Book Preview: Shooting War by Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman
Published August 10, 2007
I love comic books. Every time I open one, it’s almost like holding a movie screen in my hands and watching the progression of action taking shape. However, lately I’ve found it hard to keep up with monthly titles. Too many of them are continued from one month to the next, stretching out least six months or more, and I only get a sense of completion twice a year. This is so the comic book companies can put out what they call “graphic novels.”
In the old days, graphic novels were illustrated stories that couldn’t be told in 22 pages (or 24 pages as when I was growing up). At that time, graphic novels were stand-alone stories that might or might not feature recurring characters.
Somewhere in there, graphic novels simply became a format for comic book companies to re-merchandise product. That form is one of the most successful in publishing these days. When comic book monthly sales were down, the sales of graphic novels were growing. Libraries picked them up. Collectors picked them up. Bookstores put them on the shelves and sold them.
And America, young and old, discovered a brand new love for the format. Graphic novels are published in all sizes these days. My nine-year-old reads pocket-sized versions of Teen Titans while I usually pick up the regular-sized editions of my favorites. If a story captures my interest and I know I will read it over and over again, and if it’s available, I buy it in hardcover.
While I was at Comic-Con in San Diego this year, I got the chance to preview a brand-new graphic novel that is a genuine exercise of the form. The actual book won’t be out until November 19, 2007.
Shooting War by Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman is absolutely amazing. Lappe is a Guerrilla News Network reporter that has provided extensive coverage of the Iraq war. He’s the author of a non-fiction book, True Lies, that was unflinching in its view of the existing war. Lappe isn’t a fan of how things are being handled in that part of the world, nor does he appreciate the slanted news coverage and lack of information that’s been given to the American people.
Dan Goldman co-authored Everyman: Be The People, an illustrated satire of George W. Bush’s presidency and the theft of the American dream. Goldman isn’t noted for pulling punches either.
Together, Lappe and Goldman have created a brand new graphic novel called Shooting War. The book is about a young, independent newsblogger (someone who has independent access to the Internet and specializes in covering breaking stories – which isn’t too far removed from what’s actually taking place on the Internet these days).
Set in 2011, Jimmy Burns is a sympathetic character still wrapped in innocence when he first appears on the pages. The opening scene reveals him on the front line in the Iraq warzone. We don’t yet know why he’s there. The story cuts immediately to a time two months ago when Jimmy has his brand-new satellite-feed camera that allows him to upload to the Internet in real-time (which is a really scary thought if you think about it, and that technology is not that far off when everyone is going to Wi-Fi. This look at emerging technology is one of the things I liked about the book, and that wasn’t even a primary focus.)
- Book Preview: Shooting War by Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman
- Published: August 10, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Adventure, Books: Comics and Graphic Novels, Books: Suspense, Books: Thriller
- Writer: Mel Odom
- Mel Odom's BC Writer page
- Mel Odom's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
Comments
From Wiki: The title is a reference to W. Somerset Maugham's retelling of an old story, which appears as an epigraph for the novel.






Attention, Anthony Lappe, love your work but--please make one correction if Shooting War comes out in another edition. About midway in the book (why aren't the damned pages numbered?) you have Dan Rather talking to Jimmy Burns and quoting from the novel Appointment in Samarra. As the real Dan Rather knows (and I know because I'm the same generation) Appointment in Samarra was written by the American novelist John O'Hara--not by Somerset Maugham.
One of the ideas I get from your graphic novel is that reality matters. So, please, fact check! It is neoCons who don't need to.