Book Description
Based on events, organizations, and locations that Barbara Goldscheider experienced while working on army bases throughout Israel, Al-Naqba, The Catastrophe follows the parallel stories of an elite Palestinian Arab and an officer of the Israeli Defense Forces. Asa Ibrahimi’s infatuation with the daughter of a desert sheikh is brutally ended when he’s arrested and beaten in the Russian Compound, two of his brothers are killed by Israeli soldiers, and his parents’ home in Ramallah is demolished. Israeli Colonel Neyri Ben-Ner attempts to begin a new life far from the instability of his country by going to Harvard and marrying an American woman. But a return to Israel brings him back to the horror of suicide bombings and mass murders. Both face a personal and political transformation with ramifications beyond their own lives. This epic novel blends drama, suspense, and romance, in the process tallying the tragedies to both parties in this seemingly unstoppable conflict.
Customer Reviews:
Great for Book Groups.......2006-06-13
As someone without a detailed knowledge of the conflict in the Middle East, I found this very educational and grounded in fact. It helped a lot to have this dramatic story unfolding in real history, and I felt as if the characters could have been real people, and probably are. It is as fair-handed as any book on the topic could be, and we see how the pain hits both Israelis and Palestinians at great force, although the powerlessness of the Årabs struck me more forcefully than the guilt of the Israelis. Death, of course, is an equal opportunity employer and this book is filled with endless grief on both sides. I found it engrossing, and it offers a great platform for book groups that can handle controversy. Because of it's clear-sighted presentation of both sides, you can come to any conclusion you want, except the conclusion that this war benefits anyone.
exciting.......2006-05-01
Al-Naqba, The Catastrophe, was a good reading, at least to me. The author tries to give an impersonal account of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Hence its easy to understand, from the onset, that this will be like walking on ropes, always having a chance to loose balance. The author does a reasonably good job, but at the same time swings back and forth pretty often. On the average she swings, at least it appears to me, toward the Israeli side. I am pretty sure that she hears the same from the Israeli side and I read somewhere that she actually angered one of her close relatives, just because she wrote about palestinians. Though its a good reading, some points do not fit. For example, Asa, being a practising muslim, do not drink alcohol and wakes up early in the morning to take to the mosque to say prayers, how come he does adultery with Beth. Though not impossible, but its hardly believing at all. Also it seems that the author likes to put maximum importance on dialogue among israelis and palestinian academics. Its hard to see how arm-chair academics can solve the crisis by simply playing with words. For example, in one of the dialogues, an israeli academic says the Arabs will remain as a "defeated people" because of their "decaying society" and it will remain so "untill it develops in the line of science and technology." This belong to one of the straightforward explanantions put by historians like Bernard Lewis in his "what went wrong" type of academic works. These academics, and the like, try to say that since Arabs, and in general , muslims, started losing everything they had, they are now frustrated, jealous and so they hate "us" and "our freedom". Well this itself is a discourse of its own, but what it says is that had the arabs been 'modern' this conflict would have been averted, which is hard to believe. The Germans in pre-WWII were very 'modern', compared to Arabs, and look what they did. Also it seems melodramatic that Asa actually put a bomb into Beth's bag, while she was carrying his baby. At that point of the story it would make sense if he were planning to kill more Jews than other people. At other points, this book emphasizes the dialogue of the Israelis, and highlights the agonies of Israeli casualties. She mentions palestinian casualties by mere numbers, whereas she writes individual names of the deceased Israelis, as if palestinians are mere numbers or statistics. Overall, this book displays the Israeli mood, what they want, what they do not want, how they carry on their life amid constant fear of terrorism, their dreams, their formulas for peace etc. which of course good to know. Finally the author emphasizes that both the people have to overcome their mutual hatred, that they are not demons or things, but humans as well. Thats the most humane and appealing part of the message of the book. It remains to be seen how Israelis and Palestinians come across these barriers. Only time will reveal how prophetic these wishes are.
