Iraq War veteran Uriarte delivers a graphic novel about conflict and honor as the unstoppable Sergeant King confronts a ruthless enemy, entrenched bigotry, and inflexible protocols in the mountains of war-torn Afghanistan.
The villagers of the Sar-i Sang valley have mined the semiprecious stone lapis lazuli for generations. But when the Taliban finds value in the stone, they descend upon the peaceful villagers and force them into service. On the heels of the brutal organization is the U.S. Marine Corps, with plans to win the hearts and minds of the local population and restore U.S.–sanctioned order to the region. We follow the efforts of one platoon, specifically their sergeant, a massive man named King from the “Battle Born” state of Nevada, so named because it achieved statehood during the Civil War. The use of a touchstone as quintessential as the Civil War nods to the story’s interest in painting with a broad brush; between scenes of gorgeously illustrated and often graphic action, characters muse on how the guise of “civilization” has excused the most savage of acts and appeals to a morality higher than the rule of law. The archetypal nature of some characters can ring a bit hollow or familiar: King, an African American man, comes from a broken home; his white lieutenant with British parents has refined manners but no street smarts; the Southern white soldier is a Confederate flag–waving racist (there is liberal use of the n-word). Uriarte’s illustrations are lush and vivid, with an appealing manga-tinted realism. The panels are often large, with frequent splash pages and some two-page spreads, showing the details of characters’ expressions or slowing the action to amplify drama. The effect is sumptuously cinematic with the depth of an action movie.
War is hell but beautiful.