Last modified: 2015-01-03 by peter hans van den muijzenberg
Keywords: brin (david) | life eaters (the) | abrahamites | swastika | star: 5 points (white on blue) | ring with star | magen david (white) | fish (white) | crescent (white on green) | crescent: no star |
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The Life Eaters is an alternate-history/fantasy graphic novel by
David Brin (also the author of The Postman)
and Scott Hampton, published in 2003 by Wildstorm. The plot begins in 1958;
WWII is still raging, although an Axis victory appears
imminent. Flashbacks reveal that in the winter of 1943, the Nazis had succeeded
in performing an occult rite by using the death camps as a large-scale human
sacrifice to summon the Aesir or Norse gods, who proceed to sideline Hitler,
take over Germany, and use their powers to win a decisive victory on
D-Day.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
image by Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
Between the first and second chapter, North America falls (and most open
military resistance ends.) The flag of the unnamed US Nazi puppet state is
shown three times: red-white striped (5/4), with a large black swastika
overall, and a small blue disc at its center, edged white and charged with a
white star. (The second time it is shown mirrored, likely just a flub by the
artist.) The third time is in SE Asia, with American troops fighting under
German command, where the Nazi-US flag is — in the distance — on
the same pole but below what I guess is meant to be
a German swastika flag.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
- uno.html images by Željko Heimer and Graham Bartram, 27 December 2003
At one point the protagonist visits a surviving Allied undersea base,
where the flags of the Allied nations are on display,
with a UN flag predominating.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
The other notable flag/flags shown are those of the Abrahamites, an Allied power in Iraq and Persia, made up of a (cloyingly brotherly) coalition of Jews, Muslims and Christians who have fled the new paganism. They use three swallowtailed pennants (simultaneously):
(all charges white).
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
image by Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
Blue with Magen David.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
image by Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
Red with fish. It is noted that the Christians reverted to the fish in
consideration of their new partners, who negatively associated
the cross with the Crusades.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
The Christian fish is/was an outline as one would draw in the sand in
two/three strokes, one long loop eventually crossing itself, with a straight
line between the ends forming the tail.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 30 Augustus 2011
However unconventional, the fish in the image is the rendition used in the comic.
Eugene Ipavec, 31 Augustus 2011
image by Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010
Green with crescent.
Eugene Ipavec, 13 November 2010