Most problematic, though, is the fourth member of the travelling band: Dan, an Iraq war veteran from Seattle who is returning to the region for… for what, is never really made clear. Journalist Sarah has some idea of a story built around Dan confronting his actions in the place where he was previously a combatant, but nothing much comes of that. Dan spends the bulk of this book acting as an American war apologist, and the fact that roughly 100 pages are spent in the Kurdish areas of Turkey and Iraq, where the civilian population is portrayed as grateful for the American campaign, does little to change his views. Late in the book, Dan undergoes what might be seen as a crisis of conscience — gosh, he even acknowledges that murdering hundreds of thousands of people might have been a bad thing! — but for readers for whom the criminality of the Iraq invasion is already obvious, this revelation will be too little, too late.
Ultimately, this book is about a handful of Americans viewing the mess that their country made, rather than about the people who were caught up in that mess. There are exceptions, and some of them are powerful, like glimpses of a stronger book that might have been. Sam is an Iraqi refugee who made his way to the United States in the late 1990s with his family, settled in and even changed his name, only to get enmeshed in a web of post-9/11 allegations that see him deported to Syria. His story forms a backbone to the book that Glidden returns to periodically. It’s not enough to offset soldier Dan’s recurring story, but it helps.
Glidden herself is not a journalist; she is travelling in the region with friends of hers who have vague ideas of hunting up stories of refugees and internally displaced people living through the after-effects of the Gulf War.
Finally, a graphic novel derives much of its power from its visuals, and while Glidden’s watercolour paintings of the countryside are often evocative, they are sadly much less common than her simple face shots. This is the comic book equivalent of a talking-head documentary, and as such it is visually static. Pages are broken up into simple grids of eight or nine panels, with conversations playing out back and forth across an entire page. Compositionally, the repetition is dull, and the effect is to flatten the movement and render it lifeless.
Rolling Blackouts might be of interest to people with a curiosity as to how journalism gets produced, and who don’t mind that the countries mentioned in the subtitle are often little more than painted backdrops for these Americans to host their conversations. Readers with a strong desire to explore the effects of war and the subsequent power vacuum left when the troops leave, however, would be better off searching elsewhere.
The reviewer is the author of five novels, including The Preservationist and Fallen.
Rolling Blackouts: Dispatches from Turkey, Syria, and Iraq
(GRAPHIC NOVEL)
By Sarah Glidden
Drawn & Quarterly Publications, US
ISBN: 978-1770462557
304pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, January 8th, 2017