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East of West is, without a doubt, one of the best Image Comics ever. Hickman and Dragotta make for a brilliant team, giving readers some of the most wild stories out there. It’s a book that I got obsessed with in 2016, buying all of the trades and then getting it in floppies until it ended. At the time, barely any issues a year where coming out, and they took so long that I would forget what came before. However, I recently just re-read the series and I realized something very important about it. This isn’t a “Western” comic. It’s a manga. There were clues all along, but reading it again proved to me that Hickman and Dragotta set out to do something unique in American comics.
East of West Uses Numerous Aspects of Manga to Tell Its Story

East of West, at first glance, doesn’t really seem like a manga. It’s set in the 2060s in the United States. The country had been torn asunder by the Civil War, but instead of being a two-sided affair, it became a seven-sided war, before the Message was brought to the people. The Message was the apocalyptic prophecies of the end of days, and this ended the war, as the seven nations sat back and prepared for the end of the world, gathering their power, and entering a Cold War-like phase that lasted two hundred years. The book follows the Horseman of the Apocalypse Death, as he searches for his son, all while the final war begins in the background, introducing readers to an amazing cast of characters.
The book feels like a slice of Image sci-fi perfection with a healthy dose of Americana, but, right from the beginning, there’s a Trigun vibe to the whole thing. A big part of the story is Death and other characters traveling across the United States on their missions, battling each other in beautifully rendered, bloody battles. Dragotta uses the language of manga action — motion lines, sparse backgrounds, and over the top physicality — to give the action scenes a little something extra that you don’t always get from American comics. His art style at the time wasn’t as obviously manga-influenced as someone like Joe Madureira’s was, but the more you look at East of West, the more you can see that Dragotta was using manga as his inspiration (after East of West, he and Caleb Goellner did a straight up manga called Ghost Cage where his art goes even more in the Japanese direction; you should a hundred percent check it out).









