The story took me most of the comic to get into, and by the time I felt like things were getting interesting, the volume was over. I really doubted continuing with it at about 1/3 way in, but decided to push through to the end. I’m glad I did, and I considered raising the score to 4/5 stars for the last 1/3 of the book and for the artwork, but decided to stick with a 3.
Death is weird and strange and quirky. I glanced at another review, and they said this isn’t Neil Gaiman’s Death from Sandman but more like Delirium. I suppose she might seem like a mash up of the two, with Karmen being more zany and bizarre than Sandman’s Death. But all I could think of while reading was how similar she was the Gaiman’s Death. A quirky, beautiful Death who is helps guide her charge to the afterlife and tries to connect with them. In this, there are other Deaths as well, so seeing her juxtaposed against the harsher, more no-nonsense versions of Death only made her seem more like Gaiman’s Death to me.
But that’s when the story got most interesting. We saw another version of Death, Karmela, who seemed cold and beautiful and to the point. She was the first time we saw that Karmen handled death differently, and it gave us some depth to Karmen’s character. By this point, the graphic novel was nearly over. Everything with Cata was suddenly wrapped up quickly after her resisting passing on and struggling with her suicide for 90% of the book. The last 20 pages are my favorite part, and I felt like it was over too quickly. I still haven’t decided if I want to read the next volume when it’s available.
The artwork is beautiful. The colors are rich, and pink and red are a heavy theme through the story. The woman who died by suicide is naked and exploring the city for most of the novel. I enjoyed the dynamic way they drew the exploration and the poses they chose when she was swimming and flying around.
However, something about her being nude the whole time and the only one who is (besides brief glimpses of a couple in a hot tub and what I assume is other dead people waiting for the afterlife), it felt like an excuse to draw a naked, beautiful woman over and over again. Sometimes, the close up panels were shots of her breasts or groin. I have mixed feelings about how this was handled. I loved the art style and all the beautiful women. I believe we should be more comfortable with human bodies and not sexualize nudity. Figure drawing is one of my favorite art forms. But something about it sat strange to me. Of course it was beautiful, flawless looking woman who were naked. We saw a crowd of people waiting for the afterlife in various states of dress with various bodies, but none of them were ever zoomed in on, the panel cropped to only show breasts or groin or buttocks. There were harry butts and dimples skin and chubby women in these pages, and I wish there was more of that. At one point, Cata yells at a random woman on the street for how she’s dressed, saying “You must be really brave to go out dressed like that. Your taste in clothes sucks!” to test if anyone could hear her. I’m not sure why they chose for her to target another woman for her appearance.
I just really have mixed feelings overall. It started off at a 2.5/3 for me but picked up near the end, but was over soon after that. The art was gorgeous, but sometimes felt indulgent. I’m interested in Karmen’s story, but not sure if I will continue or not.
I received this for free on NetGalley in exchange for a review.