The Forever War | |||
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Cover of Volume I. The style and art quality of the cover are representative of the actual graphic novel. Mandella is standing in the foreground
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Publication information | |||
Publisher |
Dupuis (Belgium) NBM Publishing (USA) |
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Formats | Original material for the series has been published as a set of graphic novels. | ||
Original language | Dutch | ||
Genre |
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Publication date | 1988 | ||
Number of issues | 3 | ||
Creative team | |||
Writer(s) | Joe Haldeman | ||
Artist(s) | Marvano | ||
Colourist(s) | Bruno Marchand | ||
Reprints | |||
The series has been reprinted, at least in part, in English, French, German, Polish, and Spanish. | |||
Collected editions | |||
Volume 1 | |||
Volume 2 | |||
Volume 3 | |||
Single volume |
The Forever War is a 1988 Belgian science fiction graphic novel trilogy drawn by Marvano and closely based on the award-winning The Forever War novel by Joe Haldeman, who has noted that he "supplied all of the dialogue and scripted [the comic] like a movie".
Drawn in the ligne claire style and originally published in Dutch as De Eeuwige Oorlog, it tells the story of William Mandella, an elite soldier fighting for Earth in a centuries-long interstellar war against the 'Taurans'. The series focuses mainly on the dehumanising effects of war and its attendant bureaucracy.
Staying very faithful to the novel in describing the life of the soldiers and their involvement in various military actions, the graphic novel touches upon themes such as the inhumanity of war (both during combat and in the administration of it) and the change of a society faced with centuries of war footing against an almost totally unseen enemy. Most importantly, it portrays personal experiences of a soldier who, due to pure luck and the Einsteinian time dilation of interstellar travel, fights in and survives the whole length of the war, to end up in a world he does not recognize anymore.
Like the novel, the series is based heavily on Haldeman's experiences in, and thoughts about, the Vietnam War, which are mirrored in the conduct of the military actions and propaganda operations of Earth's military government, especially in its treatment of enemies and the casualties / veterans on its own side. Like its protagonists, the series shows more resignation than outright cynicism at what are depicted as very human failings unchanged throughout history. Haldemann has noted that Marvano managed to include much more of the novel's "first-person ruminations" by Mandella in the graphic novel than the author had originally thought practical.