
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Is it unfair to give first volumes full reviews? The opening chapter might be too much setup or tries too hard to impress and has a lackluster middle act. Should it be more of an initial impression rather than being placed under the critical laser scalpel Goldfinger style? No, the answer is no. All art must be judged. I will admit that context matters, but beginnings are not lesser or greater than their middles or even ends. And I will die on that pretentious hill.
Invisible Kingdom is a great book. Not blowing-my-socks-off good, but still shows a huge amount of potential. I'm still going to nitpick, because I have to, but the overall impression is that this is a graphic novel worth reading. And not just the first issue or anything, give the entire first volume a try.
One thing I really noticed was how well the writer and artist synced together. There was just something in how everything flowed that gave me the impression this was a true collaboration. Not just one person writing a script and handing it off to another person to draw it. It feels alive in a way that most comics, even good ones, fail to do.
If I had to pick one knock against the writing, I would say it's the pacing. Bad pacing doesn't necessarily mean it's moving too slowly. Sometimes it can mean that it's moving too quickly as well, and I felt that was the case here. It's in such a hurry to get the ball rolling on the main course it barely spends any time driving up our appetites. With the vaguest of world-building and a party of characters that we only get to know two of them, the story feels it's being rushed. It's not a deal-breaker, but still bothersome. I prefer to sip my whiskey, not gulp it down in one go so it burns my throat.
The art is a feast for the eyes. I'm not going to say it's better than the writing, but it was certainly a pleasure to take in. My only complaint is that it gave me strong Descender vibes, but that might have just been me. Still, I would recommend this book on the art alone.
"This book wasn't 100% for me, and I still really liked it." Should be the promotional tagline for the book. Because if you are the audience for this book, say feminist art nerds who can't admit Firefly is overrated, then this book will be the second coming for you. For me, I'll still be picking up volume two in the near future.
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