Reviews

Rome West by Brian Wood

spiffysarahruby's review against another edition

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5.0

Nice fast pace through the ages!

acrisalves's review against another edition

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4.0

Publicado com imagens em https://osrascunhos.com/2022/01/25/rome-west-justin-giampaoli-brian-wood-e-andrea-mutti/

E se a América tivesse sido colonizada por Romanos? Esta premissa, relativamente simples, é explorada em Rome West! Um conceito curioso que me levou a adquirir e a ler este livro.

A história

Um milénio antes dos Descobrimentos, as terras americanas são colonizadas por romanos sobreviventes de um naufrágio. Sem meios para retornarem às suas terras de origem, o conjunto de homens vê-se obrigado a estabelecer a paz, trocando invenções com os nativos. Anos mais tarde, as duas culturas estão fundidas e quando os ibéricos chegam à América encontram uma civilização faladora de Latim.

A história vai prosseguindo, mostrando a evolução desta nação ao longo dos séculos e como as diferentes culturas se relacionam do ponto de vista político e cultural. O surgir desta civilização romana na América origina grandes diferenças na história da Humanidade.

rítica

A premissa é interessante e sei que já foi explorada noutros livros. Neste caso, a narrativa salta temporalmente em cada episódio, mostrando novas personagens e as consequências da divergência em cada século. Esta abordagem permite o exercício da história alternativa (E Se…) mas não permite criar grande empatia com a maioria das personagens.

Desta forma, julgo que teria sido muito mais interessante, criar uma série que poderia explorar, na totalidade, cada um dos episódios estendendo-o ao tamanho de um volume. Assim se criaria maior envolvência com a progressão.

Sem esta componente (a envolvência com o leitor) Rome West é uma narrativa de história alternativa que explora bem as hipóteses, mas que acaba por não se destacar do ponto de vista emotivo e corre o risco de se tornar esquecível.

Conclusão

Rome West é uma leitura engraçada qua parte de uma boa premissa e até a explora bem nas possibilidades que desenvolve, mas que falha em criar envolvência com o leitor. Acaba por se focar mais nos episódios históricos desta realidade alternativa, do que nas personagens, ainda que o tente fazer na personagem final. Tardiamente, a meu ver.

astrangerhere's review against another edition

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dark fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

Not Brian Wood's best work, sadly.

prcizmadia's review against another edition

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3.0

I love the concept, but the rapid-fire refocus through time in such short stories really kept me from feeling attachment to any character. There’s such fertile ground here, and you can see that they turned some over, but the limitation of the format— originally digital one-shots— limit the impact. Still, it’s worth a quick read!

romcm's review against another edition

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4.0

The story has a massive scope and is necessarily a big project. What’s missing in character development is made up for in the creativity of the scenes, and the deft weaving of history and reality with this new alternate timeline. I’m not a historian, so I imagine I was able to overlook a lot of the errors other reviewers have pointed out. It’s a good story and well worth reading just to marvel at the imaginations of the artists and writers.

museoffire's review

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2.0

Another entry for the "eh" shelf. I just didn't quite get this one. The premise is pretty neat. What if a shipwrecked Roman fleet were the first people to arrive in America in 323 A.D. well ahead of the infamous Columbus? How much would the future be altered and what would it look like?

The book vaults through different periods in "Rome West" history following the Valerius family who were part of the original Roman fleet who first settled there. As we move through world wars, technological advances, epidemics, and great discoveries the name Valerius comes to mean different things. But the time the story ends almost 1000 years later the Valerius family have gone from peace making assimilaters who chose cohabitation and marriage with the natives they encountered and a blending of cultures and belief systems to conquering despots responsible for every bit of misery in the world.

I think some of my issues stem from how short each historical segment is. Each period in the country's history is only about 5 to 10 pages. There really isn't time to make personal connections with any of the characters before we're moving on to the next period hundreds of years in the future. I was never clear on what exactly was so special or awful or whatever about the Valerius family and I never really got a clear picture of what New Rome even was or how the entire world was changed by how the discovery of North America was made.

The art is pretty nifty, very gritty and dark but there's a real warmth too particularly in the romantic relationships and familial portrayals. These seem like real people, which is perhaps why I was disappointed that I really had no idea who any of them were.

I just wanted more from this. That can be a good thing, when you just don't want the story to end. But in this case it had more to do with just not enough story to begin with.
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