by Jeremy Lambert ; illustrated by Alexa Sharpe ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 8, 2024
Myth-making with a majestic monster at its heart, laced with style and suspense.
In a moonlit world, a girl contends with her own shadowy origins.
The sun is nowhere to be seen, and the moon bathes a small riverside town in ominous gloom. Gravedigger and astronomer Barnabas Tock observes this phenomenon with increasing concern. His adopted daughter, Madeline, is plagued by whispers from the graveyard dead’s whispers and by near-constant nightmares. Alternating between third-person narration and 12-year-old Madeline’s perspective, the book deftly lays the groundwork for an intriguing legend: A Night Mother governs the lunar world and turns the souls of the departed into moonlight when the moon is full. In every generation, a new Night Mother is born, ascending at the age of 13. The current Night Mother is a tyrannical phantom, plunging the world into darkness so she can consume the souls of the living as well as the dead. She harbors a dark plan for her offspring—brave, hard-bitten Madeline. To save her father, her town, and the souls bound in moonlight, Madeline and new friend Nura must find a way to stop her mother. Galactic greens, blues, and purples evoke inky darkness, while the immense Night Mother feels inescapable—a horrifically elegant Victorian ghost who resembles a gothic twist on Maxfield Parrish–esque tableaux. Barnabas is tan-skinned with gray hair, Madeline is light-skinned with dark hair, and Nura is brown-skinned with blue-green hair.
Myth-making with a majestic monster at its heart, laced with style and suspense. (Graphic fantasy. 9-15)Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2024
ISBN: 9781637154946
Page Count: 88
Publisher: Oni Press
Review Posted Online: Aug. 17, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2024
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by Graham Annable ; illustrated by Graham Annable ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 18, 2023
Thoroughly, deliciously creepy.
A gathering of genuinely chilling tales, related by children in a classroom and presented in graphic format.
Invited by their teacher Ms. Nomed (mark the name) to tell “the eeriest story you have,” five young volunteers, variously light or dark of skin, stand up in turn to petrify their classmates. Alvin, for instance, shares a historical tale of a village that vanishes after previously friendly green bipedal “fish people” discover a taste for human flesh. Emily tells of a spaceship’s crew that looks human…right up until the tentacles shoot out of their eyes and mouths. Those and other tales that feature ghosts and conversations with a decapitated stranger are related in even tones that work effectively with the sepia and other subdued color schemes in Annable’s cartoon panels to provide properly slow builds to horrifying climaxes. The most lurid twist comes at the end of the last and longest entry, “The Door to Demons,” which turns out to be not made up at all but a frame story that touches off a mad scramble to escape a teacher who has suddenly transformed into a toothy, terrifying monster with a spectacularly weird upside-down head. It will take hardy readers indeed to sit comfortably in their own classrooms by day—or for that matter, hope for peaceful dreams at night—after these screamers.
Thoroughly, deliciously creepy. (Graphic horror. 9-12)Pub Date: July 18, 2023
ISBN: 9781250195036
Page Count: 368
Publisher: First Second
Review Posted Online: April 11, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2023
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by Graham Annable ; illustrated by Graham Annable
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by Graham Annable ; illustrated by Graham Annable
by Ryan Andrews ; illustrated by Ryan Andrews ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 11, 2019
Brilliantly enchanting.
Two reluctant friends—and a talking bear—journey deep into the night in search of answers.
The night of the annual Autumn Equinox Festival unfolds as the villagers cast hundreds of lanterns down the river in honor of a local folk legend. For Ben, this year will be different from the rest. He and his friends make a pact to follow the lanterns until the unknown end of their voyage. One by one Ben’s friends give up and return home, all except for Nathaniel, whose love for the cosmos and nerdy ways ostracize him from the group. In spite of his misgivings, Ben decides to uphold the pact with Nathaniel. A third, unexpected member joins the adventure when the boys come across a talking fisherbear who’s on a quest to fish as his ancestors did. The trio eventually loses track of the path, and an unplanned encounter with the feisty Madam Majestic leads to even greater escapades. To shed more light on the story risks spoiling Andrews’ marvelously melancholic, earnest graphic novel, at its core an exercise in whimsical self-reflection. This story’s a quiet one in which danger flickers and hope flares at odd but fruitful moments. The core relationship between Ben (a dark-haired, light-skinned, bespectacled boy) and Nathaniel (a dark-skinned boy with puffs of hair) never veers into pure mawkishness. Likewise, the primarily blue and red mixed-media pictures underscore how nighttime sometimes promises transformation.
Brilliantly enchanting. (Graphic fabulism. 10-14)Pub Date: June 11, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-250-19695-8
Page Count: 336
Publisher: First Second
Review Posted Online: March 30, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2019
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More by Kara LaReau
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by Kara LaReau ; illustrated by Ryan Andrews
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by Kara LaReau ; illustrated by Ryan Andrews
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by Kara LaReau ; illustrated by Ryan Andrews
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