Amazon.com
Fans of Batman are lucky to get Greg Rucka--the talented, gritty young author of Keeper and Finder, among others--sharing time with their favorite licensed character in this novelization of DC's complete No Man's Land comic series. (And fans of Rucka--assuming they get around to reading this at all--will still likely hold the opinion that Atticus Kodiak could take Batman in a standup fight any day.)
DC shook up Gotham--literally--in its 1999 Batman plot arc: a 7.6 earthquake rocked Gotham City, wreaking enough destruction to bring the broken, crime-ridden, runt kid-brother of Metropolis and New York to its knees. In the story line's most indulgent liberty, those fat cats in Washington decide to write off Gotham, à la Escape from New York, blowing up the connecting bridges, mining the surrounding waterways, and signing into law the Federal Declaration of No Man's Land, which makes it a crime to even set foot in the city. The usual suspects from Arkham Asylum, Two-Face and the Penguin, the Riddler and Dr. Freeze, Poison Ivy and Mr. Zsasz, file out to begin running the show, strong-arming and manipulating the block-by-block turf battles that envelop the now-ultraviolent city. A conflicted Batman shows up fashionably late, only to find that these lunatics are the least of his worries: Lex Luthor, Superman's archfoe, has nefarious designs on Gotham too. Could this possibly get any better? Sure, No Man's Land is derivative fiction, but the appeal of Rucka--and, of course, Batman--can make this one worth the read. --Paul Hughes
Book Description
Fans of Batman are lucky to get Greg Rucka--the talented, gritty young author of Keeper and Finder, among others--sharing time with their favorite licensed character in this novelization of DC's complete No Man's Land comic series. (And fans of Rucka--assuming they get around to reading this at all--will still likely hold the opinion that Atticus Kodiak could take Batman in a standup fight any day.) DC shook up Gotham--literally--in its 1999 Batman plot arc: a 7.6 earthquake rocked Gotham City, wreaking enough destruction to bring the broken, crime-ridden, runt kid-brother of Metropolis and New York to its knees. In the story line's most indulgent liberty, those fat cats in Washington decide to write off Gotham, + la Escape from New York, blowing up the connecting bridges, mining the surrounding waterways, and signing into law the Federal Declaration of No Man's Land, which makes it a crime to even set foot in the city. The usual suspects from Arkham Asylum, Two-Face and the Penguin, the Riddler and Dr. Freeze, Poison Ivy and Mr. Zsasz, file out to begin running the show, strong-arming and manipulating the block-by-block turf battles that envelop the now-ultraviolent city. A conflicted Batman shows up fashionably late, only to find that these lunatics are the least of his worries: Lex Luthor, Superman's archfoe, has nefarious designs on Gotham too. Could this possibly get any better? Sure, No Man's Land is derivative fiction, but the appeal of Rucka--and, of course, Batman--can make this one worth the read. --Paul Hughes
Customer Reviews:
Great read.......2007-09-27
Great read. I left the comic book scene right after this happened in the comics and was able to catch up easily with this graphic novel!
A good Build up to Volume 4..........2007-07-16
First of all, I found volume 3 far better then volume 2.
This Volume is worth a read and those missing Nightwing and Robin will be glad to see their return. Also, there is a great story involving poison Ivy and Clayface and even Superman makes an appearance. Very enjoyable.
If you found Volume 2 to lack some of the qualities of Volume 1, as I did, Volume 3 renews faith in where this epic story is going.
I gave it 3 stars simply because at the same time...It didn't blow my mind. Sure there were some great twists to the story,
The new Batgirl and so forth but generally this is still a build up to the
next Volume.
Also, another reason why I took a Star away from this is because this volume does not include Nightwing #35-39 which deal with Nightwing going to BlackGate, It's simply mentioned in this volume but not shown at all.
Hope this helped!
A Fair Ending..........2007-05-19
So, the first couple volumes of "No Man's Land" were excellent, possibly the best part of a series I have ever read...then came volume three. Starting with volume three, each story was hit and miss. Some were good, others were mediocre, and some...far below the 'good' line. This one is pretty much more of the hit and miss. However, it has a great ending that I'm pretty sure would please anyone who likes Batman at all. Not as great as the first couple volumes, but definatly not a waste of your time or money, "Batman: No Man's Land, Vol. 5" gets a 3 out of 5.
Great Read!!.......2006-11-10
The story line is captivating and the fact that all of the characters you know and love are brought togther in such new and unique juxtapositions makes this worth recognition.
Someone hired Bane to ripen Gotham for the taking-.......2006-04-20
Bane makes an appearance in the No Man's Land and Batman must discover his purpose there. Does Bane want to once again be the "king" of Gotham? Or is he merely taking advantage of a new opportunity?
Someone is making a move and materials are being sent in. There is a light at the end of the No Man's Land tunnel. In addition, Joker and Two-face are still running wild.
No Man's Land is a take-no-prisoners look at Gotham if it reverted to the days of feudalism. It is an interesting "social experiment" on the part of the writers, and an intriguing plotline.
Customer Reviews:
Shake it baby...........2007-07-09
This volume has just about anything you could possibly ask for and almost every Bat character in the Bat universe. Nobody escapes the disaster, the book ends on a high note...at least higher than one might expect, but as soon as you pick up No Man's Land you see that things only get worse.... Moving story and well worth the read, it does stand on its own but you must buy all of the NML volumes if you want some sense of closure.
prelude to No Man's Land.......2007-05-21
I was collecting comics at the time this story arc came through, and enjoyed it throughly. It shows you just how hard the caped crusader had to work to try his hardest to save his city. I reccomend the whole No Man's Land collection for anyone who hasn't read it yet.
Well put together.......2006-07-07
Batman can handle criminals. But how can he fight a Earthquake? How can he fight the natural destruction of a city?
A lot of crossovers nowadays are pathetically poorly coordinated. But Batman: Cataclysm is very well coordinated and flows pretty well. If you don't read the writing credits you wouldn't be able to tell how many different writers were involved. The main story following Batman, Oracle, Nightwing and Robin are intersepersed with vignettes starring Two-Face, Ra's al Ghul and others. One of the few week points is a vignette starring Robin is put in out of order. In it Robin, while rescuing trapped victims, says in the narrative that he hasn't found his family, but about five pages before he was reunited with his family. But most of the story flows well, and it's believable. Batman and Alfred are trapped in the Batcave well below ground. How do they get out? The Batmobile exit is blocked, the stairs up to the mansion is blocked, the access to Robin's house is blocked. So how do they get out? It's handled very clearly and as realistically as any comic book can get.
The real strong point of this story though is the artwork. Almost every comics artist can draw a decent figure but there are a sad number of artists who don't or can't draw backgrounds. But the Batman creative crew is occupied by artists who can draw buildings and scenery. As Gotham city is an essential part of the Batman mythos this probably isn't a coincidence. As such the scenes of the destroyed city are amazing and horrific. The falling skyscrapers, Wayne Manor split down the middle, rubble two stories high are all handled well, and you really feel how intense it is for these people to lose their city, their home.
I was really impressed with this work. The story continues in the No Man's Land story arc, and after reading this I definately want to go read those.
bring down Gotham.......2004-03-16
What we have here is a major earthquake that pretty much destroys Gotham. You get to see what Batman and company would do in the face of a major natural disaster. On a scale that we've never seen (after all, they do close it off). It's a great story with really good art. It helps keep Batman from becoming stale.
Interesting comic book, with a few flaws........2002-07-11
The greatest entity about Batman: Cataclysm is that it had excellent artistry; most of the pictures/scenes made sense, and are clear. For the most part, this book contains well-thought writing, which makes it better to understand . Although, there are a couple cons in this book that I must share with you. There are about four grammar errors, and some of them may keep you mind-boggled for the rest of day/night thinking about what they were trying to express. Once you get to meet Ra Al' Ghul, he can make the story confusing because of his wording. Overall, this book will get very exciting with its art, and knowing if you're a Batman fan, you'll love this book.
