2023
A gorgeous, wordless comic that follows a series of eccentric events across a grimy, corrupt city. Stylistically, it is comparable to Frans Masereel's The City with the artwork even looking a lot like woodcuts. But where Masereel's The City was focused on vignettes of the many mundane lives of the city dwellers, Kuper seems much more interested in a continuous wordless narrative. Calling his comic The System is an apt name - the people of Kuper's world are ground down by the excesses of the city and the squallor is completely palpable across each page. And yet, there is a rustic beauty to this comic given Kuper's simplistic cartooning style. The colors are also really well done - the heavy use of muddy colors accentuate the atmosphere of The System. This is a quick read, but well worth it especially since you have to pay attention to how the narrative evolves across all three issues.
Profile Image for Rex Hurst.
Author 19 books38 followers
March 13, 2025
A wordless comic showing a variety of characters, from the high to the low, all circulating in New York City. Kuper truly is the successor to Franz Masareel and Lynd Ward's style. This collects the original three part series published by DC, back when they were doing new things. It contains Kuper's standard points of view, often expressed in WWIII magazine, but even if you don't agree with his worldview, you have to admire the art. The system as portrayed is a brutal place, random, violent, uncaring. What little snatches of joy a character gleans is quickly trampled underfoot by the other denizens looking to destroy, steal, and kill whatever they come across. It is a jaundiced view of New York, beautifully drawn.
Profile Image for Janet Azucena.
179 reviews1 follower
February 14, 2021
Peter Kuper por medio su novela gráfica, relata o mejor dicho, por medio de las imágenes (sólo cuando los personajes leen periódicos o algún cartel aparece texto escrito) nos narran diferentes historias ante una realidad muy cercana.

Publicada originalmente en 1997 pero, recopilada en su totalidad en el 2014, sus protagonistas viven en una gran urbe, cada uno tiene un estrato social, corrupción, racismo por mencionar algunos temas aparecen como una radiografía social. Pareciera que el autor visualizaba lo que vendría en el año 2020 a nivel social en Estados Unidos, aunque comparte en sí rasgos comunes en los diferentes países.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ryan.
382 reviews13 followers
May 9, 2021
One of my favorite things about books are the words that make them up. This book had no dialogue; the only words to appear were in the background, on newspapers, billboards, etc. Still, after "reading" it (in like an hour), I feel like it told a story better than most people do with actual words. The weaving in and out of the character's stories, the art, and the plot were all fantastic. Read this book!
Profile Image for Luis.
335 reviews18 followers
January 11, 2025
El merito de esta obra radica en que te cuenta un buen par de historias entrelazadas, sin uso del diálogo e interconectando las viñetas de forma muy audaz.
Ciertamente son como los chiclés típicos de la vida oscura newyorkina: asesinatos, maníaticos, stalkers, strippers, drogas y más pero graficadas de manera única.

Es mi primera obra de Kuper y de seguro no será la última.
Profile Image for Erik.
2,174 reviews12 followers
December 3, 2019
I really liked the colors but didn't care for anything else about the art. The narrative flows well and is easy to follow despite being wordless and having a large cast, but it felt unoriginal and didn't do anything to make me care about any of its characters.
Profile Image for Drake Zappa.
195 reviews3 followers
May 8, 2022
A brilliant use of the comics medium. An intricately woven collection of illustrated narratives coming together cohesively to tell the story of the corrupt systems we find ourselves living in or around throughout our everyday lives. kuper really created something special here.
Profile Image for Gadiel Ochoa.
400 reviews5 followers
April 14, 2023
Una crítica social plasmada en un cómic, el cual comienza como un thriller, pero se va a adentrando a lo peor de la humanidad, ahí es donde uno dice "el ser humano es su mismo antagonista y su misma destrucción". Más siempre hay esperanza.
Profile Image for Kevin MacDonald.
52 reviews
July 17, 2024
Peter Kuper paints an interesting picture of a city in this dialogue-free graphic novel. It probably stands out the most out of the short-lived Vertigo Verité line of comics. Mostly, it stands on its own as an entertaining and tangled web of corruption, crime, and conspiracy.
Profile Image for محمود راضي.
Author 14 books271 followers
December 25, 2018
عمل صامت يقرأ في دفعة واحدة، يأخذك بين عشرات الحكايات الصغيرة والمتناثرة داخل الطاحونة الوحشية للحياة النيويوركية.
Profile Image for Victor.
102 reviews
March 25, 2022
I could not really follow the story, and it’s only pictures. His other books are pretty good though.
563 reviews1 follower
December 4, 2023
Muy recomendado, es increíble las historiS y el activismo y el misterio en un tomo sin diálogo. Me encantó!
Profile Image for Leigh.
182 reviews7 followers
August 10, 2024
This was great!! My ADHD brain has trouble following graphic novels of any kind, much less those without dialogue or captions, but I enjoyed this. It was a quick read and will be great for teaching visual storytelling.
Profile Image for Filipe Siqueira.
121 reviews3 followers
March 13, 2017
Quando pensamos num sujeito icônico que leva a linguagem dos quadrinhos aos seus limites artísticos, geralmente pensamos em Daniel Clowes e suas obras malucas, introspectivas e simbólicas. Mas outros artistas fizeram similares.

