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Tag: Monstress

  • The 10 Best Dark Fantasy Graphic Novels

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    Noble warriors? Just rulers? Good triumphing over evil? Hah! Whether I’m cracking open a graphic novel or pondering eldritch truth held within my wizarding orb, my rule is the same: I’ll believe it when I see it. In a dark fantasy, there are no heroes. When it comes to the adventuring game, people are only in it for one thing: themselves. It’s a dragon eat dragon world out there, one where the rules are decided by whoever is holding the sword. If your idea of a good time is a graphic novel that feels more “Red Wedding” than “Bilbo’s 111th Birthday,” boy do I have a list for you. Here are the 10 best dark fantasy graphic novels around.

    Monstress

    (Image Comics)

    Monstress by Marjorie Liu will have you Mon-stressed out. Inspired by East Asia’s bloody 20th century, this graphic novel is set in a grimdark world at war. This realm is being torn apart by a never-ending struggle for power between matriarchal sorcerers that rule the human world, and the eldritch Arcanics that can pass for people. Maika Halfwolf is an Arcanic – hunted for her magical abilities like the rest of her kind. Not content to serve as a magical battery for the ruling class, she strikes out alone on a quest to avenge her mother. Well, not entirely alone. She’s got a frenemy of sorts, a demon that lives in the stump where her left arm used to be. In order kill the monsters the did her family wrong, Maika will need to learn to embrace the beast within – before it can consume her from the inside. Don’t let the glittering art deco style fool you, this epic fantasy is as dark as they come.

    Kill Six Billion Demons

    Cover art for "Kill Six Billion Demons"
    (Image Comics)

    Kill Six Billion Demons by Tom Parkinson Morgan is a martial arts manual, a spiritual treatise, and a sapphic romance all rolled into one. Before she was kidnapped by a runaway god, Allison Ruth was a barista whose biggest concern was loosing her virginity to her boyfriend. After being spirited away to a city at the center of the multiverse, she now has bigger fish to fry. Those fish are The Demiurges, seven tyrannical divinities that each rule 111,111 of the 777,777 universes that make up all of existence. With the help of an angelic martial arts teacher and a demonic sapphic lover, Allison will learn to embrace her budding divine power to and break the cosmic cycle of violence and suffering. If all goes well, she might even inherit the throne of God themself. Brutal, beautiful and gloriously queer, this dark fantasy is one of a kind.

    Something Is Killing The Children

    Cover art for "Something Is Killing The Children"
    (BOOM! Studios)

    In case the title didn’t clue you in, James Tynion IV’s Something Is Killing The Children is set in a world where not even the most innocent of us are safe. Kids in Archer’s Peak fare about as well as children in a Stephen King novel – they tend to go missing and turn up dead. Frantic for answers, the townspeople lay the blame on a chainsaw wielding new arrival – a young woman who claims to be able to see monsters that they can’t. Erica Slaughter is an agent of the Order of Saint George, an ancient organization dedicated to eradicating monsters that are spawned from the darkest human fears. Sadly, they’re also dedicated to eradicating any humans that find out about their clandestine organization – a policy point that creates some tension between the merciful Erica and her ruthless handlers. Grim, gory, and grotesque, this novel is perfect for anyone who could stomach It.

    Berserk

    Cover art for "Berserk"
    (Dark Horse Manga)

    The poster child of dark fantasy, Kentaro Miura’s Berserk is one of the genre’s most seminal works – inspiring grimdark games like Dark Souls and Elden Ring. The story follows Guts, a linebacker sized mercenary with the sword the length of a four door sedan. Guts wanders a demon haunted world searching for a former comrade, the man who betrayed him and sacrificed his friends to demons. Armed with a dragon slayer of a blade and a repeating crossbow, Guts is 300lbs of pure, grass fed hate. He walks the dark path of vengeance, and he’ll pulverize any demon standing in the road. While the author tragically passed away before the story could be finished, his assistants have taken up the narrative torch and are seeing it through to the bitter end. Guts would be proud.

