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The Plot
The Secret Story of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion
Will Eisner
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About the book:
Eisner's final graphic novel examines the tangled history of The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion a piece of anti-Semitic propaganda
(with its origins in several generations of libel and plagiarism)
that's been circulating for the past century. Eisner, who died earlier
this year, was one of the patron saints of American comics, and his
artwork improved as he got older. The ink-wash drawings here are among
his most exquisite work, and his characters have the kind of grandly
expressive, minutely observed body language that was his
specialty. But Eisner was a far better cartoonist than a writer, and
it's puzzling why an artist who thought as deeply as he did about
visual narrative decided to take on a project that has no reason to be
a comic book. There's basically nothing interesting for him to draw,
and he adds nothing to well-documented history. The core of Eisner's
book is an endless scene of two men comparing passages from it with
Maurice Joly's Dialogue in Hell from which it was plagiarized;
not even the dramatization of their conversation (in a smoky
Constantinople cafe) helps. The rest of the work is gorgeous to look
at, but suffers from leaden expository dialogue and disastrous pacing,
documenting the history of The Protocols without successfully
understanding its insidious power.
About the author:
Will Eisner was the author of the legendary comic strip The
Spirit. The comic industry's top annual awards, "The Eisners," are
named in his honor.
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