As fictional stories packed with enough inflammatory rhetoric to set off the apocalypse prophesied in this series itself go, The Saved looks like it is going to be packing one hell of a wallop. At least once, and if it finds the audience it seeks. Finding that readership could prove to be another problem entirely.
The key here is just to keep in mind that it is a fictional story - even if it is one steeped pretty deep both in current political events and the apocalypse fever which has swept America since at least 9/11. One thing is for sure. The folks at Revelation Comics have come up with the most overtly political and topical graphic novel this side of V For Vendetta. Which, at least for my money, is a good thing.
Give upstart writer R.T. Both credit for this much. She knows her rock and roll. In this, the second chapter of a projected six-book series, we meet two of the central characters, Bowie and Slade (like I said, the lady knows her rock and roll) in the very first frame.
The year is 2052 and America is a post-apocalypse Christian theocracy headed up by President Jeb Bush. Bowie and Slade (one black, one white) are the skate-punk sons of Rip Taylor. You heard me right. This writer apparently has a sense of humor in addition to her knowledge of seventies rock. Anybody remember Rip Taylor, the ridiculously effeminate, confetti tossing comic of the seventies?
Anyway...
Taylor is apparently some sort of high-ranking military guy in Jeb Bush's America. Which has by this time been reduced to a post-apocalyptic Supermall somewhere in Kansas where the remaining population waits for the rapture of the Christian faithful while shopping its brains out in some sort of state of ignorant, obedient bliss.
I like this already.
But, if this is starting to sound like it's pretty heavy-handed stuff to some of you out there, well you would be dead on the money. Both does little to mask her feelings about both the politics of present-day America and its relationship to evangelical Christians here. This series is even being promoted somewhat as a leftist sort of response to the wildly popular Left Behind series of fictionalized Christian novels about modern-day Bible prophecy.








Article comments
1 - Gordon Hauptfleisch
Good review, Glen. I'm not sure we needed a heavyhanded leftist response to "Left Behind," but then again I didn't think we needed the original "Left Behind" in the first place.
However, any story that features the skate-punk sons of Rip Taylor sounds irresistible and has "guilty pleasure" written all over it.
2 - Glen Boyd
Color me guilty as charged Gordon. Thanx for the comment.
-Glen
3 - Gordon Hauptfleisch
Congratulations & (non-existent) Fabulous Prizes! This article has been chosen as an Editor's Pick.
4 - Glen Boyd
Thanx so much Gordon. Just so you know, I'm going to reviewing every installment of this series as they are sent to me (there are supposed to be six total). It will be interesting to see the twists and turns as Slade and Bowie skate their way through the theocratic apocalypse. Stay Tuned.
And thanx!!
-Glen
5 - Gordon Hauptfleisch
I envision Slade and Bowie tossing out confetti during their skating escapades, perhaps breaking out into song, perhaps "Mama Weer All Crazee Now," or "Alladin Sane" ("Cracked Actor" would be good too. Somehow I associated the Alladin Sane album with them--maybe it's that Rip Taylor hair Bowie had at that stage).
I'll have to stay tuned...
6 - Lamya
this website is so effin stupid and not helpful at all