The Umbrella Academy Is A Winner
By Henry ChamberlainJul 28, 2008 - 10:24
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The Umbrella Academy is quite the baroque affair with extravagant scenarios and a byzantine trail of clues. The opening scenes provide a fantastical premise and enough raw material to keep this going as a never-ending tale. For starters, you have a miracle of forty-three births by undistinguished mothers to extraordinary children. An outrageously rich and famous mad scientist/alien, Sir Reginald Hargreeves, adopts seven of the infants and announces at a press conference that he has done this, "To save the world, of course."
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I don't think there will be an answer to everything conjured up in this book but, given enough time, perhaps most of the loose ends will be addressed. If I can just find out why The Eiffel Tower turned into a spaceship, I'll be satisfied. Don't get me wrong. The main plot, a story of sibling rivalry, does not get lost among the details. Actually, it's the details that keep you going. It is most definitely a pleasure to read and reread.
You'll want to linger on this book. Everything from the little details like the newspaper headlines responding back to the action to spectacles like a carnival set ablaze. Then there's the diner demolished by aliens, a chimp and a ten year-old boy wearing a monocle that can reveal a person's soul. The Umbrella Academy is that something new you've been looking for. Ignore any comics snobs. Remind them that this book won an Eisner and for good reason.
Last Updated: Jan 7, 2012 - 7:41
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