The Silk Road to Ruin
By Hervé St-Louis
November 4, 2006 - 15:59
NBM Publishing
Writer(s): Ted Rall
Penciller(s): Ted Rall
Inker(s): Ted Rall
Cover Artist(s): Ted Rall
ISBN: 1561634549
I did not expect to enjoy reading this book. In previous books by Rall, he enjoyed repeating the same criticisms continually. It felt didactic and after a while, as if he were crying wolf. But here, Rall is provided with new material over which few have any opinion. Be warned. Rall is a liberal. He will not shy away from adding a few comments about current American President Bush and his administration. Yet, the warnings he does provide, should be heeded by any level headed Western politician who wants to influence Central Asia. A good example of this is how few American students are enrolled in colleges’ programs that teach the different languages spoken in the “Stans,” as many call them. This is an abject weakness, for an area, which according to Rall will become the next hotbed of the political world.
Although completely new to me, by the time I finished this book, I could tell something about each of the different Central Asian republics. I still cannot pronounce their names, but I know what makes Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan different. This is not a book that you have to read from the first chapter until the end. In fact, I would read any chapter and proceed to any other, starting of course with the many comic strips included in this book. As a comic book reader, these were the best part of the book. Rall has a wry humour that works. Characters are curt, yet, fascinating.
A good sign about a travelogue, is if it makes you feel like “going there.” Central Asia is the last place on Earth I would want to go after reading about the bleeding diarrhoea, vomiting and foul food that everyone that goes and lives in there has. Although it did ignite the adventurer in me! I’ll have to rethink that “Do not go to this part of the world” decision. For those who, like me, are asking themselves whether the adventure is worth it, Rall has included a very informative chapter called “If You Go.” Reading it made me wish more people would write about the area has it seems clear that Rall’s first person opinion is not comprehensive.
There are so few current books on Central Asia that Rall’s book will become one of the required readings for any student of the history and political science interested in these countries. Rall’s epic journey is as current as to the month of May 2006. By the time I was done reading this book (a mere two weeks), its spine was completely used, the protective front cover had been discarded. This is a real book for the real world. It did not remain neatly unused on a book shelf. I have read it entirely, sometimes reading some chapters a second time, and I have learned a lot. Thanks to Rall, I went to bed less dumber each night.
As for the comic strips, Rall has a peculiar style. He doesn’t care about proportions and great design. You can feel the oblique stupidity of his subjects in this book. Better page layouts would have helped. Whereas his cartooning style was not impressive in Generalissimo El Busho: Essays & Cartoons on The Bush Years, In Silk Road to Ruin, the look fits perfectly.
10/10
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