For the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Maus, the terrorist attacks
of September 11th were both highly personal and intensely political. In
the Shadow of No Towers is a masterful and moving account of the events
and aftermath of that tragic day.
Spiegelman and his family bore witness to the attacks in their lower
Manhattan neighborhood: his teenage daughter had started school directly
below the towers days earlier, and they had lived in the area for years.
But the horrors they survived that morning were only the beginning for
Spiegelman, as his anguish was quickly displaced by fury at the U.S.
government, which shamelessly co-opted the events for its own
preconceived agenda.
He responded in the way he knows best. In an oversized, two-page-spread
format that echoes the scale of the earliest newspaper comics (which
Spiegelman says brought him solace after the attacks), he relates his
experience of the national tragedy in drawings and text that
convey--with his singular artistry and his characteristic provocation,
outrage, and wit--the unfathomable enormity of the event itself, the
obvious and insidious effects it had on his life, and the extraordinary,
often hidden changes that have been enacted in the name of post-9/11
national security and that have begun to undermine the very foundation
of American democracy.