Member Reviews
A historical graohic novel retelling with absolutely beautiful watercolour artwork.
You can tell real love had gone into the creating of this book, it's an absolutely beautiful way to consume history and would be great in schools.
This story was written as a graphic novel and I thought the artwork was wonderful. The story didn't really grab me. It has been advertised as a story of a courageous man, a martyr etc., but I (my own personal bias and opinion) saw it as another man during the aftermath of the reformation who decided to split off from Christianity as it had been since Jesus Christ started a Church which He handed down through the Apostles, and started his own cult based upon his interpretations and beliefs.
Yes, that was a horrible time of persecution of all faiths and heretics were risking their lives in staying within the realm of Catholic kings.
I found it sad as it led to more people following something other than what the Lord had intended.
I do thank Plough Publishing for offering me an early read of this book. I do love how varied their works are and how diverse. I learn a lot.
I loved the artwork and the story that was told. I don’t know the Bible that well but I think it was pretty accurate to what actually happened. I need to read the first book to get the complete story.
By Fire by Jason Landsel is an historical graphic novel telling the story of Jacob Hutter during the 16th Century. The information contained at the end is well formulated and documented. I am not a fan of graphic novels and I did not enjoy this format. I did enjoy the information that it contained. I received a copy of this book on NetGalley and I always review every book that I read. I recommend this book if you are interested in history and religious freedom.
I really enjoyed this. I had tried reading the letters of Jakob Hutter but the language was hard to understand and I didn't understand the historical context. This graphic novel made it easy to understand. I was able to see in color what was going on. I understood the issue with Anabaptists and teh chaos. This was well put together and is an easy way to people about historical figures.
Thank you Netgalley and Plough publishing for this wonderful arc. I picked this up because the Protestant reformation is one of my favourite historical periods to learn about. However, all the previous media I'd consumed about it had been more focused on England so reading about it in Northern Italy, Austria and Czech republic was refreshing. I also learned about the Anabaptists for the first time.
When the story focused on Jakob Hutter it was much stronger, as I found that the addition of the fictional character Peter (inspired by a real life spy) quite weak. Jakob was meant to be his friend yet Peter didn't hesitate ratting him out if it meant getting a chance with Katharina who was so obviously not a match for him, if he would only take into consideration other things like her values and life goals instead of just 'her beauty and sincerity'.
The art style was lovely, it was sort of smudgy and simple and paired well with reading about peasant's revolting and forming their own religious sects. The plot was the strongest part of this story and I guess that is because it is rooted in real life historical happenings, and whilst I understand the recounting of these events to the reader seems to be the biggest purpose of this graphic novel, I wish there was better characterization. For example, rather than following the pov of Peter, I would have preferred Katherina's pov, with a focus on what her life was like before being exposed to anabaptism and what made her so inclined to believe in its teachings. It would have also elevated her romantic arc with Jakob. I would have also liked to see more of Jakob x Peter before being exposed to Anabaptism and their previous failed attempt at Protestant reformation.
Overall this was fun to read, quick to get through, educational and the art style was cute. Since this graphic novel is part of a series about radical reformation I will definitely be checking out the other books to get educated in a fun way.
By Fire: The Jackob Hutter Story is the second part of a duology concentrating on the early Anabaptist movements and mostly taking place immediately after its predecessor By Water: The Felix Manz Story. This volume tells a story both more personal and more political than its predecessor, alternating the personal narrative of Jackob Hutter going from a failed rebel to a nonviolent martyr with scenes of King Ferdinand I that show the background of his war against the Ottoman Empire that motivated his persecution of the Anabaptists.
The scenes with King Ferdinand fall slightly flat but are very informative, and they help to underline strong anti-establishment and countercultural nature of the Anabaptists that the authors obviously wish to emphasize in this volume, even more than they did in By Water (I think Hutter’s Fidel-like green shirt and beret in some early scenes may have been accidental, but the execution of Thomas More, author of Utopia, is included in the timeline appendix despite doubtful bearing on events of the story). This book also foregrounds the role of women in the early Anabaptist movement, through the figure of Ursula who connects the two books, and of Katharina, convert and eventual wife of Hutter.
This book is certainly on the Anabaptist’s side. The soldiers of King Ferdinand are sneering and ugly, the brief period of peace in Moravia is conveyed with six pages of village idyll, and the foreshadowing of Hutter’s martyrdom is spread thickly though the story. However, it also shows clearly the deep research that went into the composition, going out of its way to give a careful listing of what details are actually known about the events and people in the appendices, as well as including several primary source documents in part or in full.
Sanka Banergee’s art has the same expressive but slightly odd-looking faces and sometimes rich, sometimes muddled watercolor work that was seen in By Water. In this volume she makes somewhat stronger use of symbolism, often by foregrounding art or architecture within a scene. Both of these volumes have perhaps worked better as heavily illustrated books than a strict comic, since Banergee’s watercolors lend themselves to amazing larger landscapes and symbolic scenes, but do less well as small panels.
Ultimately, both volumes are highly informative works on a quite obscure cultural moment, as well as being visually rich works in the somewhat dry genre of nonfiction comics. They are valuables as works of scholarship, but perhaps more valuable as works of love for a historical moment and its people’s radical counterculture.
I got an ARC of this book.
This was a quick read and the trend of having more legible lettering continued! I am so glad there was an effort to make it so the words were clear and not overly stylized like earlier titles by this publisher. It worked better and I got so much more of the story.
The story was very linear and I was still at times lost. I was not familiar with this part of the reformation movement, so I didn't have that background to help guide my reading. I think there needed to be a bit more meat or help for the reader who is not familiar with the story to fully engage.
The art was wonderful. Characters were clear. The expressions they had were strong. I have to say some of the choices were just breath taking.