Tuesday, February 24, 2026

New Franklin Book For Hegseth Children

 Franklin Copes With Daddy's Drinking takes a child's approach to dealing with alcoholism in the family

Franklin Copes with Daddy's Drinking cover

Pete Hegseth, kegmeister, judge, jury and executioner of South American boat passengers, has previously expressed his interest in the Franklin series of books for children. Franklin is a Canadian series that started in 1986. Although it's possible that Hegseth first encountered the Franklin series as a child, it's more likely that he may have found the books at his home from one of his various baby's mommas. In response to serious questions about the legality of Hegseth's extrajudicial executions without due process of alleged drug smugglers, Hegseth smugly replied with a proposed Franklin book cover that showed the beloved Canadian turtle with a bazooka shooting at men on boats. Rather than provide Americans with answers or accountability for this unprecedented use of force, Hegseth found humor in these deaths, delighting in eliding responsibility or even providing any kind of rationale for these deadly strikes. Similar to his complete abandonment of responsibility for leaking war plans and endangering troops in his use of Signal last year, Hegseth clearly echoes the Trumpian approach to really not caring, and forcing us to question whether we do or not. His unserious response to serious questions demonstrates what he thinks about the justice, due process, the rule of law, the rules of engagement, and even the lives of others. It left me wondering what kind of messages this man teaches to his children. Does he impart similar unserious responses when his own children ask questions either about his work or about his ideals? Does he deem their questions as worthy of a meme response? If he's treating his position of power with such arrogance, would he do the same for his children? 
It lead me to find this amazing title in the Franklin series, and I am recommending it to Pete's children. In this book, Franklin's daddy has a problem with drinking. At first, Franklin and his family think daddy can be funny or silly, but then daddy starts to become sleepy or angry; it's hard for Franklin to know which daddy will show up. Furthermore, Franklin learns that daddy has met some new mommies, and Franklin has to learn to love his new mommies, including the pool mommy that daddy met at a hotel, and who daddy has given a large sum of money to so that this pool mommy won't make daddy lose his job by saying "Me too." Throughout the story, Franklin learns important lessons, not from his own daddy, but from learning to set boundaries, to love his daddy, but not his drinking, and to recognize that daddy is really sick, and daddy's drinking is just a symptom of the larger character defects and issues that have been a part of daddy's life for a long time. Franklin Copes with Daddy's Drinking is an important book for children of alcoholic parents, and I recommend this book for these children. It's much better than the jingoistic Reagan-fever dreams of 1980s action heroes that have long passed. 


Monday, February 23, 2026

New MAGA Movie from the same producers who brought us measles and ferments: Denim Daddy

 New MAGA Movie from the producers of the hit horror flick Melania

Denim Daddy


The MAGAverse is going to the movies. 2026 is shaping up for a MAGA-takeover of the popular media and entertainment we once loved. After the hit horror and dread of Melania, the same producers who brought measles back to the US are looking for another breakout infectious hit with a new erotic comedy titled Denim Daddy starring MAGA stalwarts using pseudonyms Jack Steele and Randy Colt. Not content to let the ladies have all the rom-com business, Jack Steele and Randy Colt are here to show us that the boys are back in town, and they're about to get in the pit and love someone. I'm not sure what the film is about, but judging from the picture, it probably features lots of hot sweaty action, lots of synthetic testosterone and ferments, and maybe even some dead bears and whale carcasses along the way. Through it all, Jack and Randy realize their true connection and their deep seated misogyny. It doesn't look like a film that all of the MAGAverse will be pleased about, but it does look like a movie that might have the power to fill some seats. It looks like this might be a straight to video release though, so we'll have to keep our eyes out for this release. 

Kaiju Battle in Godzilla: Here There Be Aliens

 Godzilla: Here There Be Aliens by Frank Tieri; artwork by Angel Hernandez

Author Frank Tieri
Artist Angel Hernandez

Great big kaiju thanks to IDW Publishing and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of their latest Godzilla collection Godzilla: Here There Be Aliens by Frank Tieri with artwork by Angel Hernandez. I really enjoyed this story as it represents much of what makes the Godzilla stories so fun and entertaining. Not only does Godzilla work to protect the earth from an alien invasion, but he also teams up with some of his other kaiju friends like Mothra, Jet Jaguar, and Rodan to battle the invading Xiliens, a deceptive group of aliens who have the ability to shape-shift and take on human forms, and have been attempting to take over the world for centuries. However, they’ve upped their intensity to attempt to overtake the world by infiltrating various high-level government and military positions in post WWII America. I loved the historical element of the story in that it features President Eisenhour and other references to real historical individuals and events.