    The Wicked and The Divine

    (Image Comics)

    The Wicked and The Divine by Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie is Almost Famous mixed with ancient myth. Every ninety years, a pantheon of twelve gods is reincarnated into human form. Upon awakening, the young gods have two years to walk among mortals before dying and beginning the cycle again. Through supernatural powers, supernatural talent, and supernatural good looks, these divinities make very good use of their time. They become movers and shakers, pop stars, celebrities, idols, burning hot and bright before finally sputtering out. Like any self-respecting divine pantheon, this gaggle of gods comes with some serious family drama. When multiple lifetimes of emotional baggage combine with the pressures of fame, the results are messy, violent, and explosive.

    The Last God

    Cover art for "The Last God"
    (DC Comics)

    At the beginning of The Last God, by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, the big bad has already been defeated – the heroes won. Thirty years ago, a group of warriors claimed to have felled The God of the Void and his undead army after journeying to an alternate dimension. Problem solved! Except for the fact that the undying legions have reappeared to renew their assault on the world of Cain Anuun – sounds like we haven’t heard the last of The Last God after all. Now a new group of heroes must traverse dimensions in order to slay the dark divinity once and for all – a perfectly sensible plan. What doesn’t make sense is why the old group of heroes claimed to have killed The God of the Void when they very obviously didn’t. Somebody is playing a trick, and The Last God is having the last laugh.

    Redlands

    Cover art for "Redlands"
    (Image Comics)

    Redlands by Jordie Bellaire takes place in the darkest of dark fantasy worlds: small town Florida. The town of Redlands is ruled by a matriarchal coven of witches, who have asserted their dominion through decades of demonic sacrifice. Serving as the local law enforcement, the terrible trio maintains an uneasy peace with the average citizens. When young woman start turning up dead, the peace dies with it. A serial killer is stalking the streets of Redlands, and the vengeful spirit of one of the murdered can’t rest until her killer is found. It’s a swampy, Southern Gothic detective story steeped in feminist revenge. Like a witch’s victim, you’ll be charmed.

    Through The Woods

    Cover art for "Through The Woods"
    (Margaret K. McElderry Books)

    Through The Woods by Emily Carroll is a collection of dark fantasy fairy tales that would make the Brothers Grimm proud. Five separate stories are rendered in a muted color scheme of ghastly black, grim grey, and bloody crimson – including Carroll’s viral webcomic sensation His Face All Red. These bleak fables don’t end well, just ask the main character of the novel’s most famous story. Granted, he killed his own brother, so he kind of had it coming. What he probably didn’t expect was how it came, at the hands of the sibling he thought he murdered, returned from the dead. Unless it was some kind of magical doppelgänger? In this macabre world, it’s highly plausible.

    Black Magick 

    Cover art for "Black Magick"
    (Image Comics)

    Black Magick by Nicola Scott is a hard boiled dark fantasy noir. The plot revolves around Rowan Black, a loose cannon detective who doesn’t play by the rules, which in this case are the laws of physics. She’s a witch, and uses her magical abilities in order to help crack cases while working her police detective day job. While she’s managed to keep this secret under wraps, someone is now targeting her – threatening to expose a fact of her existence that would have gotten her burned at the stake a few hundred years before. This tense police procedural blends magic and mundane to create a tight drama drawn in shades of morally grey.

    Pretty Deadly

    Cover art for "Pretty Deadly"
    (Image Comics)

    Pretty Deadly is a hallucinatory murder ballad – something that late career Johnny Cash would sing about while tripping balls off of discount acid. It’s the story of Deathface Ginny, the gunslinging daughter of the grim reaper himself. She can be summoned via song, and her vengeful spirit will aid anyone who has been wronged by a man. At least, that’s what the legends say. Sissy isn’t sure, she’s been traveling across the wasteland with an old man named Fox for quite some time now; she and her guardian have been trading bits of Ginny lore back and forth, but the stories seem to conflict. Little does little Sissy know, her to the legendary gunslinger might go deeper than she ever imagined – perhaps they even share a common ancestor. Who’s to say death’s daughter is an only child?

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    Image of Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.

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    Sarah Fimm

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  • The 10 Best Graphic Novel Series

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    What’s the problem with great graphic novels? They come to an end. While all good things must, some do so sooner than others. Imagine the disappointment when the graphic novel you expected to last through the rains of April only holds out for a few afternoons. You had an entire month of coziness planned! But those dreams were dashed by an author who selfishly decided to make their graphic novel a standalone. Oh the frustration! The disappointment! The sheer tragedy of it all!. When the single issues let you down, these titles will provide a long-running shoulder to cry on. Here are 10 of the best graphic novel series, to last you through this April and the next.

