
Denis Bajram
Author of Universal War One, tome 1 : La Genèse
About the Author
Series
Works by Denis Bajram
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1970-02-01
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- France
- Associated Place (for map)
- France
Members
Reviews
Before this graphic novel ‘Universe War One’ explodes with vibrant colour, there’s a three-page grey prologue. The inhabitants of Titan are revolting and Lieutenant June Williamson is ordered to ‘clean up’ a sector. Euphemisms for murder will obviously remain popular with authoritarians in the future. Williamson refuses to follow orders because the only people to be ‘cleaned’ are women and children. Luckily, as it turns out, this includes the wife and child of a high ranking show more officer, so she is spared court-martial. Later, she gets to form Purgatory Squadron, a band of talented misfits who were all in line for severe disciplinary action. The child she refused to kill is her second-in-command. The others are Balti, a reckless, disobedient hero; Mario, a coward; Milorad, a rapist and Kalish, a genius who beats the crap out of people who disagree with him. There’s also Amina, a rape victim who ‘emasculated’ her attacker with a blade. Tough crew.
Then a sphere three billion kilometres in diameter appears near Uranus, centred on the satellite Oberon. It fills a third of the sky when viewed from Earth and seems to have many of the properties of a black hole. Oberon is controlled by I.C.C. – the Industrial Companies of Colonisation – yet they deny any knowledge of the Wall, as it is known. Earth’s military – the United Earths Force – sends a fleet to investigate. It’s an interesting situation that gets more interesting as the plot twists and turns but I’m not going to give that away and ruin your pleasure.
Here are death, sex, cowardice, heroism, love, brutality, nobility, compassion, all the varied strengths and weaknesses of humanity. I suppose all good stories cover some of this ground but few cover so much. It’s an epic tale on the grand scale of ‘Ringworld’ or ‘Riverworld’. I’d compare it to ‘Lord Of The Rings’ but it’s more adult than that, harder and definitely Science Fiction rather than fantasy. At one point, when they’re dealing with a time travel paradox, a character says, ‘The fools! Had they not read any classic Science Fiction!‘ Clearly, Denis Bajram has. It’s wonderful to have hard Science Fiction in graphic novel form.
The art is excellent but doesn’t take over. There are no filler splash pages or slow-mo sequences to occupy pages. The story comes first and there’s a lot of it to squeeze in. Bajram is clearly a writer of talent even without pictures, so both plot and dialogue are superbly handled. The French have had adult graphic novels for a long time now and may have the jump on the rest of the world when it comes to serious work and what a lot of work has gone into it!
Denis Bajram does both words and pictures for the 272 pages of story plus 6 covers from the original format. This hardback edition on good paper in glorious colour is worth every penny, euro, drachma, yen or dollar you might spend on it. Best of all, ‘Universal War Two’ is proceeding episodically in French right now and should hopefully be available in a similar format one day.
Eamonn Murphy
This review first appeared at https://www.sfcrowsnest.info/ show less
Then a sphere three billion kilometres in diameter appears near Uranus, centred on the satellite Oberon. It fills a third of the sky when viewed from Earth and seems to have many of the properties of a black hole. Oberon is controlled by I.C.C. – the Industrial Companies of Colonisation – yet they deny any knowledge of the Wall, as it is known. Earth’s military – the United Earths Force – sends a fleet to investigate. It’s an interesting situation that gets more interesting as the plot twists and turns but I’m not going to give that away and ruin your pleasure.
Here are death, sex, cowardice, heroism, love, brutality, nobility, compassion, all the varied strengths and weaknesses of humanity. I suppose all good stories cover some of this ground but few cover so much. It’s an epic tale on the grand scale of ‘Ringworld’ or ‘Riverworld’. I’d compare it to ‘Lord Of The Rings’ but it’s more adult than that, harder and definitely Science Fiction rather than fantasy. At one point, when they’re dealing with a time travel paradox, a character says, ‘The fools! Had they not read any classic Science Fiction!‘ Clearly, Denis Bajram has. It’s wonderful to have hard Science Fiction in graphic novel form.
The art is excellent but doesn’t take over. There are no filler splash pages or slow-mo sequences to occupy pages. The story comes first and there’s a lot of it to squeeze in. Bajram is clearly a writer of talent even without pictures, so both plot and dialogue are superbly handled. The French have had adult graphic novels for a long time now and may have the jump on the rest of the world when it comes to serious work and what a lot of work has gone into it!
Denis Bajram does both words and pictures for the 272 pages of story plus 6 covers from the original format. This hardback edition on good paper in glorious colour is worth every penny, euro, drachma, yen or dollar you might spend on it. Best of all, ‘Universal War Two’ is proceeding episodically in French right now and should hopefully be available in a similar format one day.
Eamonn Murphy
This review first appeared at https://www.sfcrowsnest.info/ show less
The human crew of an exploratory space vessel crash on an ocean planet are saved by giant squid-like creatures and brought to an island inhabited by docile humans living without technology.
You know, I don't need or want all stories about space exploration to have a utopian Star Trek ideal to them, but I do ask that the stories not be full of people who are really just too stupid to live. The stranded crew make snap judgments based on no evidence, and just show zero common sense.
Received via show more NetGalley. show less
You know, I don't need or want all stories about space exploration to have a utopian Star Trek ideal to them, but I do ask that the stories not be full of people who are really just too stupid to live. The stranded crew make snap judgments based on no evidence, and just show zero common sense.
Received via show more NetGalley. show less
Wow - quite the ending to this volume! And yes, I have been shopping on Amazon.fr so I won't be in suspense for too long.
It still seems a bit weird to see a future New York with a skyline that includes the World Trade Center. I'm not sure why it should be unexpected in a book that was written in 2001, but it still felt strange to turn a page and see the Twin Towers as part of the backdrop.
Now, after the first four volumes, I'm waiting to see if either of the last two doesn't contain at least show more one moment when I feel a need to give Mario a hug... show less
It still seems a bit weird to see a future New York with a skyline that includes the World Trade Center. I'm not sure why it should be unexpected in a book that was written in 2001, but it still felt strange to turn a page and see the Twin Towers as part of the backdrop.
Now, after the first four volumes, I'm waiting to see if either of the last two doesn't contain at least show more one moment when I feel a need to give Mario a hug... show less
Wormholes, time travel, temporal paradoxes, the destruction of an entire planet - that's quite a bit to fit into these first three volumes, and that's without considering the individual characters' stories that have brought them all together in Purgatory Squadron, not to mention the beautiful artwork that provides the backdrop for the tale. Fantastic series. I'm very tempted to buy volumes 4-6 now, but they're not too cheap...
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