Average customer rating:
- Best Comic Book Novel Thus Far.
- Super Reader
- Great!
- Another fantastic batman novel
- Great Book
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Batman: No Man's Land
Greg Rucka
Manufacturer: Pocket Star
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
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Batman: No Man's Land, Vol. 1
ASIN: 0671774557 |
Book Description
GOTHAM CITY: a dark, twisted re?ection of urban America. Overcrowded, overbuilt, and overshadowed by a continuous air of menace, this gothic nightmare is a breeding ground for the depraved, the indifferent, and the criminally insane. It's also the object of one man's obsession. Witness to the brutal murder of his parents, Bruce Wayne has dedicated his life to protecting this city, taking a form to inspire hope in the innocent...and fear in the guilty. He is the masked vigilante known as the Batman.
Now the battlefield has changed. Leveled by a massive earthquake that left thousands dead and millions more wounded, Gotham City has been transformed into a lawless wilderness -- a No Man's Land -- where the survivors are turning against one another, and where the city's protectors are torn by a crisis that may consume them all.
Customer Reviews:
Best Comic Book Novel Thus Far........2007-09-14
This is by far the best Comic Book Novelzation that I have read thus far. This book isn't about Batman as much as it is about the supporting characters of the franchise. There is no one character that takes the spotlight in the No Man's Land but Commissoner Gordon defintely has largest slice of the pie. The opening monologues by Oracle are written from a great view of the character which combines her history as Batgirl into them. The relationship between Gordon and Batman goes to a another level. Two-Face as a warlord is simply brillaint, and the political games between the warning factions in Gotham City will have any conspiracy fan sitting on their rear end reading this book.
Super Reader.......2007-08-07
I had not read No Man's Land in comics when I read this, and was very impressed. At times a highly emotional story Rucka has performed admirably. A decent novelist in his own right, he has produced a Batman novel that is sometimes horrifying in its own right. It is also fairly lengthy for a hero novel, being closer to 500 pages, than 400, because of the epic it is covering, and not large print and lots of spacing, either.
Really good.
Great!.......2007-06-11
They should novelize comic book stories more often! After reading the Infinite Crisis novel, I searched for more "comic to novel" adaptations. So I check this out... Man, am I glad I did!
Another fantastic batman novel.......2006-10-16
I first heard about this story from the DC Comics web site, which stated what had happened to Gotham, not to the people residing in it. I see this as a direct sequel to Dennis O'Neil's "Batman: Knightfall" due to the fact the story takes place after Bruce Wayne returns to Gotham to reclaim the Batman title. Rucka shows his talent in how smoothly he shows the character's relationships.
This is a must-have novel for any Batman-fan or some one into a gripping tale of reclaiming a destroyed city.
PARTY ON, DUDES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Great Book.......2005-12-16
This is a great story about justice in a forgotten city, destroyed by an earthquake and overun with crime Batman and several others try to bring justice. This story alternates points of view many times through out the story from Batman to Penguin and everyone in between. Action and adventure fill the story with few dull moments through out it.
This story isn't a tough read and once you get into it its hard to put it down. The book can be confusing at times with all the different points of view but than again that is also what makes the story so interesting. The story is told from the first person by all of the many characters. Batman along with Batgirl and what is left of the Gotham Police Deparment fight villians such as Two Face, Penguin, Poisen Ivy and many more. It is a great read and i higly suggest it.
Customer Reviews:
For fans of Batman:The Animated Series.......2007-09-29
This is like a Batman:The Animated Series cartoon on paper. The art and storytelling are both right out of the show. I enjoy when Batman acts like a detective instead of just a ninja. Good stuff.