    Saga

    Cover art for "Saga" Brian K. Vaughn
    (Image Comics)

    Brian K. Vaughn’s Saga is the ultimate soft sci-fi, a space opera of truly epic proportions. The series centers around two star-crossed lovers on opposite sides of an interplanetary war, who put their allegiances aside to escape with their new baby in tow. Refugees in a hostile and alien universe, Alana and Marko have few friends and an ever growing list of enemies. It turns out that carrying a literal poster-child for peaceful coexistence doesn’t bode well for war propaganda, and the lovers’ former governments have ordered them to be eliminated to bolster moral. As this nuclear family vaults across the stars, they discover an extended found family in the alien worlds between. Romance novel writing cyclopses, ghost nannies, adorable seal-men with an arsenal of high powered weapons – each of these extraterrestrial oddballsaid Alana and Marko on their quest to find peace and quiet, and do so with overwhelming violence. To ensure a pristine future, sometimes you gotta get your flippers dirty in the present.

    Fables

    Cover art for "Fables"
    (Vertigo)

    Fables by Bill Willingham was recently made all the more famous by Telltale Games’ detective series The Wolf Among Us, centered around Bigby Wolf – a morally reformed Big Bad Wolf turned sheriff. After he and the rest of his fairytale ilk were exiled from their fantastical homelands by a being known as The Adversary, fable-kind had to learn to walk among humans. Disguised as “mundys” these mythical beings blend in with mundane people in order to get by. But when one of these folklore characters ends up getting murdered in cold blood, it’s up to Bigby to sniff out the killer. Snow White’s sister is dead. Was it the ex-fiance? The current boyfriend? Or does this conspiracy go deeper down the rabbit hole than it appears? RIP Brothers’ Grimm, you two would have loved this series.

    Something Is Killing The Children

    Cover art for "Something Is Killing The Children"
    (BOOM! Studios)

    If James Tynion IV’s Something Is Killing The Children doesn’t have you hooked by the title alone, then allow me to reel you in further. It’s the story of an average American town come under the grips of extraordinary evil – something is carrying off the kids of Archer’s Peak, and they’re never seen again. When monsters have taken up residence in the wilderness nearby, there’s only one person you can call: Erica Slaughter, appropriately named for the job. Armed with a trusty chainsaw, Erica is prepped and ready to strike back against the creatures that lurk in the shadows – beings made of the sum of all human fears. But when the terrified townsfolk are looking for a culprit, they might just pin the blame on the lady with the bloody chainsaw, even if she is the only thing standing between their children and the hungry dark. Monster hunting is a thankless job.

    Transmetropolitan

    Cover art for "Transmetropolitan"
    (Vertigo)

    Warren Ellis’ Transmetropolitan is the story of Spider Jerusalem, a drug sniffin’, muck-slingin’, power-fightin’ journalist willing to stick it to the system. Fresh off his latest drug bender, Spider returns to his city to dig up the dirt on a sociopathic presidential candidate who craves power for power’s sake. Spider trades the usual crime-fighter’s arsenal for a more unique set of armaments: photo-taking sunglasses and a gun that forcibly loosens people’s bowels. A lover of mankind but a hater of the average man, Spider Jerusalem is the ultimate misanthrope – a man who endeavors to bring the truth to the populace no matter how many powerful people it ticks off. Smarmy, cynical, sublime, Transmetropolitan reads like a gossip rag preaching gospel truth.

    Cover art for "Fullmetal Alchemist"
    (VIZ Media LLC)

    Fullmetal Alchemist by Hiromu Arakawa proves that the crackpot thinkers of The Renaissance were right, you really CAN turn lead into gold! Provided you offer something of equivalent value in return. Edward and Alphonse Elric live in the kingdom of Amestris, an autocratic regime where government alchemists uphold law and order. After these two alchemical prodigies commit the ultimate taboo and try to resurrect their dead mother through magic, their unwittingly forfeit their body parts in order to balance the equation. Deprived of their essence , Ed and Al go on a quest to find what they lost by uncovering ancient alchemical truths – and a massive government conspiracy along the way. It turns out the brothers aren’t the only humans who have tried to transmute a human soul – a shadowy organization is coming close, and the nation itself may by the price. I’m not exaggerating when I say this series is one of the greatest works of fiction ever.

