During the past two decades, Jason Lutes has quietly created one of the masterworks of the graphic novel golden age. Serialized in twenty-two issues, collected in two volumes, with a third to be released at the same time as this omnibus, Berlin has more than 100, 000 copies in print & is one of the high-water marks of the medium: rich in its well-researched historical detail, compassionate in its character studies, & as timely as ever in its depiction of a society slowly awakening to the stranglehold of fascism. Berlin is an intricate look at the fall of the Weimar Republic through the eyes of its citizens? Marthe Muller, a young woman escaping the memory of a brother killed in World War I, Kurt Severing, an idealistic journalist losing faith in the printed word as fascism & extremism take hold; the Brauns, a family torn apart by poverty & politics. Lutes weaves these characters lives into the larger fabric of a city slowly ripping apart. The city itself is the central protagonist in this historical fiction. Lavish salons, crumbling sidewalks, dusty attics, & train stations: all these places come alive in Lutes masterful h&. Weimar Berlin was the world s metropolis, where intellectualism, creativity, & sensuous liberal values thrived, & Lutes maps its tragic, inevitable decline. Devastatingly relevant & beautifully told, Berlin is one of the great epics of the comics medium.