Sunday, October 5, 2014

Notes on The Arrival by Shaun Tan

While some people believe that words can hold power, it is sometimes the wordless--stories that tell themselves through pictures--that are the most prominent and memorable. Shaun Tan's, The Arrival, is a testament to this; the comic itself contains no dialogue, but the reader is able to follow the entire story.

In the comic, it tells about a father/ family man who must leave his dangerous homeland in the hopes of making a new life for him and his wife and daughter in "America". It also tells of his trials and tribulations of being an immigrant, and going through the process of learning the land, it's language, and it's culture (despite it being a variety of cultures).

While some say that it might be body language that drives the story, others say that it might be the fact that it takes place in a world unlike our own that makes it resonate with people overall. In the end, all of us have experienced being in a land unlike our own. And in the end, the universe within The Arrival is also foreign--a beautiful, fantastical landscape that uses symbols everyone can relate to the histories they've grown up to learn.

While I wish I could say more about this book, I feel the need to re-read a few more times to truly understand it. So if you haven't picked it up yet, I'd highly recommend doing so.

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