    Lumberjanes

    Cover art for "Lumberjanes"
     (BOOM! Box)

    From Nimona author NK Stevenson comes Lumberjanes, a rustic series about a gaggle of woodsy women who solve supernatural mysteries. Miss Qiunzilla Thiskwin Penniquiqul Thistle Crumpet’s camp for outdoorsy types is more than meets the eye, the grounds are home to all sorts of magical beings – as this quintet of woodchoppers will soon find out for themselves. Three eyed foxes, malevolent yetis, perambulatory statues, all these ethereal oddities appear and more. If you’re a lover of spooky wilderness stories in the style of Gravity Falls, Lumberjanes will land right in your neck of the woods.

    Monstress

    (Image Comics)

    Monstress by Marjorie M. Liu is an art deco-drenched reimagining of 20th century East Asia. The action follows Maika Halfwolf, a teenage girl attempting to keep her identity a secret from the powers that be. Maika is an Arcanic, beings that is harvested by human sorcerers for their magical abilities. Hiding right under the nose of the ruling class, Miaka’s cover is nearly blown by the demonic being that resides in the stump of her left arm. When you’re a young woman on a quest to avenge your mother, you need to learn to manage your inner monster before consumes you entirely. Great Gatsby glamour combines with divine imagery to serve up an epic of biblical proportions.

    Kill Six Billion Demons

    Cover art for "Kill Six Billion Demons"
    (Image Comics)

    Tom Parkinson Morgan’s Kill Six Billion Demons is many things – a martial arts manual, a spiritual text, and the biography of a barista turned god-breaker. Allison Ruth was a simple business major before being spirited away to Throne – the divine city that lies at the center of all 777,777 universes. Blessed with newfound holy power by a runaway god, Allison is charged with defeating the Demiurges – seven tyrannical divinities who have each claimed 111,111 universes for themselves. With the help of an angelic martial arts teacher and a demonic sapphic lover, Allison might have what it takes to break the cyclical nature of universal suffering – inheriting the powers of God themself. Action packed, beautifully drawn, and gloriously queer, this ongoing series is one of the most underrated fantasy titles of all time.

    Akira

    Cover art for "Akira"
    (Kodansha Comics)

    Often hailed as the greatest graphic novel series of all time, Katsuhiro Otomo’s Akira laid the groundwork for the cyberpunk genre, and is one of the most significant sci-fi titles to come out of Japan alongside Ghost In The Shell. Illustrated by the legendary Satoshi Kon, Akira transports the reader to the neon-drenched metropolis of Neo-Tokyo, built on the ruins of World War III. Biker gangs rule the dystopian streets, but one young rider’s world is turned upside down after he comes into contact with an escaped government experiment. Exposed to metaphysical contamination, young Tetsuo begins to develop psychic powers. Not the “bend spoons” kind, but the “implode reality” kind. As Tetsuo’s power grows, his warped mind begins to bend the physical laws of the universe to the breaking point – resulting in a climax of cosmically horrible proportions.

    Pretty Deadly

    Cover art for "Pretty Deadly"
    (Image Comics)

    Pretty Deadly by Kelly Sue DeConnick is a western horror that gives Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series a run for its money. This is the tale of Deathface Ginny – the daughter of Death himself. She’s an avenging angel, a supernatural gunslinger who can be summoned by those who have been done wrong. The plot follows a young girl named Sissy and an old man named Fox, traveling across the wasteland trading snippets of Ginny’s story. Little does Sissy know, she and her companion play a bigger part in the legend than the little girl can possibly imagine. Hallucinatory, surreal, and sinister, Pretty Deadly is a true acid western – assuming you bought the acid off a toothless old prospector in an abandoned ghost town. You’re for a very good bad trip.

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    Image of Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.

