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War is Boring: Bored Stiff, Scared to Death in the World's Worst War Zones

door David Axe, Matt Bors (Illustrator)

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
10810252,141 (3)5
Comic and Graphic Books. Fiction. HTML:Read David Axe's blogs and other content on the Penguin Community.
The war memoir as graphic novel-an utterly unforgettable and highly original look at war in the 21st century.
Street battles with spears and arrows in sweltering East Timor. Bone- jarring artillery duels in Afghanistan's mountains. Long patrols on the sandy wastes of southern Iraq. For four years, war was life for David Axe. He was alternately bored out of his mind and completely terrified. It was strangely addictive.
As a correspondent for The Washington Times, C-SPAN and BBC Radio, Axe flew from conflict to conflict, reveling in death, danger, and destruction abroad while, back in D.C., his apartment gathered dust, his plants died, and his relationships withered. War reporting was physically, emotionally, and financially draining-and disillusioning. Loosely based on the web comic of the same name, with extensive new material, War Is Boring takes us to Lebanon and Somalia; to arms bazaars across the United States; to Detroit, as David tries to reconnect with his family-and to Chad, as David attempts to bring attention to the Darfur genocide.

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1-5 van 10 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Christ, what an asshole. ( )
1 stem Jon_Hansen | May 29, 2019 |
If you are looking for a brief history of modern conflict, this isn't it. However, it does delve into the emotions and confusion behind being a privileged American reporting on tragedy and violence around the globe. I like that the story is left unresolved.

This book does require some knowledge of many modern conflicts and has vocabulary specific to war, weapons, and journalism. ( )
  JoanAxthelm | Aug 4, 2017 |
Interesting graphic memoir by a freelance war correspondent who has covered stories Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, East Timor, Darfur,and Somalia. ( )
  Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
So is Matt Bors the illustrator? The jacket says the cover illustrations (which are book illustrations) are by Axe.

I could see some uses for this book, say in an undergraduate class that looks at the difficulty of making meaning from trauma. However, it's not well-enough realized, and I wouldn't want to appear to endorse it. The introduction sets the tone, with his self-aggrandizing war junkie friend's assertion that middle class American life is boring and inconsequential. Not my middle class American life, buddy. My life is full of meaningful activities, love, relationships, vividness, and service, all in the context of my active awareness of my privilege as an economically secure person whose country is not embroiled in conflict. Generally I stop reading books that begin by insulting the general reader, but I figured, hey, it's not Axe's fault that his friend is a swaggering schmuck.

Sadly, Axe is little better, though he insults himself more actively and the reader more covertly. I'm sorry he's bored, and I'm sorry his life is never quite satisfying even when he's in a war, which is where he seems to want to be. I'm sorry that he lives with constant, simmering anger that he can't quite attach to anything. One shocking frame in this graphic autobiography expresses his dilemma when his girlfriend, another reporter, wants to travel to a war with him (when he's been calling his buddies and trying to get them to go to a war with him). He can't bring himself to tell her no, though he expresses this with an obscenity and hostility. So she's good enough to have sex with but it makes you angry when she wants to go with you because you'll have to behave better in the war? One hopes the girlfriend noticed this contempt and got out sooner rather than later.

As to Axe's musings about his reasons for wanting to be in war zones but not finding this satisfying, I found them not terribly coherent or compelling. Is it machismo? Existential emptiness? Unmentioned substance use troubles? Hard to guess. I don't know what Axe's in-person vibe is, but I imagine from this book that he's a person you edge away from at a party as he warms to his topic.

Whether he's a good war reporter/photographer, I don't know and I'm not moved to find out. ( )
1 stem OshoOsho | Mar 30, 2013 |
Quick interesting read that is more about the inner psyche of the author than about war in general. I don't think the plot was developed as well as it could have been. But for an hour or two read, it's interesting enough and has nice artwork. ( )
  ironicqueery | Aug 24, 2012 |
1-5 van 10 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
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David Axeprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Bors, MattIllustratorprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
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Comic and Graphic Books. Fiction. HTML:Read David Axe's blogs and other content on the Penguin Community.
The war memoir as graphic novel-an utterly unforgettable and highly original look at war in the 21st century.
Street battles with spears and arrows in sweltering East Timor. Bone- jarring artillery duels in Afghanistan's mountains. Long patrols on the sandy wastes of southern Iraq. For four years, war was life for David Axe. He was alternately bored out of his mind and completely terrified. It was strangely addictive.
As a correspondent for The Washington Times, C-SPAN and BBC Radio, Axe flew from conflict to conflict, reveling in death, danger, and destruction abroad while, back in D.C., his apartment gathered dust, his plants died, and his relationships withered. War reporting was physically, emotionally, and financially draining-and disillusioning. Loosely based on the web comic of the same name, with extensive new material, War Is Boring takes us to Lebanon and Somalia; to arms bazaars across the United States; to Detroit, as David tries to reconnect with his family-and to Chad, as David attempts to bring attention to the Darfur genocide.

Watch a Video

.

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