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Graphic Novel Review: Through the Woods by Emily Carroll (HWA Summer Scares Recommendation, Middle Grade)

Through the Woods by Emily Carroll

Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2014

ISBN: 978-1442465954

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition

 

Carroll’s Through the Woods includes five short sequential art stories, each one atmospheric and eerie. In “Our Neighbor’s House,” sisters Mary, Beth, and Hannah are left on their own after their father goes out to hunt, with instructions to venture to the neighbors’ house if he did not return by the end of the third day. When he does not return, they do not obey his instructions. Mary disappears, followed by Hannah, leaving only Beth. Before her sisters vanished, they talked of man smiling man wearing a wide brimmed black hat. Beth ventures out to her neighbors’ house, only to meet the strange man, who is not a man.

“A Lady’s Hands are Cold” tells the story of a newlywed couple venturing to his estate, which the heroine discovers to be haunted. A ghostly song leads the new bride through the vast mansion where she picks up deeply disturbing items left throughout the rooms, in the walls, pieces of a woman’s body. As I wrote in my Ax Wound review of Through the Woods in 2017, the song can be considered a character on its own. The winding blood red ectoplasmic ribbon that runs through the panels with white lettering is incredibly effective. After seeing how Carroll uses red in this story, I reread it and saw the implications of the colour itself. The man uses and consumes everything he possesses, including the women in his life. He uses them to death.

In “His Face All Red,” a man confesses to the murder of his brother. The brothers went out to hunt a mysterious beast that had been harassing the village. At the town hall, the young brother volunteers to track and kill the creature, but nobody takes him seriously until his brother stands smiling and declares they will hunt the beast together. He returns home after burying his brother with a story of avenging his brother. Afterward, he takes his brother’s place in the village. But what can he do when his brother comes back?

“My Friend Janna” centers on best friends Yvonne and the titular character. People wanting to talk with their dead relatives travel to visit Janna, who communes with spirits. What they don’t know is that it is all a ruse committed by the two friends. They want to stop, but people just keep coming, yearning to have contact with their loved ones one more time. Yvonne sees something following Janna, but is afraid to tell her friend.

In “The Nesting Place”, opens with the story of a monster that lived in the cellar with thousands of teeth, and a mysterious fog that fell over the town that contained many mouths. Bell’s older brother, Clarence, picks her up from the boarding school to stay with him and his fiancée Rebecca in the countryside after the death of their mother. She is warned by the housekeeper never to wander into the woods near the house, lest she become trapped there as Rebecca had. Bell sees strange things while she stays with Rebecca and Clarence: Rebecca’s teeth seeming to clack inhumanly as she eats, the strange red marks on the housekeeper’s wrists, and seeing Rebecca wander into the forest Bell was warned against exploring.

The five stories are situated between two short pieces. The beginning tells the story of a young girls’ fear of turning off the light at night after she was finished reading lest something pull her into the darkness. The piece at the end of the book presents a story of the same girl dressed in a red cloak walking home through the dark woods, curling up in her bed, and breathing a sigh of relief at the wolf not finding her…yet.

Rereading this after a few years hasn’t changed my mind. Through the Woods is a must-read for those who enjoy atmospheric and period piece horror. While Carroll does not indicate dates of any kind in her stories, it is easy to place time periods in which the stories are set based on attire, environment, and backgrounds in her artwork. Her use of color is deliberate and communicates very specific information to the reader. It’s a hauntingly beautiful graphic novel.