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    Sarah Fimm

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  • The 10 Most Beautifully Illustrated Graphic Novels

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    Looking at pretty pictures may perhaps be the oldest human pastime – we’ve been doing it since prehistory! Ever since primitive humans stepped out of their caves and sighed at the beauty of the natural world, they attempted to replicate it on cave walls, preserving their fire-discovering, wheel-inventing stories for future generations. Thousands of years later, the graphic novelists took up the torch to do the exact same thing – like Michelangelo! The Sistine Chapel really is just a graphic novel adaptation of the Bible, after all. While watching humanity’s drama with God play out on the ceiling is certainly worth the trip, this list is for those who want to drink in stunning artwork without traveling to the Vatican. For all the homebodies, are the 10 most beautifully illustrated graphic novels of all time.

    Blacksad

    Cover art for "Blacksad"
    (Dark Horse Originals)

    When Juan Díaz Canales and Juanjo Guarnido created Blacksad, they reminded us of something that humanity has known for thousands of years: cats are beautiful. Aesthetically appreciated as far back as ancient Egypt, cats are given a modern makeover in this Neo-noire masterpiece. This is the story of John Blacksad – a hardboiled private investigator who also happens to be a kitty. A feline lone wolf, Blacksad operates independently from the foxes and bloodhounds of the local police department, preferring to stalk his way into the city’s reptilian criminal underbelly on his own. A gritty pastiche of mid-century America, Blacksad’s art style feels like if you took Edward Hopper’s famous Nighthawks painting and turned everyone in it into an animal. Moody, dramatic, lonely, and furry.

    Blue Is The Warmest Color

    Cover art for "Blue Is The Warmest Color"
    (Arsenal Pulp Press)

    Reading Jul Maroh’s Blue Is The Warmest Color feels like getting slapped in the face by an angel – divinely beautiful and searingly painful. It’s the story of a tragic love affair between two young French women, beginning with incendiary passion and ending in brutal heartbreak. The watercolor art style feels like if you mixed regular paint with human tears – the tears that you’re certain to cry as you turn through its pages. The novel’s use of light is especially poignant, everything has a soft and blurry glow to it, making you feel like you’re looking at a world seen by someone ever on the verge of weeping. With the way things go in this novel, that pretty much describes the emotional state of these characters at every second of every day. Looking at the one we love has a way of making us all misty eyed – if that person goes away, bring on the waterworks.

    Daytripper

    Cover art for "Daytripper"
    (Vertigo)

    Daytripper by Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá is ten days in the life of obituary writer Brás de Oliva Domingos, each of which results in his death. Separated into ten vignettes, the story follows Brás at pivotal moments of his life – first love, new parenthood, old age – before exploring how any of those moments could have been his last. After kicking the bucket at the end of each of these days, and the story continues on as if he hadn’t – a literary device intended to remind the audience of the fragility of our lives. The art style of the comic is equally delicate, soft colors and softer lines mix together to create a fuzzy and kaleidoscopic portrait of life – a life that could be snuffed out at any moment. Like Blue Is The Warmest Color, the blurry pages of this graphic novel are sure to be further smudged with your tears.

    The Incal

    Cover art for "The Incal"
    (Humanoids)

    A seminal work of sci-fi, The Incal by avant-garde film director Alejandro Jodorowsky is essentially Star Wars on acid. It’s the story of John Difool, a detective who comes into possession of a mysterious extraterrestrial artifact called the Luminous Incal – a crystal coveted by just about every faction in the galaxy. John navigates a labyrinthian world drawn by Jean Giraud, a groundbreaking illustrator more famously known by his pseudonym Mœbius. Depicting soft sci-fi worlds with Salvador Dali-esque surrealism, Giraud creates a dreamlike landscapes where technology and fantasy meet. This graphic novel sits somewhere between space opera and acid western, with a little bit of Dune thrown into the recipe for added spice – see what I did there?

    Berserk

    Cover art for "Berserk"
    (Dark Horse Manga)

    While “beautiful” isn’t the first word that many would use to describe the dark fantasy nightmare-verse that is Kentaro Miura’s Berserk, the late, great mangaka’s art style is nothing short of arresting. No doubt drawing inspiration from the biological horror of H.R. Giger, Miura paints the picture of a demon-haunted world that would terrify the devil himself. With his images of beautifully composed brutality, Miura was able create what is arguably the finest work of dark fantasy ever penned. It’s the story of Guts, a linebacker sized mercenary with a sedan-sized sword, cutting his way through demonic hordes in order to take revenge against a former comrade turned dark divinity. It’s somber, thrilling and tragic – blood drenched, rainswept portrait of a lone warrior who refuses to give in, despite overwhelmingly grim odds.

