A mostly depressing, unfair, backwards-looking attempt at satire that stumbles over itself for its entire 2-issue span, only staying readable thanks to the incredible, detailed art of Alex Ross. Ross carries this thing on his shoulders, bringing some pretty bland, uninspired commentary to life with utterly gorgeous paintings that I think may be some of his best work. But, that can't really save this story from being not much of a story at all.
I'm not 100% sure what Steve Darnall thinks about America after reading this. It feels a lot like an old man shaking his fist at the sky, yelling "Things ain't as good as they used to be!" While it does acknowledge that America has had its troubles in the past (for instance: slavery, various massacres, unfounded wars, you know, those kinds of fun things), the major point Darnall seems to be making is that, back then, America paid for its problems, but now, Americans just want to ignore their problems by consuming too much media. This logic feels, to me, incredibly stupid.
This book doesn't read like a rant, but it certainly feels like there's one bubbling underneath. There's just this "kids these days" undertone to the whole thing. Yes, America is more media obsessed now than it was during World War II. But that is because there are more media to obsess over. It doesn't mean we're dumber, or lazier, or barreling towards oblivion any faster than we were when we were, say, capturing people and forcing them to live their entire lives enslaved. That was some PRETTY BAD SHIT, man. I don't need to hear that "too many channels" is the worst thing that ever happened to America. I mean, there's a section where an evil politician subliminally calls out the American public for "fearing change," but as I read this, I kind of felt like Steve Darnall makes a great representative for the United States Association of Change Fearers.
Now, as I'm saying this, I should clarify that this is what I took away from this book. This could very well not be what Darnall is saying. However, the writing in this is so dense, all over the place, and difficult to follow, that I really have no idea what the overall message is. It's pretty poorly written. There's so much symbolism that the symbols lose meaning and coherence. I'm just saying, the climax of the book seems to imply that America needs to embrace how great it was in the past to continue moving forward. Well, I say screw that. We need to forge ahead and not get caught up in how "American" something is, but rather how "good" it is. Not just for us, for the world.
So, I really didn't like this book. As I said, Alex Ross's art is incredible, and kept me going even when I hated this the most. There are a couple of moments here and there where Darnall makes some decent, small points, but in general I feel like his larger point nullifies all of it.
Also, don't read this on the 4th of July. It's not worth it. Go watch some fireworks and eat a hot dog instead.