The conclusion to a masterful graphic novel trilogy that follows
Berlin's citizens as Nazism rises
The third and final act of Jason Lutes's historical fiction about the
Weimar Republic begins with Hitler arriving in Berlin. With the National
Socialist party now controlling Parliament, the citizenry becomes even
more divided.
Lutes steps back from the larger political upheaval, using the
intertwining lives of a small group of Germans to zero in on the rise of
fascism and how swiftly it can replace democracy. The idle rich, the
naïve bourgeoisie, and the struggling lower classes: all seek meaning in
the warring political factions dividing their nation. He especially
focuses on the Brauns--a working-class family torn apart by a political
system that doesn't care about them. Lovers couple and uncouple;
families and friends share rituals and laughter; most of Berlin's
citizens go about their day with little sense of the larger threat to
their existence. Meanwhile, the journalist Kurt Severing and the artist
Marthe Muller watch in horror as their society begins a dizzying descent
into extremism.
Lutes' Berlin Book Three: City of Light is one of the most anticipated
graphic novels of 2018, and the long-awaited conclusion to his beloved
trilogy.