    Monstress

    (Image Comics)

    Monstress by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda is a master class in art deco – a steampunk East Asian world rendered with turn of the century opulence. It’s the story of Maika Halfwolf, a teenage girl attempting to hide her identity as an Arcanic – arcane beings that are captured and consumed by the ruling sorcerer class for their magic. On her quest to avenge her dead mother, Maika is aided by a monster – a demonic being that resides in the stump where her left arm used to be. At its core, the art style of Monstress is a 1920’s interpretation of the biblically accurate angel – lots of wings and eyes, all laced in gold.

    Square Eyes

    Cover art for "Square Eyes"
    (Jonathan Cape)

    Square Eyes by Anna Mill and Luke Jones is a soft sci-fi that follows Fin, an engineer who recently revolutionized the society of the near future with a powerful program. Once seated at the top of the digital world, Fin suddenly finds herself completely disconnected from the virtual reality that binds humanity together. Unable to access the artificial network that augments her city, the amnesiac Fin attempts to solve why she’s been booted out. The art style of the novel is just as eerie and dreamy as its plot, drawn with soft pastel pinks and purples that wash the world in a sense of unreality. It’s a place where everyone is wearing rose-colored VR glasses, but no one can take them off. Beautiful and disorienting, like a meet cute with a hot hologram.

    Through The Woods

    Cover art for "Through The Woods"
    (Margaret K. McElderry Books)

    Through The Woods by Emily Carroll is a modern day collection of Grimm’s fairy tales, creepy enough to impress the screwed up Brothers Grimm themselves. Each of these five stories are rendered in shadowy black, bone white, and blood red, casting a lurid gleam over the already macabre tales. It feels like a folk horror picture book, something that the sorceresses of Robert Eggers’ The Witch would read aloud to the children they kidnap. The book features one of the author’s most famous works His Face All Red, which catapulted her to the heights of internet webcomic glory. It’s the story of a man who killed his brother, only for his deceased sibling to wander out of the woods a few days later totally unharmed. Did his brother pull a Lazarus? Or is it a doppelgänger that didn’t quite get all the details of the disguise right? You’ll have to read to find out.

    Sin City

    Cover art for "Sin City"
    (Dark Horse Books)

    Sin City by Frank Miller is the ultimate hardboiled detective comic, and so quintessentially representative of the author’s style that it borders on self parody. Frank Miller made a name for himself in the late 80’s with his grimdark reinterpretations of Batman, somber portrayals that created the dour image of the caped crusader we know today. Sin City is Batman level grit taken to the extreme, taking place in a black and white metropolis peppered with streaks of bloody red. It’s classic noire stuff, femme fatales, burned-out private eyes, ruthless mob bosses, all rendered with such extreme chiaroscuro that it puts the Renaissance masters to shame. It’s a monochromatically mad world.

    Persepolis

    Cover art for "Persepolis"
    (Pantheon)

    Persepolis is the graphic memoir of Marjane Satrapi, who came of age during one of the most tumultuous periods in Iran’s history. An adolescent during the Islamic Revolution, Marjane saw her formerly progressive society take a hard right turn towards theological conservatism. For Marjane and young women like her, this meant that the plethora of choices that they once had for their lives were suddenly limited – from what clothes they were allowed to wear to their career prospects. The novel is rendered in a somber monochrome that juxtaposes itself with Marjane’s colorful and outspoken personality. She’s a young woman who refuses to conform to an increasingly reactionary society, a world that views morality to be as black and white as the colors with which it’s illustrated. Hailed as one of the finest graphic novels ever written, Persepolis is a must read for anyone grappling with authority figures, which, now that I think about it, is perhaps every adolescent on the planet.

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    Image of Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm

    Sarah Fimm (they/them) is actually nine choirs of biblically accurate angels crammed into one pair of $10 overalls. They have been writing articles for nerds on the internet for less than a year now. They really like anime. Like… REALLY like it. Like you know those annoying little kids that will only eat hotdogs and chicken fingers? They’re like that… but with anime. It’s starting to get sad.

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    Sarah Fimm

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