Saga: Volume 1
Brian K. Vaughan, Fiona Staples (Illustrator)
Having seen Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples's Saga highly praised by Goodreads friends, I began by ordering Saga, Compendium One. I didn't begin it immediately when I got it, because the thickness of the book gave me pause. However, I then saw that Amazon sells Saga for kindle as a series of 11 volumes. Well, I think I can handle a series of 11 books, so that's the way I intend to read it.
Thus, yesterday evening I read Saga, Volume 1. It worked well in the kindle app for iPad. I was surprised at how quickly that went. I finished the whole in about two hours. In fact, it was a little too brief. We don't really get far enough in Volume 1 for there to be much of a story. We are introduced to the three principles pictured on the cover: Alana (that's the lady with the wings), Marko (the dude with the horns), and their daughter Hazel. It transpires that many people are unhappy with Alana and Marko, unhappy as in, "They need to die". We meet some of those people. The story is narrated by Hazel, thus we know that she, at least, will survive to an age at which she's capable of telling stories.
As I said, it is difficult to judge the story, because it is just starting even at the end of Volume 1. I did like the drawing. Many of the characters were particularly imaginative -- I liked The Stalk and Izabel a lot.
So, I will certainly continue.
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