ooh, please talk about how animorphs as a series exists in conversation with comic books!
Here it is, a whole bunch of questionably-organized thoughts off the top of my head (because if I wrote it out properly it’d be an entire dissertation):
Animorphs as Graphic Novels
Need for secrecy and “dual identities”, including through hiding abilities from loved ones and civilians
Kids’ powers given by science which no other human possesses — they are extraordinary, “unique to the universe” (MM3)
Small team of fighters with variations on similar powers (strength, speed, stealth, etc. divided among morphs)
Inability to trust authority, forcing them to take fight into own (amateur) hands
Secret Invasion: the aliens are in disguise, characters take on others’ appearances and identities
Use of exposition conceits and contrivances
Notably eschews Magic Tree House convention of putting all exposition into prologue
Also does not follow Babysitters’ Club convention of info-dump (thank Jeebus)
Follows in convention of using various devices (memory recordings, personal introductions, dialogue) to introduce the reader to the plot
When these occur, deliberately written w/ character voices
Heavy use of onomatopoeia
Short sentences, short paragraphs, short words
Written with hypertext symbols/pointed brackets
In comics, used to denote a translation from a foreign language (possibly b/c guillemets popular in French and Italian texts?)
In Animorphs, used to denote not-quite-real and non-audible nature of this type of speech
Simultaneous condemnation and celebration of need for lawbreaking and violence
Explorations of impermanent death
Rachel and Tobias in MM2; Jake in MM3 and #11; all of them in MM4; David (maybe) in #48, David definitely in #22; Cassie, Tobias, Rachel, maybe Ax in #41
Impact of death is NOT on dead character, but on surviving teammates left behind (Alaniz)
Explorations of impermanent disability
Loren in #49; James, Erica, etc. in #50; Tobias in #13 and MM2
THIS IS PROBLEMATIC AS FUCK and doesn’t age well, but it is still a convention of the genre
Vivid, lurid, unreal cover scenes, including stylized depictions of battles
Discomfort with public personas, including identity fragmentation
Jake being disturbed/horrified by own postwar lionizing (military awards, Mount Rushmore, etc.)
Cassie noting how much Rachel’s funeral would have discomfited Rachel herself, and the lack of accuracy in statements made about her postmortem
All Animorphs, especially Jake and Tobias, responding to praise with shame
Short sentences, short paragraphs, short chapters, short books
Heavy use of imagery, with emphasis on worldbuilding through unreal imagery
Dialogue does not let up throughout story — not during dreams, not during battles, not during self-reflection
During rare moments when no one is talking, everyone is doing something, w/ very little room for long reflection
Emphasis on concrete, physical sensations and images over wishy-washy abstraction
Arguably: “Good grief”; “Don’t call me prince”/”Yes, Prince Jake”
Superman as someone with “a body that retains no marks, on which history cannot be inscribed” (Bukatman)
Heroes getting “spear deaths” while villains and the pathetic get “straw deaths” (X)
Rachel’s death as heroic sacrifice
Jara Hamee, James et al, Rachel, Ax (?), Elfangor, Jake et al (?): dying in battle while bravely facing down hopeless odds
Visser One: stepped on almost accidentally after being stripped down to nothing by execution process
Visser Three: denied death in battle; must die after lifetime spent in prison
David: made helpless and pitiful before begging for death rather than continuing to exist in this state
Tom: “‘This pitiful, broken thing?’ He [the yeerk] gestured to his own body.” just before death (#53, emphasis mine)
Saddler: vilified and (guiltily) victim-blamed before dying in bed
Even “mock deaths” in Megamorphs books follow this pattern
Animorphs as SUBVERSIVE Graphic Novels
Ultrarealistic (humorous) embodiment of experience of fighting battles in multicolored spandex
Emphasis on consequences beyond the physical
Physical violence is gross, disturbing, horrifyingly realistic (contrast: comics are often bloodless, or have unrealistically pretty violence) (Pizarro & Baumeister)
Superhero stories: “happy ending” = wife, kids, picket fence, heteronormativity
Animorphs: happy ending would be the chance to rest/recover and stop having to make moral decisions (#31); happy ending moves out of reach over course of story
Almost outsized emphasis on impact of secrecy, lies, violence, and injury on protagonists
Superhero comics (and later superhero movies): strangely bloodless stabbings, often played for humor or pathos but no gore
Animorphs: Marco’s entire jaw being ripped off as his tongue lolls loose from the hole in his face (#49), Jake tripping over his own entrails where they trail on the floor following disembowelment (MM4), Rachel being blinded by amount of blood gushing from a head wound (#41), etc.
Descended from an ancient line of alien warriors, abandoned unwillingly by his parents at birth with unworthy guardians, grows up with no advantages, goes on to become a messiah-figure to the hork-bajir… and after all that, he’s just some guy on the team
It's not the story of Tobias and the Superfriends (or of Jake and the Superfriends) b/c he’s a part of the team
Characters like Cassie, who has ordinary (and therefore unconventional for superhero) backstory, actually get just as much development and even more narrative time than Tobias does
Showing impact: he has chronically, almost pathologically low self-esteem as a result of how he was raised, he experiences a lot of anger with both his parents for abandoning him, he gets continuously bullied in school for markers of poverty (wrong clothes, overweight, need to change school districts)
Another common superhero narrative: ordinary kid with group of friends accidentally stumbles into alien secret, ends up in charge of a group of superbeings almost overnight, all the while maintaining a secret identity as an ordinary (mediocre) boy non-hero to his normative suburban parents, aware all the while of villainous figure lurking in their midst…
But he remains, at the end of the day, not that special: the only “secret ability” he has to conceal is the ability to morph, not super-smarts or super-strength or any quality that makes him a brilliant rather than a merely decent leader
Again, impact: his family gets torn apart by weight of his and Tom’s yeerk’s secrets, something Aunt May (for instance) is much less likely to have to contend with
Rachel’s death as planned sacrifice play: Jake makes no attempt to die in her place
Contrast graphic novel trope (Superman and Jason Todd, Captain America and Bucky, Black Widow and Hawkeye, Hulk and Iron Man) of superheroes going to almost-ridiculous lengths to die in each other’s place, and superheroes almost never dying outside of concerted effort to prevent/undo friends’ deaths
Animorphs goes for military realism over classic self-sacrifice presentation