Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Dandelion Trade Paperback Review


 


Writer: Sabir Pirzada

Artists: Martin Morazzo, Vanesa Del Rey, Eric Koda, Roy Allan Martinez, Gegé Schall, Thomas Campi, Adrian Rivero, Juha Veltti & Marquis Rogers

Colorists: Juha Veltti, Jacob Phillips & Lee Loughridge

Letterers: Aditya Bidikar & Taylor Esposito

Dandelion Concept Artist: Corwin Herse Woo

Pin-Up Artist: David Mack

Cover Artist: Tula Lotay

Back Cover Artist: Mark S. Brunner

Publisher: Image Comics

Price: $16.99

Release Date: June 19, 2024

 

Life forces Reggie and his wife to abandon life on land. Experimental surgery can't help Amy walk again. Still, hospital bills leave them bankrupt. So Reggie and Amy scrounge up enough money for a radical new scheme. They will become Exiles from Earth and join the growing Lighter Than Air community. How will Reggie and Amy enjoy life among the clouds? And how did this movement begin? Let's pack our clothes, leap into Dandelion TP, and find out!

 

Story

In Sabir Pirzada’s story, Jen Nakamuto dreams of living above the land. She investigates the capabilities of solar energy, lightweight materials, and wind-harnessing technology. An ever-growing Human population scrambles constantly for their patch of land and often loses it due to global warming, political upheaval, and economic factors. Why not build airborne homes and float among the clouds?

 

In Dandelion TP, Jen imagines floating docking stations where these drifting homes can gather and form global communities. Unlike land-based cities, people can move and take their homes with them. Dandelion owners can enjoy the comfort of their homes while traveling anywhere at a moment's notice. Thanks to advancements in automation, machines perform most manual labor. Why not use drones to bring food and remove waste?

 

As with any dream, the rich and influential find ways to coopt Jen's dream. Once people like Reggie and Amy take to the skies, they can never return. Governments harness Jen's social movement to reduce problems like illegal immigration and homelessness. Instead of squeezing low-income earners into overcrowded housing and subsidizing their food, the poor and displaced enjoy five-bedroom homes, free utilities, and drone-delivered meals.

 

People like Reggie may regret the circumstances that forced them to become Exiles. Like Charlotte Brontë's novel Shirley, Dandelion TP tackles technological and societal evolution. Some who take to the sky will stage protests and attack those who forced them to abandon life on land. Still, that doesn’t stop people like Reggie and Amy from enjoying better lives in the clouds.

 

Art

A community of artists descends on Sabir Pirzada’s story to show how people live on land and in the air. Martin Morazzo, Vanesa Del Rey, Eric Koda, Roy Allan Martinez, Gegé Schall, Thomas Campi, Adrian Rivero, Juha Veltti, and Marquis Rogers portray these floating homes, overcrowded cities, and talented revolutionaries. An out-of-shape salesperson forces Reggie to give up the possession he most cherishes for the woman he loves. Yet the wasteland where they take to the skies later thrives with life that defies their expectations and provides healing.

 

Juha Veltti, Jacob Phillips, and Lee Loughridge fill the myriad stories in Dandelion TP with a lavish spectrum of color. Purple-suited Clown Killers rain red upon greedy executives. Yellow and green enhance a protest on an island that sparks a violent response. Red and green suffuse one man's efforts to preserve traditional agricultural methods and uphold a family legacy. After two women meet in a purple and green skybar, they chart the limits of their Dandelions among the blue clouds. Perhaps the most heartwarming story is told in soft blues and features a person garbed in red and white.

 

Aditya Bidikar and Taylor Esposito's white letters enhance the birth of Jen Nakamuto's dream. Uppercase black letters fill orange and lavender narrative boxes as two women race through the starry night. Lowercase white lettering on black accompanies glimpses of Jen and diagrams of dandelions. An octopus and a bird speak white words into black dialogue balloons. Enlarged and colorful lettering helps us hear a familiar holiday cry. Sound effects amplify gunfire and malfunctioning drones, and green letters overlay a 3D graphic display as pirates sail their wooden ship into a sunken city in Dandelion TP. Thanks to Image Comics for providing a copy for review.

 

Final Thoughts

When a restauranteur uses her bargaining skills to convince investors to fund her dream, she sparks a revolution in Human history. Jen Nakamuto’s dream becomes a springboard for stories exploring how Humanity’s move to Lighter Than Air Living changes life on Earth and charts the Poor’s path to freedom. The poems, podcast excerpts, conference transcripts, and stories in the Dandelion TP remind us how we resist change, create legends, and transform dreams into reality.

 

Rating 10/10

 

This review originally appeared on Comic Book Dispatch.

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