Greg Rucka Saves the Day.......2005-05-10
I agree with some of the reviewers that say the artwork is not great. I think the team of artists were going for a simple/classic Tim Sale kind of feel, but don't quite pull it off. The limited color palette is unusual (entire chapters use only a few colors), but this doesn't bother me. It creates an unreal feeling, so you can accept people transforming into animals... well, almost.
What saves the book is the writing of Greg Rucka. After his HUGE hit with the recent Batman comic, "The OMAC Project," I wanted to check out his earlier stuff. So I ordered this and I wasn't disappointed. Rucka understands that Batman books work well when Bruce Wayne is allowed to be a detective, not just a grunting badass. Even though Ra's al Ghul is probably my least favorite Batman villain, I enjoyed his part of the story. The Two-Face chapter is solid too. I like how Rucka includes characters from "Gotham Central," like Detective Montoya (the Two-Face chapter revolves around her).
Check out Rucka's work on the "Batman & Huntress" trade paperback (an excellent read) and the acclaimed "Queen and Country" series.
Happy reading!
Missing The BackUps, But 8 Of The Best Batman Comics Ever.......2004-12-18
Reprints Detective Comics #s 743-750, minus, apparantly, the 8-page backups that began appearing in # 746. The exclusion of said material, excellent though it is, is not enough to justify bumping this down from five stars to four; besides, all DC has to do is start issuing Trade Paperbacks reprinting the Detective backups like they've done for the Black-&-White backups from Gotham Knights (another outstanding title) and problem solved, you don't have to worry about missing any material when you purchase Trades like this or "Officer Down" or "Fugitive". What really mystifies me though, is if this is billed as 'New Gotham 1', why they didn't start the volume off by reprinting Detective # 742, THE perfect post-No Man's Land starting point, an issue largely focusing on Jim Gordon and the reprecussions of the final issues of NML. I definately recommend that issue in addition to this volume, as it sets the stage well for the whole post-NML Batman material in many of the titles, not just Detective.
Onto the material that is reprinted itself - issues 743-746 bring the detective skills of the Bat into center stage as he investigates the prescence and intentions of Whisper A'Daire and Kyle Abbot in Gotham, two new (to the reader) agents of the Demon's Head, Ra's Al Ghul. 743-746 also give considerable play to many of Gotham's 'non-costumed' organized crime elements, and does so with great characterization and realism. # 747 is a stand-alone issue in which Batman is pretty much a cameo player, in an issue starring GCPD officer Reneé Montoya and Two-Face; possibly one of the 5 best single-issue Batman stories ever published; actually I'd go even further and say it's possibly one of the 5 best self-contained comics, period. Detective Nos. 748 & 749, 'Urban Renewal' Parts 1 & 2, see the tense friction between the Dee-Zees (residents who left Gotham after the No Man's Land declaration and returned after it was lifted) and OGs (Original Gothamites, who stayed in the city during the whole crisis) escalating into violence; also brings in details on how the actual rebuilding of the city is proceeding. And Detective Comics # 750 is a follow-up to the arc in 743-746, brilliant but containing one small implausibility, the only one in the collection. To focus too much on that would be nitpicking on the molecular level given the overall awesomeness of the issue and the collection.
The artwork is tremendous, one of the few examples of veering into the highly stylized realm of art (rather than going for a fully photorealistic style) that I find totally rewarding and expressive on every level. And it's not that it's blatantly UN-photorealistic, it's just that this is a really unique, really innovative pencil style. If the drawing style is innovative, the coloring style is downright revolutionary, casting each individual issue in pre-dominantly in a single primary color and its multitude of shades, plus black, white and grey. A bold move that succeeded magnificently and worked with the pencils and inks for one of the most original looks on any comic title in years and years.
Tremendous, riveting, outstanding, and unpredictable, I'll stop now before I use too much bandwidth with thousands of praiseful adjectives.
awesome.......2002-04-24
Great read. Not so great art work but you can't blame that on rucka can you. Rucka did a great job with the villans i think. i purchased this along with batman broken bat. Broken Bat was a little better cause of the art work. BUY THIS BOOK!
