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Chosin: To the Sea

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Based on the epic true story of the Chosin Reservoir campaign of the Korean War! Created by Brian Iglesias and Richard C. Meyer. (This comic is also available as part of the graphic novel, Hold the Line) Bravery doesn't always wear a uniform. When a small North Korean village is caught in the middle of the horrific fighting between the Americans and the Chinese, two young children must flee for their lives. Mina and her little brother Jae Sun brave a 60-mile, hell-on-earth journey with the hope of honoring their parent's final wishes of escaping to freedom. Through sheer perseverance-- and the help of a few Marines-- Mina and Jae Sun make it to the sea and are rescued in one of the single largest seaborne evacuations of refugees in world history.

36 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2014

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Profile Image for Rachel Brune.
Author 33 books100 followers
July 12, 2014
Although the documentary “Chosin” primarily focuses on the Marines who fought this action during the Korean War, the comic book, written by Brian Iglesias, with lettering and art by Otis Frampton, takes a different angle, as seen in the front cover. As many people who have served overseas have experienced, the enemy is not the only one running around the battlefield. Civilians — residents, refugees, the young, the old — are there as well, sometimes victimized by one side, sometimes by the other, often by both. This comic tells the story of two children, fleeing from the Chinese, who join the exodus from North Korea with the help of an old woman and the US Marines.

The artwork is plain, stark, and graphic. There are no euphemisms or fades to black. There are subtle elements that a reader might miss on the first pass, such as the American who gives the little girl his jacket before bleeding out from wounds sustained in fighting, or the old man who scolds the girl later for wearing the jacket, telling her that the Chinese will kill her if she’s seen wearing it. Of course, she has already seen the Chinese killing people who weren’t wearing American clothing.

The writing is direct and to the point. Although there are moments of heroism, they are not presented in a jingoistic manner. Instead, they are presented as just another day in the life of the Marines fighting in the conflict. True to the comic’s pedigree as part of a documentary project, the story is bookended by archival photographs and a short background of the history of the Battle of Chosin and the evacuation of the North Korean refugees.

Although there are two comics in the project, this one stands alone as a complete story. I both recommend it highly, and am looking forward to picking up and reading the other, "Chosin: Hold the Line."
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