The main story follows Bob, a man who is trying to get pentagon buy in to use Godzilla as a defense weapon for Project Colossus. This project is based on the secret society called The Sons of Giants, whose members included Queen Elizabeth I, Ben Franklin, and Napoleon. These individuals protected the kaiju but also used them for defense and protection as well. Bob is interested in learning more about how this group might work to protect American interests and partner with the Pentagon for American defense; however, his supervisor, Director Stone, doesn’t take him too seriously, until Godzilla is sighted attacking Japan, when Eisenhour has renewed interest in seeking out the kaiju for America’s use. On his way to meet with the President, Bob is kidnapped by another mysterious group led by Dr. Kyoto. Bob finds out that this group is the one actually responsible for Project Colossus, and he also learns about the threat that the Xiliens pose to the inhabitants of Earth. As Bob learns more about Project Colossus and Dr. Kyoto’s role, the Xiliens attack various cities around the world, bringing out the kaiju to help defend major cities like Paris, Mexico City, New York, and Barcelona. Dr. Kyoto sends out Jet Jaguar, the robot kaiju, to battle the Xiliens and Mechagodzilla. Other kaiju like Rodan and Mothra battle evil kaiju helping the Xiliens. It’s a great story featuring kaiju battles in different major cities, all while the Xiliens are trying to take over Earth. It’s a fun and exciting story with some good action and great artwork from Angel Hernandez. I loved that the story also takes place during the original Godzilla time period, but the action happens all over the world. I’m also finding that I really enjoy these longer-form Godzilla stories that unfold over several issues. They allow for more plot to unravel, some characters to develop, and some surprises and tension to build. I’m hoping that IDW continues to create more stories like this that unfold over several issues and also feature a range of characters and kaiju. Highly recommended!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 







Sunday, February 22, 2026

Nowhere Burning A Dark Tale of Family, Friendship, and Survival by Catriona Ward

 Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward

Nowhere Burning book cover
Author and master storyteller Catriona Ward




Big thanks to Tor Publishing and NetGalley for sharing an advanced copy of Catriona Ward’s dazzling new novel Nowhere Burning. I previously read and was stunned by Sundial, and last year, I read the Shivers Collection, in which her story “Night and Day in Misery” stood out to me as the best story in the collection. I had high expectations for this book, and Ward does not disappoint. Nowhere Burning is a compelling and propulsive novel that deals with families, friendships, and fidelity. In fact, there were elements of the story that reminded me of some of the best parts of Sundial. Needless to say, as one of the best horror and thriller writers I’ve read in the past few years, Ward has created a dark story about death and rebirth that also features a clan of rejected kids who make their own society in the mountains in the abandoned estate of an alleged serial killer who died years earlier in an attack on one of his houseguests that resulted in a massive fire. The killer, Leif Winham, is an actor and star whose loneliness and need for attention lead him to keep his houseguests indefinitely and subject them to gruesome experiments. Leif’s story is one of the three different timelines we see in the story. While we don’t learn a lot about Leif, we encounter him through his hiring of Adam, a handyman whom is hired to build a hidden staircase in Leif’s estate, Nowhere. Through this part of the narrative, we learn about how Nowhere came to be, and we understand the ruins of Nowhere in which the current group, the Children of Nowhere, live. Riley and her half-brother Oliver, were living with Cousin, an abusive family member who doesn’t allow Oliver to attend school and subjects him to harsh physical labor. After a mysterious visit from a floating child named Noon who Riley isn’t even sure if she is real or a hallucination, Riley makes a plan to visit Noon’s group, the Children of Nowhere, in the mountains. Noon provides Riley with vague directions through the park, and Riley makes a plan to escape Cousin’s abuses and join the Children of Nowhere. There’s another story line with Marc and Kimble, true crime documentarians, who are interested in the story of the Nowhere Children, and want to visit the ruins of Nowhere for their next documentary. These story lines converge in an exciting and surprising ending. 

