I’m sitting upright in bed, quietly crying, hoping my wife doesn’t notice.
For most of my adult life, I have 1 part joked, 3 parts bragged that I only cry when old wizards die (You know the ones), or when Ben Grimm and Johnny Storm are dramatically separated (Waid/Wieringo Fantastic Four or Hickman’s “Three”
Here I am, nearly twenty years later, and the unassailable nerdiness of my stunted tearducts hasn’t changed much, but the content of The Department of Truth
And while my wife is more than the ideal listener and confidant, I don’t want to talk about it. I don’t want to explain myself. I just want to cry.
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Comic Book Herald’s favorite comics of 2021
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*****
The Department of Truth is not primarily set on heartbreak. In fact, the far-ranging conspiracies, the secret histories and governmental factions, these all bring to mind the likes of Men in Black or Planetary
The brilliance of this set-up is that it allows Tynion IV, Simmonds and team to weave in and out of various conspiracies through the ages, while broadly tackling the complexity and creeping power of “alternate facts” in our times. The range of contemporary conspiracy has escalated from the couch detective innocence of long-running JFK assassination theories to the warped foundationless desperation of “Pizzagate.” Growing up, I remember a certain goofy charm to the likes of “Area 51” or JFK, frequent topics of pop culture voices like Bill Simmons and Chuck Klosterman. In recent years it’s become increasingly clear that the perceived innocence of this kind of speculation has been replaced by QAnon infections, and real harm to real people in the real world.
The Department of Truth avoids nothing. The creative team leans into the scariest, most concerning, most present webs of conspiracy in our world, and acknowledges their presence, place and persistence. While the passage of time can make some of these feel comparatively quaint (80’s Satanic Panic, take a bow), school shooting deniers is devastatingly relevant.
Which brings us back to The Department of Truth #3.
*****
While gun violence and school shootings have always nauseated me, and remain in my opinion one of the top two or three issues I care about when voting, after having kids of my own, that threat just hits different. That there are parents in this world that have lost children to school shootings, and have then had to manage and process the black hole of hate, threats, and deranged conviction that accompany false flag believers? I don’t even know how to deal with that without curling up in a ball for the rest of forever.
Tynion, Simmonds and Bidikar tackle the subject with care, empathy, and gripping momentum. It’s one thing to showcase the storytelling ambition that says “We’re going to stand up, unflinching, to all the nastiest webs of lies in the world.” It’s another thing entirely to pull that off with drama, effortlessly letting us see how this battered victim fits into the competing shadow forces looking to define the world’s truth.
In the midst of this compelling battle for the soul of veracity, there’s the dark truth that the Department of Truth itself isn’t pretending any claims to heroism or righteousness. Truth be told, there’s no saving the mother in The Department of Truth #3, there’s only making sure her coping mechanisms – in this case, buying into the lies and living deep inside the alternate fiction herself – don’t spread. The Department doesn’t trade in happy endings, only crisis aversion. So when Tynion writes the grieving mother “Screamed in her empty home, unsure if she was making any noise. Nobody heard her,” it’s with the full weight of that hollow knowledge. It’s almost nicer to let her have the corrupted conspiracy. That’s simply the truth of it.
*****
I’ve been a fan of James Tynion IV’s writing for a number of years now, but nothing he’s done – from work across DC’s Batman to Boom’s Something Is Killing the Children
Martin Simmonds artwork and storytelling fits alongside the likes of Anand RK’s recent showstopping turn on Blue in Green
Whether the influence is more parts Sienkiewicz, Dave McKean, or others altogether, the aesthetic ties to the plot and the thrills of never knowing what the next page will look like are merged in a blissful pair. For his part, letterer Aditya Bidikar is increasingly a master at his craft, aligned to a concerningly high number of all my favorite comics this year! It’s easy to overlook how challenging it could be to fit narrative caption or dialog over Simmonds splashier works, too, finding that balance of spatial positioning and narrative flow that allows the highly inventive art detail to shine through. Unsurprisingly, Bidikar finds the balance every time.
*****
Five issues, and a single trade collection into the run, and I feel absurdly confident in declaring The Department of Truth is destined for greatness. If Tynion, Simmonds, and Bidikar want to commit to a lengthy run, there’s little doubt in my mind that we’re in for an all-timer.
Speaking of, I plan to conclude each “Best new comic’ entry with an update: Where does it fit on the Comic Book Herald all time list of favorites?
I’m ranking The Department of Truth as the new number 259 on my 500 favorite comics of all time, after Farmhand and before Rucka and Southworth’s Stumptown and Iron Man: Extremis.
Anything close to my top 250 is actually quite high, and positioning The Department of Truth this high on the list is a reflection of how much the comic has impressed me through one collected volume, and the fact that I anticipate it’s status and stature will only grow as the series continues.
View Comments (1)
Thanks for the review! I was compelled to go to my comic shop and pick this up on the day of its release and it's the best book I've read in awhile! I'm hooked now and trying my best to get my friends to read it, while eagerly awaiting the next volume.