#15: Concrete: Think
Like a Mountain
Storytellers: Paul Chadwick
Publisher: Dark Horse
Year Of Publication: 1989-1998 (collection: 2006)
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 198 pages
Storytellers: Paul Chadwick
Publisher: Dark Horse
Year Of Publication: 1989-1998 (collection: 2006)
Page Count (can be approximate or in # of issues format): 198 pages
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT WRITING / STORYTELLING:
It’s an old
lesson – and maybe more of a reiteration – that whenever you have characters
with competing viewpoints, you have to view each character’s argument from the
standpoint that “they are in the right.”
If we are lazy in contemplating both sides of the argument – spelling it
out in positive terms as a true activist/believer would do – then the dialogue
will not ring true, and it will come across as rhetoric rather than a story.
WHAT I LEARNED ABOUT ART / STORYTELLING:
One thing
Chadwick likes to do often is show the hidden parts of nature (whether in the
underbrush or beneath the Earth’s surface) in a panel. It not only makes for an interesting and
distinct visual stamp for Concrete, but it also ties in with the main character’s
personal ideology. Utilizing the visuals
to enhance characterization is an interesting tool that I’d like to try and use
in my own work.
Also, incorporating
the entirety of the scene into the creation of the images can be effective and
engaging. In a
specific instance in chapter 1 of “Think Like a Mountain,” the scene turns to
the roof of Concrete’s home, which is on fire.
Concrete has solar collectors on the roof, and Chadwick uses them as
inset panels of this scene to show the reaction of those on the ground to the
person on the roof who is dumping the contents of the water collection tank
that Concrete threw up there to stop the fire from spreading.
RECOMMENDATION: B-
NOTES / REVIEW / SYNOPSIS This book collects the 6-issue series “Think Like a Mountain” along with a number of shorter stories that have been published elsewhere – most often Dark Horse Presents. This was the last of the major Concrete collections for me to read and it was typical Concrete, which means it is a well-crafted book. Chadwick managed to make the main narrative flow naturally, and his art was stunning in its detail and imaginative imagery. Some of the shorter stories were hit or miss for me, and even when I didn’t enjoy a story, or felt like it didn’t work fully, I appreciated the experimentation incorporated by Chadwick in many of these vignettes. If you like good comics, this is worth reading, and if you’re already a Concrete fan, then you’ll really enjoy this.
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