Displaced Persons

by Derek McCulloch

Anthony Peruzzo (Artist)

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for Displaced Persons

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

San Francisco, the twentieth century: In 1939, a private
detective searches for a missing heiress. In 1969, twin brothers approach a drug
heist from opposite sides of the law. And in 1999, a woman slowly comes to
realize the terrible danger she faces in her own home. From the Eisner-nominated
writer Derek McCulloch (Stagger Lee, Gone to Amerikay) and artist Anthony
Peruzzo comes DISPLACED PERSONS, a riveting tale of murder, love, crime,
friendship, betrayal, and just the slightest bit of time
travel.

"A mammoth, sprawling family saga-both
enchantingly surrealistic and cruelly realistic- with a dazzling array of
haunting and resonant characters all drawn together through an unlikely paradox.
Derek McCulloch delivers an ambitious, complex work that's not afraid to take
chances, and the art by Anthony Peruzzo is richly detailed and evocative."
-Karen Berger, Vertigo founding
editor

This graphic novel time
travels through three generations of one family, whose connections are
symbolized, and realized, by a house in the hills of San Francisco. The themes
of politics, family, and crime are showcased in the intertwined narratives,
changing through the years only in the details. During the Great Depression, a
loving father, pressed by economic forces he's unable to control, makes a shady
deal to keep his loved ones together. Grandiose or ambitious, there's a lot here
to consume, and digest; readers may have to check the proffered time lines more
than once to keep their bearings. The sins of the past destroy some characters
and cast off others, leaving a faithful few to find their way home. Drug use and
dealing cast a pall in the 1960s chapters, and César Chávez gets a
mention through a well-meaning in-law as things fall apart in the 1990s. It
seems a bit random, but in an interesting play-within-a-play conclusion, a
friend writing a book and a time traveling relative find each other and some
answers to the family saga. The work's narrative held together by the art:
Shaded in multiple sepia tones to signal different time periods, the drawings
are roughly chiseled and remarkably detailed; whole rooms, complete with clues,
appear in single frames. This part mystery, part sci-fi graphic novel was
crafted over ten years. - School Library Journal (Starred
Review)


  • ISBN10 1632151219
  • ISBN13 9781632151216
  • Publish Date 26 August 2014 (first published 15 May 2008)
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 11 March 2021
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Image Comics
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 168
  • Language English