The Walking Dead, Vol. 03: Safety Behind Bars by Robert Kirkman, Charlie Adlard and Cliff Rathburn | Rating: ★★★★☆
My rating of the third volume, Safety Behind Bars is a bit lower
than I anticipated. I loved it on my first read and still enjoyed it
this time around but much less than before. A lot of the plots in this
were fantastic--action packed, dramatic, heart-wrenching and downright
spooky. Yet there was a bit of something missing in the tone when
compared to its previous, and later, installments. I do not want you to
misinterpret this as me saying it wasn't a good read because it was.
But!
I thought there were parts that dragged on a little too much and relied
on something else entirely at the end of the day. Can't really explain
it beyond that--from two young characters gruesome deaths, the former
inmates from the prison the gang now resides in, to the suicide pact of
two other characters and the attempted murder of another, there's a hell
of a lot to be seen. Just as disturbingly compelling as you expect, it
definitely left me both on the edge of my seat and lost elsewhere in my
emotions.
I loved the recurring themes of survival--would it really be a The Walking Dead story without it?--and the fact that Rick's emotional struggles are posed front and center.
I
loved seeing all the familiar faces come back into play as well;
despite the fact that it turns heartbreaking after some time. There was a
lot of frights to be had with the zombies and the reanimation of
several recently departed. We've got a new antagonist in what appears to
be an unlikely force. It's all very nerve-wracking and frankly a blast
to read.
And that cliffhanger at the end? Magnificent. I don't know why, but the way Safety Behind Bars
ends just gets me pumped every-damn-time I read it. Overall, this
volume is thoroughly entertaining and enjoyable reminding me why the
series works so well. Great characters, life and death plots, and a good
old fashioned zombie apocalypse worthy of some of the great horror
classics of yesterday.