Much like Sundial, I couldn’t put this book down once it started. It’s an exciting story of survival amidst trauma and tragedy, and the kind of terror that groups can inflict on outsiders when they experience external and existential threats to their survival. In a lot of ways, the setting of Nowhere Burning, an abandoned estate that initially had grand intentions as a kind of refuge for Leif Winham, literally a kind of nowhere where Winham wished to escape, but also to inflict pain and torture on those he felt where either taking from him or planning to leave him. Like the home in Sundial, Nowhere operates both in the past and the present, and despite its decay it remains a site of life and activity for the runaways that populate Nowhere. I also liked how both novels examine revisiting the sites of past traumas and tragedies. Although Riley and Oliver don’t experience trauma at the original Nowhere estate, their lives as orphans whose mother tragically passed away and whose lives were neglected and abused at Cousin’s house reflect the same kind of harsh existence that some of the characters in Sundial experienced. In fact, both stories look at the impact of a childhood lost to violence and misguided parenting. It’s interesting that the children of Nowhere seek out abusive and neglectful parents in the town and try to either punish these parents or bring their children to Nowhere to live a more idyllic, yet challenging existence, relying on nature, hunting, and farming to survive. I love how both novels challenge the idea of families, calling into question whether parents and other authority figures really know best for how to raise and care for children. 

Furthermore, both Sundial and Nowhere Burning feature an incredibly eerie setting that takes place in ruins. While the novel is being compared to Lord of the Flies, I also think there’s something Dickensian about Nowhere. It reminded me a little of Miss Havisham’s house, and how the children are both afraid of the house, yet seek to maintain it, not really cleaning the ruins, but keeping the decay and filth, maybe as a reminder, but also as a way of their hope that Leif Winham will eventually return. I loved the eerie and haunting, tragic mood of this story, much like the other texts of Ward’s I’ve read. Also like the other texts from Ward I’ve read, there’s quite a few twists and surprises that these characters encounter. While I was able to pick up on one surprising reveal, I didn’t anticipate the ending. Once I hit the halfway part of this book, I couldn’t put it down, and I found the story to be really propulsive and moving. I especially loved the connection that Riley has with her brother Oliver, and how Riley tries to navigate the challenges of belonging to a new group after leaving Cousin’s abusive home. 

Nowhere Burning is an amazing story that includes a strange and famous serial killer, as well as a kind of strange cult of kids who worship him in his abandoned estate. There are traces of folk horror, cult horror, and true crime in this story, but it is also a story about family and bonds, and how even among tragedy and trauma, those bonds that we forge with our family can be important. Riley is a great main character whose resilience and fortitude enable her to navigate challenging situations. I also loved the different children of Nowhere. A group of kids eking out living amidst the ruins of a once great estate was fascinating. There are elements of folk tales and other stories like Peter Pan in this story, but it is a much darker take. The only thing I wished there was more of was the connection the children have to Leif Winham. I don’t remember a clear explanation about how or why they came to appreciate him. There’s also some ambiguity about how the children of Nowhere eventually came to be. We know that there was a power struggle, and Noon and her group eventually won out, but I wondered if there was more to that story than Ward included here. Nevertheless, this was a great book that I couldn’t put down once I really got into the story. Highly recommended!

A Thrilling Folk Horror Spy Serial Killer Combining Genres: No Man's Land by Szymon Kudranski

 No Man's Land by Szymon Kudranski

No Man's Land book cover
Author and artist Szymon Kudranski




Huge thanks to Image Comics and NetGalley for sending me an advanced copy of Szymon Kudranski’s paranoid, dark, evocative horror thriller No Man’s Land. I wasn’t sure what to expect from this comic, but the fact that this story featured a mysterious, ritualistic death in 1963 on a remote land bridge near Alaska that required investigators from the KGB and the FBI to investigate seemed really intriguing. I imagined that with 1963, the story had something to do with US-Soviet tensions and possibly the Kennedy assassination. However, I wasn’t anticipating the kind of occult and folk horror elements that haunt the pages of these issues. The story is especially compelling once FBI Agent Collins is dispatched to the remote area of Diomedes in Alaska to investigate this mysterious ritual-like murder of a young woman. Her body appeared on a land bridge that only emerges for 3 months out of the year. This bridge is literally a “no man’s land” since it spans Alaska and the USSR, but it was also the land bridge that enabled older generations of early humans to cross from Asia to the Americas. Since the local law enforcement cannot investigate, Collins is partnering with a KGB agent in a joint effort to maintain diplomatic relations during a heated cold war. 

