In the last few years, I have spent some time in the world of graphic novels. Watchman got me started. Since then, I have read graphic format costumed heroes, religion, history, biography and sex. Returning to one of the if not the originator of the genre, Will Eisner is rewarding. A Life Force is book two of his: The Contract with God Trilogy: Life on Dropsie Avenue. I read the trilogy several years back and find it compelling enough for this re-read. A Life Force is a very worthwhile standalone read.
A life force takes place along Dropsie Avenue in a part of a run-down New York neighborhood during the depression. Our central character is Jacob Shtarkah an older, long time married, suddenly out or work carpenter. In the depths of his despair and in the throes of what could be a fatal heart attack he sees a cockroach. It is back doing whatever desperate things it can do to re-gain its feet and continue to live. Jacob is inspired by this need for all living things to live but asks the question is he, and by extension all humanity nothing more than another kind of roach?
The novel will follow Jacob , his wife and a growing circle of equally desperate people, trying to survive and maybe get ahead in a world that is always on the verge of crushing them. Dropsie Ave, is peopled with callus capitalists, union thugs, ill-lead communists, gangsters and decent if not entirely angelic people. Over all is the threat of death, age and the possible disruption in the seemingly good news of the arrival of a long-lost love. At some level everyone is on their back doing whatever desperate things they can do to re-gain their feet and continue to live.
Yes, these people are generally on an edge, work as they will, the life they so want to live can be arbitrary in how it rewards or retards the struggling. Life Force is not a depressing book. Good things large and small can happen. Some unearned, often in ways invisible to the beneficiary. The cockroach will appear with just enough frequency to remind us that we are struggling, but we also survive. Unlike the cockroach we want some meaning and some hope.
Against the charge that this is a nihilist or at least non-spiritual world. Eisner was Jewish as is Jacob. Jews routinely call out to or talk with God. Direct answers are not expected, only some kind of notice. There is a core belief that God has a contract with humanity and another with Jews. Having a contract should mean something about giving and getting. Pay close attention, miracles can happen.