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The Furnace: A Graphic Novel

door Prentis Rollins

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One decision. Thousands of lives ruined. Can someone ever repent for the sins of their past?When Professor Walton Honderich was a young grad student, he participated in a government prison program and committed an act that led to the death of his friend, the brilliant physicist Marc Lepore, and resulted in unimaginable torment for an entire class of people across the United States. Twenty years later, now an insecure father slipping into alcoholism, Walton struggles against the ghosts that haunt him in a futuristic New York City.A dark, compelling work of psychological suspense and a cutting-edge critique of our increasingly technological world, The Furnace speaks fluently to the terrifying scope of the surveillance state, the dangerous allure of legacy, and the hope of redemption despite our flaws.… (meer)
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‘The Furnace’ by Prentiss Rollins opens with learned physicist Doctor Walton Honderich on a plane to New York with his wife, Piper, and his daughter, Clara. He’s depressed and drinking too much because to have a child in this world is to live in constant fear. Along with that, he has guilt.

Soon after arrival, he sees a Gravitationally Autonomous Restriction Drone, a GARD hovering over a crowd in Manhattan. Walton flees. It doesn’t bother anyone else in the crowd but he knows more than them.

A GARD is a sphere covered in spiky protrusions, mostly cameras and projectors, that make the subject under it invisible to all around, though they know he’s there because they can see the GARD. The subject rendered invisible and separate by the guard is a criminal, a former prisoner in a maximum security jail now released into the world under its strict regime. The prisoner can’t interact with other people in any way at all but can move about freely in a state of solitary confinement. A great idea, albeit opposed by some of those damn, soft-hearted liberals when it was implemented. Later, it doesn’t look like such a great idea but I won’t give away the plot.

Doctor Honderich was a key man in the development of the GARD, along with his colleague, Marc Lepore. After his encounter in New York, the story continues to show us more of Walter’s tortured existence. Financially, he’s cosy middle-class but his mind is messed up. One morning in the hotel, when his wife is off sightseeing, he sits down with his daughter and tells her the whole story. She gets it dressed up as a fable about cookies sealed in an oven but we get the facts. There’s a lot about Walton’s own difficult childhood and plenty about that of his colleague and mentor, Marc Lepore. In fact, the theme of the book is partly that of Phillip Larkin’s famous poem ‘This Be The Verse’.

The other theme, obviously, is clever scientists showing off their brain power without any consideration of what the ultimate effects might be for real people, an issue as old as Oppenheimer. It’s all handled subtly. There’s a huge Federal Department in charge of GARDs and, in different hands, this might have turned into a dramatic and violent thriller with secret agents hunting them down. Prentiss Rollins keeps the story in a low-key, intimate and personal, more concerned with the effects on people than slam-bang action. It works.

Tucked into the narrative are various nuggets of wisdom about honesty, sexuality, ambition and other flaws of human nature. There’s an interesting story about a famous scientist who vanished one day and I liked Hofstadter’s law of complex tasks: It always takes longer than you think it will, even if you take into account Hofstadter’s law.

This is a rich and rewarding book, the best graphic novel I’ve read in a while. I consumed it in one sitting on a sunny Saturday afternoon when I should have been doing something more useful instead. The story takes 192 pages and every one of them is worth it. The art isn’t spectacular but it’s competent and realistic, suited to the subject matter. Prentis Rollins appears to have done all his own work and God alone knows how long that took (longer than he thought it would, even taking into account Hofstadter’s law) but it was certainly worth it in the end.

Eamonn Murphy ( )
  bigfootmurf | May 13, 2020 |
Rollins errs in telling this story about the future of incarceration from the perspective of the least interesting person in the book. Walton Honderich is a jackass loser when we meet him and subsequent flashbacks show he has always been a jackass loser.

After a lifetime of regret, Honderich reflects back on how he was supposed to help a tiny Tony Stark clone make a new system of individualized imprisonment hacker proof. Unintended consequences follow. The scenes with tiny Tony Stark almost push this book into the realm of interesting, but then the focus turns back to Honderich, and I found myself grinding through to the end purely out of a compulsion to finish, not out of any desire to see how it ends. ( )
  villemezbrown | Nov 11, 2018 |
Pros: decent artwork, interesting story, thought provoking

Cons: left with questions

In the future US Department of Gard Administration and affairs needed a new way to deal with the prison population. It created GARD, a ball that hovers 1 meter behind and 1.5 meters above the prisoner, creating a field that renders the prisoner unseen and unheard.

This is the story of Walton Honderich, who must come to terms with how his brief contact with the unfinished GARD program in university affected the rest of his life.

The story starts a bit slow and gains momentum through flashbacks. There’s a fair bit of philosophical dialogue which makes it surprising that so little time is spent debating the ethics of what the GARD program will do. The graphic novel does make you think about it though, the ethics and about how many people along the way could have stopped the program and didn’t.

The artwork is done in a realistic style with subdued colours. It’s not my favourite style, but it’s well done.

The art style and philosophy reminded me of Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta and Watchmen, though maybe a ‘light’ version, as the story isn’t as deep or heavy handed here.

It’s an interesting story and worth a read or two. ( )
  Strider66 | Jul 10, 2018 |
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One decision. Thousands of lives ruined. Can someone ever repent for the sins of their past?When Professor Walton Honderich was a young grad student, he participated in a government prison program and committed an act that led to the death of his friend, the brilliant physicist Marc Lepore, and resulted in unimaginable torment for an entire class of people across the United States. Twenty years later, now an insecure father slipping into alcoholism, Walton struggles against the ghosts that haunt him in a futuristic New York City.A dark, compelling work of psychological suspense and a cutting-edge critique of our increasingly technological world, The Furnace speaks fluently to the terrifying scope of the surveillance state, the dangerous allure of legacy, and the hope of redemption despite our flaws.

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