Saturday, March 23, 2024

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Above the Trenches



The Eagles, Lions, Chickens, Beavers, Bunnies and Bears are back! Nathan Hale, both the cartoonist and American patriot return to Europe during the early days of the first World War to examine the war front not from the land or seas; but from the sky!

World War I saw its fair share of aces- pilots who scored a confirmed 5 kills or more! The famed Manfred von Richthofen, known amongst his fellow pilots on both sides of the war as the Red Baron, had a record 80 victories in the sky! The pilot in second place behind the Red Baron for confirmed kills had 75 and according to a chart in the back on this book over 60 pilots from France, Britain, Canada and Germany has at least 28 confirmed victories from the years of 1914-1919. The top ace for the United States was Eddie Rickenbacker with 26 aerial wins and he didn't even make the list!

Hale does his best to cover all sides of the battle in air. But in order to keep this historical graphic novel from covering too broad a picture of the war above the trenches, Hale tries to keep the focus on the volunteering American pilots who made up the French squadron called the LaFayette Escadrille, reverently named after another hero who has appeared in a previous volume of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales

Next to the first World War I volume, Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood, Above the Trenches is the most violent and deadliest recollection of them all. Hale makes an effort to warn readers that alcohol flows freely and cigarettes fill the air with smoke like exhaust from a Fokker DR1. (That's a war plane- not a German cuss word.) Yet there's no trigger warnings about the numerous pilots and their sighters and gunmen who die in horrific ways. Maybe this is just proof that our society is desensitized to violence but whoa unto us if we see an early 1900s Frenchman sipping wine while taking a drag...

Loved this book. Honestly, I didn't want it to end and I feel that considering how much time was spent on the formation of the LaFayette Escadrille compared to how quickly things wrapped up, this book should have been broken up into 2 parts. I guess technically, you could say this volume was part two. But really, we've yet to see America's official entrance into the Great War. Maybe the two Nathan Hale's have plans for a trilogy? I'd be okay with that.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

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