From “the heir to R. Crumb and Art Spiegelman” (Economist) comes a monumental, wordless depiction of the most infamous day of World War I.

Launched on July 1, 1916, the Battle o...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

From “the heir to R. Crumb and Art Spiegelman” (Economist) comes a monumental, wordless depiction of the most infamous day of World War I.

Launched on July 1, 1916, the Battle of the Somme has come to epitomize the madness of the First World War. Almost 20,000 British soldiers were killed and another 40,000 were wounded that first day, and there were more than one million casualties by the time the offensive halted. In The Great War, acclaimed cartoon journalist Joe Sacco depicts the events of that day in an extraordinary, 24-foot- long panorama: from General Douglas Haig and the massive artillery positions behind the trench lines to the legions of soldiers going “over the top” and getting cut down in no-man’s-land, to the tens of thousands of wounded soldiers retreating and the dead being buried en masse. Printed on fine accordion-fold paper and packaged in a deluxe slipcase with a 16-page booklet, The Great War is a landmark in Sacco’s illustrious career and allows us to see the War to End All Wars as we’ve never seen it before.

24 plates

Similar Products

It Was the War of the TrenchesPalestineJournalismSafe Area Gorazde: The War in Eastern Bosnia 1992-1995Historical Thinking Skills: A Workbook for World HistoryOnward Towards Our Noble DeathsTardi's WWI: It Was The War Of The Trenches/Goddamn This War Gift Box SetWorld War One: 1914-1918 (Campfire Graphic Novels)All Quiet on the Western FrontAP World History: An Essential Coursebook, 3rd ed