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Swan Songs #1: What a Wonderful World

9.2/10

Swan Songs #1

Artist(s): Martin Simmonds

Colorist(s): Martin Simmonds

Letterer: Good Old Neon

Publisher: Image Comics

Genre: Drama

Published Date: 07/05/2023

Recap

W. MAXWELL PRINCE (ICE CREAM MAN, HAHA) continues his weird, winning one-shot formula with this all-new multi-artist project that explores the way things END...and also how they never really do.

SWAN SONGS comprises stories about endings...The End of the World. The End of a Marriage. The End of a Sentence. The End of the End of the World! (Which I suppose one might consider the BEGINNING of a new world...)

And along for the terminal ride are some of comics' best and brightest artists! The first apocalyptic issue, "The End of the World," is drawn by none other than THE DEPARTMENT OF TRUTH's MARTIN SIMMONDS. Future artists for future endings include CASPAR WIJNGAARD (HOME SICK PILOTS), and FILIPE ANDRADE (The Many Deaths of Leila Star), with more to be announced.

All things come to a close; these are the SWAN SONGS.

Review

Swan Songs #1is a beautiful comic book, but it’s more than just that. It has some excellent plotting, writing, and pacing on display that pairs well with the book’s visual style. W. Maxwell Prince is very well-known at this point for his skill as an award-winning single issue storyteller, HaHa and Ice Cream Man following the same format as Swan Songs.

This opening issue takes place right before the end of the world, the doomsday clock ticking down as our main character Brian spends his last few moments holed up in a hospital with his dying mother. After reading through a gardening magazine outlaid for her, which is something that brings her comfort, he notes that there’s another one out there at a local drug store. Determined to find it for her, he ventures out into a dying world in order to retrieve it for her and face the end of days with a small, happy moment between himself and his mother.

The writing could be painfully forced, heavy handed, and ill-thematic. However, Prince handles everything with grace. The story here focuses on Brian’s journey through a dying world, which is a setting that both he and artist Martin Simmonds do so much with, even though they do very little. It’s a rich setting with some neat world building, both in its conceptual ideas and its visual execution. The emotional beats hit here not because they are forced, but because they naturally arise in the character’s journey.

It makes everything all the more sweeter and engaging. It’s easy to get ripped out of a story when it tries too hard to be something poignant, instead of just telling a story and allowing its importance to flow naturally. Tackling the beauty of endings, and the small moments between people that reign superior over the threat of the end of a world’s totality is something weighty enough to fall flat. Instead, it rises above and stands tall.

As such, the character work here intercedes with the plot to create something that’s very entertaining to read. There’s moments of hilarity, sadness, and tension, all of which are balanced quite well within the book’s tight page count.

Martin Simmonds’ art is simply magical. He’s at the top of his game, as he often is, blending painterly colors with traditional character pencilling to create a blend of visual styles that is both hyper expressive and easy to follow. It brings about a sense of dread and beauty within the coming apocalypse that really hammers home the themes at play here.

Final Thoughts

Swan Songs #1is beautifully realized in a painterly style, combining simple writing with an environmentally atmospheric setting to create a comic book that goes above and beyond what its 24 pages should be capable of.

Swan Songs #1: What a Wonderful World
  • Writing - 9/10
    9/10
  • Storyline - 9/10
    9/10
  • Art - 10/10
    10/10
  • Color - 10/10
    10/10
  • Cover Art - 8/10
    8/10
9.2/10
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