Memorable only for the Two-Face chapter.......2002-03-05
Novelist Greg Rucka came aboard the Batman books during the groundbreaking "No Man's Land" epic. I loved that story arc, but since then, I've found Rucka's work, both on Batman and other comics (Whiteout, Batman/Huntress, etc.) to be either hit or miss. He is capable of great work, as the Two-Face story in this book shows, but when he's off his game.....oh boy.
The biggest problem here is Editorial; When DC rebooted Detective Comics, post NML, they made a few awful decisions- Artist Shawn Martinbrough's work is boring and nondescript, and it's made even worse by the "Limited" Colors used. The book looks like someone spilled a mug of Hot Chocolate on it. Just awful. Why bother to color it at all? It would be much more palatable in black and white.
An Editor should also have stepped in to stop Rucka from using a ridiculous designer drug as his plot device; The drug doesn't just addict, it turns it's users into animals. Literally. Snakes, Wolves, etc. After years spent trying to keep The Batman books (Semi)believable, the sight of addicts turning into snakes had me howling with laughter. Is this the best the great Ra's Al Ghul could do? Pathetic! Ra's Al Ghul is not my favorite Batman villain, but I think that's why he never used to turn up much: It took a really talented writer to do something with him. Rucka was not that writer. After all of that buildup, the story doesn't end, so much as stop. It's almost like Rucka ran out of writing paper....
With the great array of Batman books out there, you can't really be in bad enough shape that you'll want to waste your cash on this....
Average customer rating:
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The Batman Chronicles #17 (No Man's Land)
DC Comics
Manufacturer: DC Comics
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Comic
Batman | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
Batman | Characters | Comics & Graphic Novels | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B000IQQO92 |
Product Description
Quarterly direct sales edition comic book published by DC Comics. Features 3 different stories by 3 different writer/artist teams. Part of the "No Man's Land" crossover event which ran throughout the various Batman titles in 1999 & 2000.
Average customer rating:
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The Batman Chronicles #16 (No Man's Land)
DC Comics
Manufacturer: DC Comics
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Comic
Batman | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
Batman | Characters | Comics & Graphic Novels | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B000IQTDYK |
Product Description
Quarterly direct sales edition comic book published by DC Comics. Features 3 different stories by 3 different writer/artist teams. Part of the "No Man's Land" crossover event which ran throughout the various Batman titles in 1999 & 2000.
Average customer rating:
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Batman #564 (No Man's Land)
Devin K. Grayson
Manufacturer: DC Comics
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Comic
Batman | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
Batman | Characters | Comics & Graphic Novels | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B000J00556 |
Product Description
Direct sales edition comic book published by DC Comics. part of the massive "No Man's Land" storyline that ran throughout the various batman titles in 1999 and 2000.
Average customer rating:
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Batman #573 (No Man's Land)
Greg Rucka
Manufacturer: DC Comics
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Comic
Batman | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
Batman | Characters | Comics & Graphic Novels | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B000IZWFNW |
Product Description
Direct sales edition comic book published by DC Comics. part of the massive "No Man's Land" storyline that ran throughout the various batman titles in 1999 and 2000. Guest-stars Superman's Archenemy, Lex Luthor.
Product Description
Comic Book Series
Product Description
Comic Book Series
Books:
- Alentejo Blue: Fiction
- Amor De Perdicao (Classicos da Literatura Portuguesa)
- Anansi Boys: A Novel
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- Angels: Guardians of the Light
- Antologia de la Poesia Hispanoamericana Contemporanea 1914-1987
- Arban's: Famous Method for Trombone
- Beyond Line of Sight: A History of VHF Propagation from the Pages of QST
- BFF*: Two novels by Judy Blume--Just As Long As We're Together/Here's to You, Rachel Robinson (*Best Friends Forever) (Best Friends Forever)
- Blood of Paradise: A Novel (Mortalis.)
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