Member Reviews
1.5 stars ⭐
WTF did I just read?! I love books that are complete nonsense but even nonsensical things should make at least a bit of sense and that wasn't the case. The more the author tried to explain the rules of the world the worse it got. The thing with the coffee was so ridiculous lol.
Mr ash Tuesday by script and art by Eric Liberge.
A fatal slip on the toy car that his son had left in the bathroom, and Victor Tourterelle is dispatched straight to the other side of the mirror, to the beautiful world of chalk desert, under a sky as black as ink. No noise, not a soul. In his new state, Victor finds that he's still fully conscious, more acutely than on earth, even. But his body is only bones. Little does the dead man know that he's at the dawn of the wildest adventure of all time...
A very good read. I loved the illustrations in the book. Great story. 4*.
Not a great one for me. I liked the artwork but didn't fully understand the story. I thought the artwork was good.
Detailed artwork and highly original. I liked this book and would recommend it for readers who enjoy comics.
A work of great imagination and genius.
Questions exist in all cultures about what happens to us humans when we die.
Writer Éric Liberge has a very clear vision of Purgatory and his graphic novel has been translated into English by Europe Comics.
For the author it is a place devoid of your body apart from your skeletal remains, a barren place, a boring place. A place of waiting but for what?
In this first episode “Welcome” Victor Tourterelle has to be process and given a new identity - he is reassigned as ‘Mr Ash Tuesday’ but he needs answers he is not a sheep and he is quickly identified as a trouble maker. His attitude of not taking things at face value and struggling for his rights while maintaining scant regard for the status quo places him in prison.
He is sprung from jail by a secret society that has identified him as a potential asset in their attempts to subvert this society.
Unlike some comics where the story just abruptly ends we have a clear account of Ash’s new reality - I love the humour that he uses when he says he does not want to be called after a religious festival.
So the series is set up with insight and intrigue you want to read on about this crazy imagining of a church / religious tenet that a Purgatory may exist for some. It is vividly depicted with graphic illustrations and it is a world that comes alive in these drawings.
We want to learn more and to understand why Ash was assigned a place here and how he might achieve an outcome he feels he merits. Great concepts and stimulation through words and pictures. a must read.