“I don’t know, Rick. It’s been a while since I’ve had a frame of reference for ‘okay.’”
The little community follows Rick Grimes on the way to finding a safe place to live. Along the way they meet both Tyreese and his family as well as Hershel Greene and his children. While their community grows, the question remains — is there really any place that can be called safe?
TITLE:
THE WALKING DEAD: MILES BEHIND US
WRITER:
by Robert Kirkman
ARTISTS:
by Charlie Adlard (penciler, inker)
Cliff Rathburn (gray tones)
SERIES:
The Walking Dead — Vol. 2
Reprints The Walking Dead comics #7-12
PUBLISHER:
Image Comics
GENRE:
Graphic Novel (collection), Horror Fiction, Psychological Fiction, Suspense
DESCRIPTORS:
Horror, Zombies, End of the World, Survival, Psychological Studies, Life and Death, Disaster
CHARACTERS:
Rick Grimes, A Kentucky police officer who wakes up from a coma to find the world overrun with zombies.
Lori Grimes, Rick’s wife who loves him but doesn’t always agree with his ideas.
Carl Grimes, Rick’s son.
Shane, A police officer and Rick’s partner.
Glenn, A young Asian-American teenager and camp scavenger.
Dale, A older man who recently lost his wife. He owns an RV which is the camp’s primary shelter and rescued Amy and Andrea.
Andrea, Amy’s sister, rescued by Dale.
Carol, A young mother who is somewhat troubled in these troubling times.
Sophia, Carol’s daughter.
Alan, A middle-aged man, Donna’s husband and father of Ben and Billy.
Donna, A middle-aged, somewhat conservative woman, Alan’s wife and mother of Ben and Billy.
Ben, Alan and Donna’s son.
Billy, Alan and Donna’s son.
Tyreese, An African-American father who swings a mean hammer.
Julie, Tyreese’s daughter.
Chris, Julie’s boyfriend.
Otis, A hunter who is living with Hershel for safety.
Patricia, She seems like a nice person and is Otis’ girlfriend.
Hershel Greene, Former veterinarian and now a farmer where his family lives in some safety.
Lacey Greene, Hershel’s oldest daughter.
Arnold Greene, Hershel’s older son.
Maggie Greene, Hershel’s younger daughter.
Billy Greene, Hershel’s youngest son.
Rachel Greene, Hershel’s younger daughter with glasses.
Susie Greene, Hershel’s youngest daughter with pigtails.
SUMMARY:
After suffering a pair of heartbreaking losses, the community takes to the road to find a more secure resting place as Winter sets in. First they meet Tyreese, his daughter Julie and her boyfriend Chirs. Rick welcomes into the community despite reservations other people have.

The group find a possible haven in the gated community of Wiltshire Estates. They clear out a house and begin to settle in only to have the promise turn sour in less than a day.
Forced back on the road, the survivors head further away from Atlanta. Seven-year-old Carl is accidentally shot by a dim witted man who mistook him for a zombie. Realizing his mistake, he rushes the boy and Rick to a nearby farm owned by a former veterinarian who might be able to save him. Hershel protests that he’s only an animal doctor but is persuaded to try. When the operation is over, Hershel invites the group to stay with him and his family on the farm while Carl recovers.
At first the offer seems to good to be true. However, Hershel and his children turn out to be nice people. Rick realizes that the community could make a go of an already working farm with plenty of flat lands to help them spot zombies in the distance.
Unfortunately, there are secrets hidden on the farm — secrets that when discovered, will cost Hershel and the community dearly.
APPEAL:
Although some scenes naturally flow quickly, many are of a moderate to slow pacing because Kirkman’s interest, and ours, isn’t so much the numerous ways to dispatch zombies, but what becomes of people without civilization and under constant danger. The comic is heavy in dialog, but knows when to stop and let the illustrations and action tell the story.

This is definitely a character driven book. Kirkman spends the most time with Rick as we watch him grow and mature into a role he never wanted. But the people around him are not slighted. The ensemble is large and changing as people join, die or leave but they each present their story and some change before our eyes. This time out we lose some people but gain a family and a couple of friends — or do we?
This is a drama masquerading as melodrama. Kirkman has genuine interest and love for the people he introduced in the pages. But it is a story that uses a zombie trope to reveal certain truths about the human condition. For the first time we get to view other people’s notion of what the zombie plague is and what it means. It creates a conflict of beliefs. The major on-going storyline is centered around Rick.
Throughout the book you see people surviving the best way they know how. You may pick-up a survival tip or two, but the unpredictability of the human psyche and the mindlessness of the zombie defeats most tactics. Despite the possible nihilism inherent in the zombie sub-genre, the general tone of the book is hopeful. Most characters still believe that soon the government will reassert itself and rescue the survivors.
NOTES:
This is a black and white comic with greytones.
The Walking Dead Book One reprints The Walking Dead comics #1-12 in a 304 page hardcover edition.
The Walking Dead Compendium One reprints The Walking Dead comics #1-48 in a 1088 page trade paperback extravaganza.
READALIKES:
If you like The Walking Dead: Miles Behind Us you might want to try some of the zombie novels now available. Closest to The Walking Dead in terms of the psychological study of humanity is Brian Keene’s The Rising the sequel City of the Dead
and a collection of short stories set in that dying world called The Rising: Selected Scenes From The End of the World
. You’ll want to note, however, that the zombies are very different. Kirkman makes use of the standard slowly shambling mindless undead while Keene’s zombies are fast, cunning and intelligent.
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: Days Gone Bye
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: Miles Behind Us
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: Safety Behind Bars
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: The Heart’s Desire
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: The Best Defense
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: This Sorrowful Life
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: The Calm Before
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: Made to Suffer
- Horror Graphic Novels — The Walking Dead: Here We Remain



Comments on this entry are closed.
{ 5 trackbacks }