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Monsters. Comic books, strips, etc. Fiction.
Social isolation. Comic books, strips, etc. Fiction.
Children. Comic books, strips, etc. Fiction.
Routine life intersects with the unnatural in five horror tales told through black-and-white comics.In the opening story, Frankie talks to someone on the other side of the fence; only an eyeball can be seen through a small hole. Frankie is sick of interfering, judgmental parents and seeks connection with someone who understands. This yearning for companionship and comfort is echoed throughout the collection, each time ultimately leading to interactions with unknown beings. A stressed-out student seeks comfort from a mattress found abandoned on the street, which turns out to host a grotesque, flesh-stealing creature. Walking corpses become an old woman's new companions. A young girl wants to be reunited with her friend the lake monster, who is not so friendly anymore. While each story features some sort of creature or monster, the way they play into the horror differs. Thrilling action, disturbing body horror, unnerving suspense, and deep melancholy can all be found within these tales. The art, consisting of realistic-looking crosshatching lines on white panels, is stunning, with various shapes and shading used intentionally to amp up the drama. The intensity of the stories warrants quick page turns, but all the little details of the art beg to be thoughtfully pored over. Most characters appear White; main characters in one of the stories are cued as Black.Unsettling in the best way. (concept art) (Graphic horror. 13-adult)
ALA Booklist (Thu Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)Filled with monsters of both the supernatural and human variety, this anthology of short horror comics offers a wide range of stories to please a variety of readers. Howard (The Last Halloween, 2020) excels at body horror, and "The Girl in the Fields" and "Mattress, Used" are the perfect vehicles, featuring close-up views of necrotic skin, a lumbering monster with distressingly probing hands, and a nefarious man meeting a pulpy end in a threshing "accident." Others offer quieter, slow-burn plots, resisting typical horror tropes and touching instead on tragedy, such as "The Boy from the Sea," about sisters and sacrifice, or the standout closing story, "Kindred Spirits," which turns on ideas of loneliness, isolation, and autonomy. Howard's scritchy, scratchy crosshatched style, jam-packed with fine-lined detail and plenty of shadows, creates just the right unsettling, eerie atmosphere. Though the short format doesn't allow much in the way of depth to these tales, they're perfectly bite-sized for readers who like their scares quick and punchy. Hand to fans of Emily Carroll or Junji Ito.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Routine life intersects with the unnatural in five horror tales told through black-and-white comics.In the opening story, Frankie talks to someone on the other side of the fence; only an eyeball can be seen through a small hole. Frankie is sick of interfering, judgmental parents and seeks connection with someone who understands. This yearning for companionship and comfort is echoed throughout the collection, each time ultimately leading to interactions with unknown beings. A stressed-out student seeks comfort from a mattress found abandoned on the street, which turns out to host a grotesque, flesh-stealing creature. Walking corpses become an old woman's new companions. A young girl wants to be reunited with her friend the lake monster, who is not so friendly anymore. While each story features some sort of creature or monster, the way they play into the horror differs. Thrilling action, disturbing body horror, unnerving suspense, and deep melancholy can all be found within these tales. The art, consisting of realistic-looking crosshatching lines on white panels, is stunning, with various shapes and shading used intentionally to amp up the drama. The intensity of the stories warrants quick page turns, but all the little details of the art beg to be thoughtfully pored over. Most characters appear White; main characters in one of the stories are cued as Black.Unsettling in the best way. (concept art) (Graphic horror. 13-adult)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Howard (
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Sun Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly (Sun Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
ALA Booklist (Thu Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Winner of the 2021 Ignatz Award for Outstanding Collection "Unsettling in the best way." -- KIRKUS, Starred Review "Wonderfully terrifying." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, Starred Review "Gets under your skin." -- GEEK MOM "Striking drawings and suspenseful storytelling." -- io9 A masterful collection of tales from the faded border between our day-to-day world and the horrifying unknown on the other side of midnight. An old woman living alone on the edge of a bog gets an unexpected -- and unsettling -- visitor, throwing her quiet life into a long-buried mystery. An isolated backwoods family stumbles into good fortune for a time with a monstrous discovery in the lake behind their house, but that time is running short. And a misfit little girl, struggling to make friends, meets an understanding soul one day at the beach: but why will he only play with her alone at night? All these lonely souls -- and more -- have reached out into the darkness, not knowing what they might find. Around the dark edges of reality lurk unknown beings with unknowable intentions -- ordinary objects can become cursed possessions, entities who seem like friends can become monstrous, and those who seem monstrous can become the truest companions. In this collection of evocative, unnerving slice-of-life horror, five stories explore what happens when one is desperate enough to seek solace in the unnatural, and what might be waiting for us at the Crossroads at Midnight.