I loved the story and plot twists in this graphic novel. The story is rooted in history, so it incorporates elements of political thrillers and spy stories; however, it also captures elements of serial killer and folk horror films. In fact, some of the alternate covers include homages to Silence of the Lambs and John Carpenter’s The Thing. I also couldn’t help but think of the most recent edition of True Detective that is set in remote Alaska. Collins’ investigation takes him to some of the indigenous people of this remote arctic region who maintain their traditional beliefs and practices and are not really a part of the Soviets or the US. One of the eeriest parts of the book is a young girl who may have encountered the killer. The girl is somewhat catatonic, and she only scribbles on paper with a twig. Her skin has erupted in odd rashes, and she claims to have seen an ocean of blood. All of these clues along with the ritualistic killing of the woman who was disemboweled and positioned with her hands pointing like Baphomet, add a kind of apocalyptic tone to the story. This also makes sense when we consider that this killing happened amid the nuclear threats from both countries, a kind of threat that promised mutually assured destruction. I won’t get into more details about this story, but I felt like it had so many of the great elements of genre stories that I enjoy. There’s mystery, horror, espionage, and folk horror, and apocalyptic dread. 

What also makes this comic stand out is the incredible artwork from Kudranski, who is also the author as well. I loved the artwork and how it has almost a kinetic feel to it as the images zoom out to give readers a sense of the vast openness of the arctic wild, making the characters seem insignificant and weak, but then zooming in to closeups to give readers a better sense of their stress, worry, dread and fear. In addition, Kudranski includes some newspaper clippings, maps, and government documents in the background to give the story both a realistic and a kind of collage like feel. This was another strength of the story for me. I loved how this created a realistic and historical feel to the story. While most of the story is in black and white, Collins visits the blood ocean, and it is done in a glorious deep red, along with other deaths and kills. The artwork complements, if not leads, the story, to make this a great historical horror thriller. Highly recommended!





















Thursday, February 19, 2026

On Morrison: A Brilliant Look at America's Most Important Writer By Namwali Serpell

 On Morrison by Namwali Serpell

On Morrison book cover
Scholar and author Namwali Serpell

Big thanks to Random House and NetGalley for sending me an advanced copy of Namwali Serpell’s brilliant new in-depth analysis of the works of American Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison titled On Morrison. If I could give this book 10 stars, one for each insightful chapter focused on Morrison’s novels, a play, a book of critical essays, and a short story, I would. This book was absolutely a joy to read, especially if you love literature and reading or were an English major. I had the pleasure of reading Song of Solomon and Beloved in two different lit courses in my undergrad studies, and I still remember how much Morrison’s writing both challenged and delighted me. It’s not just her characters and storytelling, but it’s her language- her imagery, the chiasmus, the metaphors, all of these literary and rhetorical devices that English majors become acquainted with- used to mastery to create worlds and beings so realistic and imbued with such emotion, passion, love, pain, loss, and sorrow. Reading Morrison in class, pairing the readings with research and criticism, discussing the findings and developing a thesis to argue for a research paper all helped me better understand some of the ideas and conceptions that Morrison grappled with in her writing, and Dr. Serpell’s book brought back all of that dialogue and debate, creating a Bakhtinian reading experience that also references the talking book and the kind of reading that Morrison reminded Orpah was necessary in literature. On Morrison is a book that I wish I had access to in undergrad or even when I was teaching Beloved to high school students. Not only does Dr. Serpell look at the kinds of dialogues and influences that Morrison’s books engage in, but she also gets into textual analysis, examining specific lines and sections from Morrison’s novels and other works to show these influences, the traditions, and signifying, demonstrating how Morrison not only engaged with classical and “canonical” literature, but also incorporated African American literature, history, themes, and language. On Morrison is such an important book not only because it assesses and addresses the first female Black Nobel Laureate in American history, but it also serves as a great model for students to learn textual analysis and close reading. It takes that kind of literary scholarship, which can seem foreign and intimidating to students, and makes it more accessible for students and others who may be interested in Morrison’s work but not necessarily studying her for a course. Furthermore, Dr. Serpell’s work helps readers appreciate Morrison, but also understand her place in American and world literature. While I wasn’t sure if this book would be more of a contextualized biography of Morrison’s life and works, it was so much more, and I felt as if this book was a course itself. I learned so much from this book, not only about Morrison’s life, but more about her work and how to consider her work and works of other writers like Hurston, Jean Toomer, William Faulkner, and Ralph Ellison. I also added to my “To Read” list with other writers who may have influenced Morrison’s writing. More importantly, though, Dr. Serpell’s book evoked memories, or the kind of re-memory from Beloved, where I kept thinking about friends, colleagues, and students, and how Morrison factored into so many of our conversations throughout my career as a student and teacher. Maybe my experience is unique, but I hope that others who have read and experienced Morrison’s novels may have a similar experience.

