ADVANCED REVIEW: The Passageway OGN launches Lemire, Sorrentino's shared horror universe, The Bone Orchard Mythos
Or, how The Passageway proves that The Bone Orchard Mythos will unravel the fabric of reality.
Read MoreOr, how The Passageway proves that The Bone Orchard Mythos will unravel the fabric of reality.
Read MoreFollowing their success on Descender (and then Ascender) Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen are teaming on another original story, this time with Little Monsters #1.
Read MorePrimordial #6 concludes a heartfelt journey of three best friends on their way home, surrounded by mystery and danger, all from the veteran creative team of Andrea Sorrentino and Jeff Lemire.
Read MoreToday we have a new review of Primordial #1 by writer Jeff Lemire, artist Andrea Sorrentino, colorist Dave Stewart, and letterer Steve Wands.
Read MoreThe Unbelievable Unteens #1 feels special. It’s got an excellent metafictional concept that caters right to people who spend much of their time doing comics things, executed to near perfection by Tyler Crook.
Read MoreBlack Hammer Reborn #1 is a welcoming introduction for new fans and a fun reinvigoration of the world for long time readers. On a deeper level, it’s an exploration of the internal struggles of daily life play out with superheroes.
Read MoreTwo of the most acclaimed creators of their generation — writer JEFF LEMIRE and artist JOCK — together for the first time in SNOW ANGELS #1, a new comiXology original series…
Read MoreBy Larry Jorash — Just when we thought the world was done with new high fantasy space operas, Tim-21 returned — a brought a new genre with him. Descender — the Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen hard sci-fi story — has been back for 12 issues now, taking familiar touches from the previous book and lacing them with high fantasy. All the while this extraordinary universe is still embracing and welcoming us in with wildly brilliant covers by Nguyen; and fabulous water-colored brushstrokes that trail between pages.
Read MoreBy Jacob Cordas — Family Tree still can’t seem to figure out how to pay off its narrative mysteries. The previous issue suffered harshly from its over reliance on obfuscating the puzzles at play. Family Tree #8 does nothing to fix that problem outside of not leaning so hard on the convention as the last issue did. This issue thankfully only has one occurrence of a character claiming that everything is about to be explained (spoiler - it isn’t).
Read MoreBy Benjamin Morin — Once again, the creative team behind Family Tree knocks it out of the park. With Family Tree #7, writer Jeff Lemire begins to tie all the various narrative threads together from previous entries. The three main threads of Grampa Judd’s escape, Meg’s concurrent transformation, and Josh’s future struggle are woven together through Josh’s unique perspective. This is an action-packed issue that grabs readers from page one and does not let go.
Read MoreBy Jacob Cordas — If you had told me that there’d be a mini movement of amazing plant-centric comics, I’d have told you that was an incredibly specific and confusing prediction. But here we are halfway through 2020 and we have several excellent, plant-centric comics, including Farmhand, No One’s Rose, and basically the entire X-Men line. But no comic is better able to mine this imagery for horror than Family Tree.
Read MoreBy Toren Chenault — The Black Hammer Universe is filled with superheroes. When it debuted in 2016, it was clear from solicits that writer Jeff Lemire and artist Dean Ormston wanted to change superhero comics with Black Hammer. And that’s exactly what they did. I worked at a comic book shop for most of 2018 and part of 2019. The first Black Hammer trade was one of the books I sold the most. I would pitch it to comic readers and say “Imagine if Watchmen expanded into a full-blown universe. But was a bit more modern.” And that would work most of the time. But to be honest, most of the sales came from people who had never heard of the title or read any of Lemire’s other work.
Read MoreBy Zack Quaintance — Since it first launched back in 2018, Gideon Falls has presented itself as a horror comic. And it’s certainly been that for much of its run, owing to the imagery from artist Andrea Sorrentino and colorist Dave Stewart, which at times has made me feel an actual chill (no exaggeration). After reading Gideon Falls #21, however, I’ve noticed a genre shift in this comic from horror to existential mystery, more in line with Twin Peaks (an obvious inspiration for this story throughout) or perhaps Stephen King’s Dark Tower series than any narrative of the straight stab-stab or traditional monster variety.
Read MoreBy Nick Couture — Family Tree #3 — from Jeff Lemire, Phil Hester, Eric Gapstur, Ryan Cody, Steve Wands, and Will Dennis — continues the journey of a young girl who is literally turning into a tree. This issue adds new threads, villians, and mystery to a book already stacked with intrigue. The warm hug of a Jeff Lemire book feels nice (as always), and this is another solid entry to the beginning of a new book, but part of me wishes that a few more risks were being taken.
