The story goes something like this: a bomb falls, then a plane falls, and the people and birds are left to figure out what’s going on. If you feel a little jostled while reading this book, try to roll with it. In an interview with Publisher’s Weekly Comics World, Nilsen talks about creating narrative by finding connections between existing images. He draws first, and makes order after, unconcerned with linearity. As with Dogs and Water, there’s lots of room for interpretation. It’s rather similar to watching birds in real life.You notice some robins in the grass, digging in the dirt; or some starlings cleaning themselves in a puddle; you observe their colours, their flitting motions, you wonder what they’re thinking about, an d then suddenly they’re up and on their way elsewhere. And for me, watching the birds in this book give meaning to their experiences and perceptions made it easier to see the subjectivity of our own meaning-making.
So if you like to think about love and death and failure to perceive parts of one’s own body, i.e asomatognosia, check out this lovely, huge book written over many years. Or try one of these other graphic novels:
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2012/06/staff-pick-big-questions-by-anders.html