Highly recommended

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

 

Graphic Novel Review: Monstress Volume 3: The Haven by Marjorie Liu, art by Sana Takeda

Monstress Volume 3: The Haven by Marjorie Liu, art by Sana Takeda

Image Comics, 2018

ISBN-13: 9781534306912

Available: Paperback, Kindle, comiXology

In Volume 3, Maika Halfwolf discovers more about her mother’s plan, herself, and her past, just as Zinn (the Monstrum living within her), is putting together their own plan. War between the Arcanics and humans is imminent. Maika may have no choice but to work with Zinn just to survive the entities close at her heels. Ren and Kippa still follow Maika in her quest as they make it to Tear Shed in the Pontus Waters, a place of refugees and neutral ground. There Maika reluctantly makes a deal with the Royal Engineer to help repair the region’s shield wall, which resembles a Monstrum itself. The Engineer, and others, are convinced that because of Maika’s bloodline, she will be able to make the repairs to the shield. In exchange, Maika and her allies will receive sanctuary in Tear Shed. While all of this is going on, the Cumea are plotting, the Blood Queens are closing in, and enemies and allies alike are on their way. Maika’s bloodline also opens the laboratory and archives of the Shaman-Empress, a place that has been locked for centuries. What greets Maika and Zinn is not only unexpected, but leads to major revelations for the Monstrum. Ren also commits the ultimate betrayal that results in Kippa’s abduction. I have no shame admitting that I cried when that discovery came to light. As with the two previous collected volumes, Professor Tam-Tam helps provide further context and history of the world of Monstress.

There is so much going on in this volume. I actually had to go back and reread sections of the previous two volumes to make sure that I was following everything that was going on. Most people would probably count this against Monstress, but I don’t see it that way. The world and storylines are so intricate that it is easy to miss something, unless you are paying close attention. As someone who likes to read and reread comic series, I appreciate this, and I am wondering when I do revisit the series what else I am going to pick up on that I missed before. I’m sure that there will be things on my next reading that will also fall into place based on a full reading. Liu is a great storyteller who has created such an immense world and tale that I don’t think it can all possibly be taken in with only one reading of Monstress.

I am so in love with Takeda’s artwork, so much so that I even requested from my favourite comic shop to pull her alternate covers for The Power of the Dark Crystal series for my box. That’s another series I recommend, but that is a story for another world…another time… Highly recommended.

Volume 3 collects issues 13-18.

Contains: blood, gore, nudity, PTSD, sexual situations

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Editor’s note: Monstress Volume 3: The Haven is a nominee on the final ballot for the 2018 Stoker Awards in the category of Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel. 

Graphic Novel Review: Moonshine Volume 2: Misery Train by Brian Azzarello, art by Eduardo Risso

Moonshine Volume 2: Misery Train by Brian Azzarello, art by Eduardo Risso

Image Comics, 2018

ISBN: 9781534308275

Available: Paperback, Kindle and comiXology editions

 

I need to be up front about a few things in this volume. There is racist language, and physical and threatened sexual violence against PoC.

The second volume finds gangster Lou Pirlo, Delia, and some of her family in a train car, running from the police. With Hiram Holt missing or dead, with his family wanting revenge, and the gangsters back in New York City equally wanting his head on a pike, Lou  finds himself clapped in chains and thrown in a different type of gang altogether. He also has another problem; he was bitten by a werewolf. When a cottonmouth snake strikes him, and doesn’t end up killing him, his fellow prisoners know something is not quite right. The gangsters are also wise to the werewolf menace in Appalachia, and have sent a deadly monster hunter on their trails.

 

Volume 2 is better than the first, with a more cohesive story and intense action. One of the gangsters from volume 1, L’Ago, is much more front and center dealing with the Holt family. However, the story is still missing something. I still can’t get invested in the characters, perhaps because they are too flawed and stereotypical. I had high hopes, since it is a 2018 Stoker nominee, but I don’t feel invested in any of the characterss. As much as I enjoy reading about flawed characters, there needs to be something redeemable, or at least worthy of respect, for me to engage with the text. I don’t get that here. If you want a good noir crime series by this team, pick up 100 Bullets. Recommended, with reservation.

 

Contains: blood, nudity, racism, threatened rape violence

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

 

Editor’s note: Moonshine Volume 2: Misery Train is a nominee on the final ballot for the 2018 Stoker Awards in the category of Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel.