Paperback ©2020 | -- |
Monsters. Comic books, strips, etc. Juvenile fiction.
Halloween. Comic books, strips, etc. Juvenile fiction.
Monsters. Comic books, strips, etc. Fiction.
Halloween. Comic books, strips, etc. Fiction.
Starred Review Mona's settling in for a boring Halloween when actual monsters start wreaking havoc on earth in this sprawling, twisty horror comic. The inept cops are no help, since they assume it's all a Halloween prank, but a ring of undead misfits helpfully explain what's going on: every human on the planet is paired with a monster in the shadow dimension. Normally, the phagocyte keeps monsters and humans apart, but someone has gravely injured him, and monsters are killing their humans to gain immortality. Goggle-eyed Mona is unwillingly roped into a scheme to track down the son of the phagocyte to restore order, and with her new not-quite friends pulsive preteen vampire Ringley (and his pet werepossum), sulky ghoul Shirley, and affectless, possessed doll Robert e fights her way to the shadow realm. With her finely crosshatched black-and-white artwork, full of skeletal birch trees and looming shadows, Howard strikes a delicious balance between the truly grotesque body horror of the impressive array of monsters, all spindly, skittering appendages, rippling blobs of flesh, and protruding rows of teeth, and the wry, absurdist comedy around Mona's quest. There are some unexpected turns here, too, and for all the Clive-Barker-meets-Adventure-Time playfulness, she ends on a disarmingly sober cliff-hanger. Tailor-made for fans of postmodern horror comedy.
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)When nightmarish creatures attack, the fate of humanity rests in the hands of a 10-year-old girl.It is Halloween night, and all young Mona wants to do is trick-or-treat, but her parent is unable to take her. In the dark and gloom of night, monsters descend, and Mona finds herself absorbed into a motley but friendly crew of creatures: tween vampire Ringley, creepy living doll Robert, teenage ghoul Shirley, and Banjo the wereopossum. The nightmarish monster scourge has been unleashed by the presumed death of the Phagocyte, a magical being who keeps the balance between worlds. Can Mona and her friends find the Phagocyte's heir before the monsters devour all of humanity? In this spectacularly wrought graphic offering, writer and artist Howard's illustrations are unquestionably striking, utilizing a perfect mood-setting black-and-white pen-and-ink scheme and grabbing its reader with both the scope of its imagination and its clever use of perspective, including fish-eye shots. Despite its prepubescent protagonist, this is not a middle-grade tale; Howard has a keen eye for creative gore that may deter the squeamish, however, those who forge on will be utterly captivated by its unexpected heart and dark humor. Although Howard's first volume in a proposed series is a hefty doorstop at nearly 450 pages, expect readers to blaze through it at wildfire speed and absolutely demand more. Mona's parent is nonbinary; most characters appear to be white.A comic horror tour de force. (character list, reader questions, guide to making a comic) (Graphic horror. 14-18)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)When nightmarish creatures attack, the fate of humanity rests in the hands of a 10-year-old girl.It is Halloween night, and all young Mona wants to do is trick-or-treat, but her parent is unable to take her. In the dark and gloom of night, monsters descend, and Mona finds herself absorbed into a motley but friendly crew of creatures: tween vampire Ringley, creepy living doll Robert, teenage ghoul Shirley, and Banjo the wereopossum. The nightmarish monster scourge has been unleashed by the presumed death of the Phagocyte, a magical being who keeps the balance between worlds. Can Mona and her friends find the Phagocyte's heir before the monsters devour all of humanity? In this spectacularly wrought graphic offering, writer and artist Howard's illustrations are unquestionably striking, utilizing a perfect mood-setting black-and-white pen-and-ink scheme and grabbing its reader with both the scope of its imagination and its clever use of perspective, including fish-eye shots. Despite its prepubescent protagonist, this is not a middle-grade tale; Howard has a keen eye for creative gore that may deter the squeamish, however, those who forge on will be utterly captivated by its unexpected heart and dark humor. Although Howard's first volume in a proposed series is a hefty doorstop at nearly 450 pages, expect readers to blaze through it at wildfire speed and absolutely demand more. Mona's parent is nonbinary; most characters appear to be white.A comic horror tour de force. (character list, reader questions, guide to making a comic) (Graphic horror. 14-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)On Halloween night, 10-year-old Mona must forego trick-or-treating when her nonbinary parent opts out of chaperoning to contact their late wife at a séance. That night, the mystical Phagocyte, which -protects and preserves the balance between the worlds,- becomes incapacitated, leaving monsters-each of which connect to, and have the power to subsume, a human counterpart-to roam outside their shadow dimension. While fleeing her own monster after it appears suddenly in her house, Mona becomes an unwilling hero, setting off with vampire Ringley, ghoul Shirley, and living sailor doll Robert to locate the Phagocyte-s son and ask him to restore the worlds- order. Howard-s (
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Wed Jul 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
"A comic horror tour de force." -- KIRKUS, Starred Review "Tailor-made for fans of postmodern horror comedy." -- BOOKLIST, Starred Review "An endearingly emotional journey." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, Starred Review "Howard's writing is so razor-sharp, it might have blood dripping from it." -- SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, Starred Review The monster apocalypse is nigh, but never fear! Humanity is under the protection of . . . this crew? It's a lonely Halloween night for ten-year-old Mona. While everyone else is out having a ghoulishly good time, she's stuck inside without so much as a scary movie to watch. Just when she figures this evening can't get much worse, a giant monster appears in her living room, proving her very, very wrong. Running for her life, Mona quickly sees that she's not alone; trick-or-treating's been canceled due to monster invasion! A barrier keeping billions of monsters at bay has broken and the horrific hordes have descended upon humanity, wreaking bloody havoc everywhere they stomp, slither, or squish. She may not be equipped for it, but it's up to Mona to save the world with a team of fellow weirdos by her side. Perhaps they will succeed. Or perhaps this will be . . . The Last Halloween.