When telling a story as historically significant as the holocaust, I believe it is easy for a writer to fall into the mundane pattern of explaining it by means of a step-by-step process. This makes the story seem redundant, and the holocaust is anything but. By using the graphic novel as a way to tell his father's story, Speigelman captures the reader's attention in a way that can not be done by any other means of story-telling. The pairing of the panels and text do more than even a movie could, because the spaces between the panels force the reader to draw their own conclusions. In doing so, it is possible to make something as impersonal as the holocaust is to a 22 year old American girl just that- extremely personal and moving.
The series of panels on the bottom of page 83 (in the full version) show Vladek, the author's father, biking on a stationary bike as he tells the story of his first son's death during the holocaust. These panels are extremely haunting once analyzed by the reader, because of what they represent. While it appears that Vladek is merely riding a stationary bike, this represents the much bigger issue of the way the Jews felt during the entirety of the holocaust- stuck in one place with no way to get out. As Vladek's story progresses, he pedals harder and harder, as if he is trying to gain momentum and get somewhere, but in the end he is still on a bike that refuses to move, and the last panel reflects that feeling of failure. Another series of panels that shows increasing emotion is on page 111. We see Tosha, a woman who was supposed to be looking after Vladek's son as well as here own, facing the fact that they would all soon be sent to Auschwitz. Upon finding out the horrible news, she immediately makes a decision to poison herself as well as the children. The series of panels that in the middle of the page shows her anger towards the German Nazi's progress as it zooms closer and closer in on her face. Her face begins to furrow in anger and sweat rolls down her forehead. These panels make the reader become personally attached to Tosha's situation in a way that a mere novel could not.
Page 127 contains perhaps my favorite panel of the entire graphic novel. It shows Vladek and Sonja walking straight into a swastika. Speigelman used this panel as a means of foreshadowing, while letting the reader know something that the characters at this point do not- they are walking right into danger. The caption "Anja and I didn't have where to go," shows the pure helplessness of Vladek, as well as all of the Jewish population at this time. While reading over this portion of the book, I couldn't help but feel like a viewer of a horror movie; I kept wanting to shout "turn around!" "go back!", but just as in the movies, it would do the characters no good.
Perhaps the most horrifying panel in Maus appears on page 232. Vladek is explaining the gas chambers and ovens, and the readers are greeted with an image of mice engulfed in flames, throwing their heads back in anguish. It looks like a scene straight out of hell. There is no caption necessary- we all know the sound they are making. This is the beauty of the graphic novel; while it may not contain as many literary clues as a typical novel would, it gives the reader the freedom to fill in the gaps, making it that much more memorable and personal.
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