Além do próprio Will Eisner, um deles é Peter Krupe, nesse fantástico O Sistema. Sem diálogos, vemos a rotina de Nova York seguindo personagens como executivos de empresa, moradores de rua, grafiteiros, trabalhadores. A história é simples, mas aos poucos vemos uma crescente complexidade que abarca desde a dura cultura das ruas até as negociatas de grandes corporações.

A arte é limpa e cada quadro é um pedaço de narrativa, pulamos de uma história para outra através de links visuais, que demonstram a ligação de tudo num gigantesco sistema.

Ao mesmo tempo em que tudo está ligado, temos a teoria de que tudo se repete e alimenta algo maior, que não está de fato vivo, mas nos influencia a todo momento. A arte é tão bela quanto o roteiro, bem limpa, e lembra a arte das ruas.
Profile Image for Chris Cummings.
103 reviews25 followers
September 3, 2015
A picture can speak thousands of words and tell so many stories. Peter Kuper proves that in this. The System, a book I've heard many good things about, and finally had a chance to get a copy and experience for myself, is a wordless graphic novel telling the stories of the darker veins that run along the body of New York City. The pastel art work is beautiful, breathtaking, and works wonderfully with the style in which we almost find things swimming like dreamscapes in certain scenes. The grit and dirt of NYC, along with its beauty, is shown in this story of sleaze and corruption and family, of murder and work and passion.

I loved this, and I definitely feel like it is one I will flip through numerous times. The panels are just incredible, and there is something in the background each time that you might have missed. It is worth taking this book slowly and staring at each page.

Awesome.

4 out of 5
Profile Image for Keith.
465 reviews263 followers
June 15, 2020
2020-06-15 EDIT: Almost two years later I barely remember anything about this at all, so I guess the key descriptive word here is "forgettable."

Thought I'd see what he looks like when he's not adapting Kafka, which I enjoyed enough. The stencil technique here gives it an unusual-yet-familiar urban look. It's not exactly "wordless" as advertised though; more like "without dialog." There are no speech balloons to hide behind, but significant elements of the plot (such as it is) are revealed in text on newspapers, marquees, screens, and the like. This still renders it textually spare. For the cautious I'll also note that it's about PG-13 for "sexual situations" and some inevitable violence. Overall enjoyable, though hardly essential or revolutionary.
Profile Image for Morgan.
186 reviews15 followers
June 17, 2009
Even after having his art on the cover of Time, Newsweek and The New Yorker, Peter Kuper keeps it real with his wordless portrait of New York City. Told in a series of intertwining narratives, this full color stencil-style comic reads more like a film, reminiscent of the intersecting storylines in Crash and the innovative sequencing of Slacker, while paying fitting tribute to the forefather of the wordless novella, Frans Masereel in conveying the sensation of an urban environ without the use of dialogue.
Profile Image for Brandon.
63 reviews22 followers
March 25, 2007
It has been a while since I read this, but I remember really liking it. If I remember correctly there is no dialog. It is done very well though.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews

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