In the film 101 Dalmatians, Pongo and Perdita howl for help
once their puppies have been stolen. It
is an interesting concept, this use of howling and work because any dog owner
can believe it. Evan Dorkin and Jill
Thompson start their excellent series about a group of dogs the same way. The dogs of Burden, however, do so to call on
the help of a wise dog.
Wise
Dog = Merlin or Gandalf, he is an English Sheep Dog after all.
In
Beasts of Burden: Animal Rites (the first four issues as well as a short story)
chronicle the beginning adventures of Ace, Jack, Whitey, Rex, Pugsley, and
their cat friend Orphan. The story
starts as the friends with the help of the Wise Dog, investigate why Jack’s dog
house is haunted.
Apparently,
Burden is the Sunnydale of the dog world because there is quite a bunch of
weird things going on.
Over the course of the first volume, the group
of friends becomes wise dogs in training, guardians of the area, tasked to
protect it. Like most fiction involving
super hero teens, owners (the de facto parents) are largely absent and a dog
owner sometimes wonders what is going on with these people. Yet, despite that wobble (and necessary plot
hole. To be fair, owners do make some
appearances), the series is pretty darn good.
In
part, this is due to the dogs and cats remaining dogs and cats. It is also because of the strength of the
storytelling. Animal Rites is in many
ways, an origin sequence. But the stories
are heartfelt, and while not having the lecture footnotes of Atwood’s Angel
Catbird series, the stories do comment on how we treat animals and each other
in the world.
At
first, the group is seeming to be entirely male, but female characters in the
form of a dog and a cat are added. In
many ways, too, the dogs act like their respective breeds (though my Dobie was
braver than Rex). This isn’t a story for
children, there is death of some pets (but not of the major characters), and
the dogs sometimes are a bit, well, fierce.
It would be fair to say that the series is in part horror story from a
dog point of view. It actually remembers
me a bit of Wayne Smith’s Thor.
The
issue Neighborhood Watch contains stories that are referred to in the later part
of animal rites. Included are a story
about a chicken stealing goblin and a flock of strange sheep. Honesty, the sheep story is one of the
spookiest I’ve read in a long time.
Hunters
and Gatherers and Issue #0 seem to occur after Animal Rites. Issue) details the story of one the cat characters
in greater detail. It is also a story about
family. IN the closing panels, you can
easily see why the series has won awards.
Hunters is an adventure tale that does seem to change Watership Down in
part. The crossover with Hellboy is also
very good, making Pugsley more than simply a downer. It was both funny and touching.
Comments
Post a Comment