Read MoreBy Zack Quaintance — As those who follow me on Twitter have surely realized at this point, for more than a year now I’ve been slowly reading every single Hellboy and Hellboy-adjacent comic at a pace of one chapter (or issue, rather) per day in the order of original publication (catalog them all via #RaisingHellboy). Through this, I’ve also read all the Lobster Johnson volumes. Lobster Johnson is a pulp hero that has larger-than-life adventures in early part of the 20th Century.
Read MoreJeff Lemire has long been a master of tone and mood in comics, often creating a unique sort of mysterious desperation within his work. It’s tough to articulate how he does this, but I think it has do with the way his dialogue and action are at times kept sparse, leaving more than enough material to intrigue while also trusting readers to make necessary connections. Lemire has recently used this to great effect in a pair of excellent creator-owned titles, Royal City — an introspective series heavy with family, grunge, and what ifs — and Black Hammer — a curious meditation on superheroes and aging.
In those books, as well as in much of Lemire’s earlier work, there are hints of horror on the fringes, more of a garnish than an actual component to the meal (terrible analogy, someday I’ll do better, I swear). But in the first issue of Lemire’s Gideon Falls (due March 7, available for pre-order now at your local comic shop), he has planted seeds for a story poised to have dread at its very core, and the result is one of his best first issues yet.
This is a spoiler free review, so I won’t go into the plot much, not past what Lemire has revealed elsewhere or what's in the book’s solicitation, but Gideon Falls is psychological storytelling grown from some of the first characters Lemire ever invented. These characters, he's told interviewers, were created years ago before he started getting his work published. They're intriguing figures to be sure, and I'm excited for Lemire to fill in the details of their lives. The story here (and I suspect moving forward) is split between two main protagonists, as well as between a rural and an urban setting. This is all available in the solicits, though, and I can't tell you much more without risking spoiler territory.
What I can tell you about, however, is this book’s aesthetic. Gideon Falls is another series in which Lemire teams with frequent collaborator Andrea Sorrentino, the artist from his runs on Green Arrow and Old Man Logan. This is the duo's first time working on a creator-owned series at Image, and, as usual, Sorrentino’s artwork here is intricate and precise, gorgeous throughout, but especially impressive whenever it takes a step back to give us some truly fascinating wide layouts. The art here is also straight up terrifying when it needs to be.
For the most part, I’ve never been a big horror fan, at least not as it pertains to certain corners of the genre, like the teen hack and slash and gore stuff, the Freddys and the Jasons and the Michael Myers, etc. The aesthetic of this book, however, isn't even in the same neighborhood as all that. There is attention paid to evil and religion, but it doesn’t seem to be overly concerned with God or the devil. I will say that I was raised Catholic, which will likely lead to greater understanding of at least one of the characters as the plot moves forward.
Gideon Falls comes off in its first issue as David Lynchian, boasting shades of the sort of dark mythology that underlaid Twin Peaks while some of Sorrentino’s dystopian urbanscapes evoke sets from Lynch’s first film, Eraserhead. It’s foolhardy to predict what is to come in an ongoing Lemire book (anybody have a read yet on where he’s going with Descender?), but my early impression is that Gideon Falls is concerned with a certain type of existential horror, and that it aims to disturb readers on a deep and personal level rather than to settle for quick or gory scares.
I should also note that colorist Dave Stewart’s contribution is invaluable here, that the palette in each scene really layers and intensifies the tones and moods established by Lemire’s script and Sorrentino’s artwork.
Overall: this is a first issue deserving of a large and devoted audience, and given the star power of its creators, it will likely find it. I think the intrigue and the high quality of the storytelling will ultimately make this a book we'll be following for the long haul. 9.6/10
(W) Jeff Lemire (A/CA) Andrea Sorrentino
A brand-new ongoing series from the acclaimed bestselling creative team of Old Man Logan and Green Arrow! The lives of a reclusive young man obsessed with a conspiracy in the city's trash, and a washed-up Catholic priest arriving in a small town full of dark secrets, become intertwined around the mysterious legend of The Black Barn, an otherworldly building that is alleged to have appeared in both the city and the small town, throughout history, bringing death and madness in its wake.
Rural mystery and urban horror collide in this character-driven meditation on obsession, mental illness, and faith.
In Shops: Mar 07, 2018
SRP: $3.99
SPECIAL NOTE: Gideon Falls was one of our most anticipated comics of 2018. Be sure to check out the rest! Also, Jeff Lemire had the unique distinction of landing a book in both our top 5 AND our Top 6 - 15 Comics of 2017!
Zack Quaintance is a journalist who also writes fiction and makes comics. Find him on Twitter at @zackquaintance. He lives in Sacramento, California.