“A compelling exploration of how comics shape historical memory, Harriet Earle’s study of marginalized voices provides an inclusive and nuanced understanding of the Vietnam War’s portrayal in American comics. Essential for those interested in the intersection of culture, history, and memory.”—Stephen Connor, associate professor of history at Nipissing University
“Absent speech, scenes concealed in the gutter, the ambiguity of a figure: these are the traces expertly tracked and analyzed in Harriet Earle’s exploration of narrative silences within the American mythogenesis of the Vietnam War. This study offers arresting insights for both comics scholars and historians and could offer an interesting counterbalance for teachers who would wish to teach history through comics or other popular media.”—Elizabeth Allyn Woock, assistant professor of English at Palacký University
“This is an important and timely contribution to a neglected but significant part of American comic book history. Although much academic work has concentrated on superhero comics, the war comic has been a hugely popular and important form that has been hugely under-researched. Earle demonstrates that the Vietnam War had an immense impact on the war comic genre. . . . The complexities of the differing, and continuing, responses to the war in comics are clearly explained in a perceptive and accessible analysis. This is an essential guide for anyone studying the representation of conflict in the comic form.”—David Huxley, editor in chief of Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics