I can’t be the only person who picked up this title thinking that there’d be a religious subtext here. And perhaps there is, but the creators chose a much more interesting way to use the title word in this graphic novel, that collects the first (?) four books of the series.
Science Officer Orrin Kutela is a twofer on his space crew’s mission to an uncharted planet. As both an evolutionary biologist and an artist, he’s responsible for recording any images should the ship’s equipment fail. But it’s failure of an entirely unexpected kind that leaves him stranded planet-side, alone and with any help some thirty years away.
With k-rations running out, Orrin starts looking for sustenance. The local flora, while beautiful, doesn’t have enough nutrients to sustain a human being. The fauna proves difficult to hunt and trap. When Orrin finally manages to catch and cook a fish, his body rejects the meal entirely, treating it as poison.
Dying of starvation, Orrin writes what he thinks will be his last words in the journal he’s been diligently keeping since making landfall. But the planet and its inhabitants aren’t done with him yet, as he slowly begins a process of conversion that changes everything about him, body and, perhaps, soul.
There are strong Annihilation vibes in this tale of a man who must adapt to survive, and in so doing learn that sometimes survival is the greatest lie of all. Orrin’s adoption into the local ecology is both transcendent and nightmarish, as he learns not only how to assimilate but how to improve the lives of the sentient creatures he’s joined, even as the being known as The Provider uses him as a pawn. It’s thought-provoking and weird, even if I feel that it doesn’t go quite deep enough into the themes it’s attempting to explore.








