**The second volume of collected woodcut graphic novels from a
"brilliant and iconoclastic" author who has been compared to Frank Capra
and John Steinbeck (Jonathan Lethem, New York Times-bestselling author
of The Fortress of Solitude)
**
In this, the second of two volumes collecting all his woodcut novels,
The Library of America brings together Lynd Ward's three later books,
two of them brief, the visual equivalent of chamber music, the other his
longest, a symphony in three movements. Prelude to a Million Years
(1933) is a dark meditation on art, inspiration, and the disparity
between the ideal and the real. Song Without Words (1936), a protest
against the rise of European fascism, asks if ours is a world still fit
for the human soul. Vertigo (1937), Ward's undisputed masterpiece, is
an epic novel on the theme of the individual caught in the downward
spiral of a sinking American economy. Its characters include a young
violinist, her luckless fiancé, and an elderly business magnate
who--movingly, and without ever becoming a political
caricature--embodies the social forces determining their fate.
The images reproduced in this volume are taken from prints pulled from
the original woodblocks or first-generation electrotypes. Ward's novels
are presented, for the first time since the 1930s, in the format that
the artist intended, one image per right-hand page, and are followed by
four essays in which he discusses the technical challenges of his craft.
Art Spiegelman contributes an introductory essay, "Reading Pictures,"
that defines Ward's towering achievement in that most demanding of
graphic-story forms, the wordless novel in woodcuts.