I haven’t read all of Morrison’s books; in fact, I’ve only read 5 of the books in this book. 2 of them I read for classes; I’ve taught Beloved, which was its own emotionally fraught experience, and I’ve read 3 others on my own (The Bluest Eye, A Mercy, and Home), and my experience reading for class and teaching Beloved was much different than reading on my own. Dr. Serpell’s book was helpful in reconsidering these books, their themes, and how they relate to some of Morrison’s other works, as well as the works of other writers. In particular I appreciated the chapter dedicated to Morrison’s 3 later novels. Rather than addressing these novels with their own individual chapters, Dr. Serpell notes how there’s a difference with these novels than with Morrison’s earlier works. Furthermore, the last chapter indicates Morrison’s ambivalence to monuments, even though she has a hall in Princeton named after her. As Dr. Serpell notes too, citing Edward Said, later works can sometimes not only challenge or push against the previous work, raising complexities and contradictions with the artists (see notes Beethoven’s later works as a reference point), but that they can also provide insight into how the artists view their own works. It’s a fascinating chapter that lovingly critiques Morrison’s work, both in its differences and similarities to other works, and seeks not to monumentalize or memorialize her, but rather to further rearrange the puzzle pieces of her works to evoke a new or reimagined image. She used a bingo card to present some of the recurring themes, motifs, characters, and images that help readers better understand possible meanings in Morrison’s work. It’s both brilliant and funny. In addition, this chapter also focuses on Morrison’s experiments, and the many failures or the abandoned projects that were never midwifed into publication. This was also fascinating to read, and it was also a reminder of how even Nobel Laureates and the greats of American Literature even sometimes struggle with the writing process. I really enjoyed Dr. Serpell’s critiques of Morrison’s poetry, which I didn’t even know existed. However, it was the analysis of A Mercy, a book I read 17 years ago, shortly after it was first published, and really struggled to make meaning of it. Dr. Serpell’s analysis was clear, thoughtful, and provided much to consider. I loved seeing how A Mercy was in dialogue with other books from Morrison’s worlds. Reading this analysis definitely made me want to revisit the book to see many of the characters, stories, symbols, and language that I missed on my initial, isolated read.

Other chapters focus on specific texts- mostly novels, but one chapter focuses Morrison’s short story “Recitatif”, which was another experiment in removing racial identifiers from the main characters. I looked forward to reading each chapter, savoring them, going back to re-read longer passages of analysis and finding agreement with the connections and conclusions Dr. Serpell delivers. I think that Beloved was probably my favorite chapter, just because it’s a novel I’ve read and taught so many times, yet I learned so much more from this. While I recognize Beloved is a haunted house, ghost, and even a possession story, I never thought about the book in relation to the popular horror of the 80s, like Stephen King and Anne Rice. However, a few years ago, I read Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian and James Welch’s Fools Crow, which were both published around the same time as Beloved. I couldn’t help but wonder if these books influenced Morrison at all. Similarly, when reading the chapter focused on The Bluest Eye, about the isolation and deprivation of Pecola, I wondered whether Morrison may have been influenced by McCarthy’s dark tale of isolation and alienation Child of God, or Welch’s earlier novel Winter in the Blood, which is another tale of fragmentation and identity. Although this book was published later than The Bluest Eye, maybe Welch read Morrison’s book and was influenced. I also kept thinking about Ayi Kwei Armah’s Fragments, another book I read for an African Literature course that has haunted me for nearly 30 years. This is another book about the power of colonization and corporations to created a fragmented sense of identity, where the main character truly loses a sense of his self due to the westernization of Ghana. It was published around the same time as The Bluest Eye, so I’m not sure if Morrison had any advanced notice of it, or maybe it was just something in the chronotope of the time period. It’s been more than 20 years since I read The Bluest Eye, and it’s not necessarily a book I want to revisit immediately, but reading Dr. Serpell’s analysis and connections made me want to revisit these texts to see how Morrison may have been in dialogue with some other writers of her time.

In addition, I couldn’t help but think of Sarah Chihaya’s memoir Blbliophobia, where she recounts her close emotional connection to reading and texts. Chihaya mentioned that The Bluest Eye was the text that she referred to as a “life ruiner,” since it opened her eyes to racism and self-hatred. Although I didn’t have the same experience, I do agree that reading Toni Morrison is an emotional and evocative experience. It’s transcendent and moving, a rare, but important experience that some of us may have when reading or engaging with great art that maybe doesn’t make us feel great, but that makes us feel a range of emotions, helping us to be more empathetic and understanding. Reading Namwali Serpell’s On Morrison was a thick love experience, like Sethe tells Paul D. “Thin love ain’t no love at all.” Dr. Serpell’s book, like most of Morrison’s books, is a loving experience, and one that is particularly thick in love. I could go on and on about this book, but I highly recommend it. Again, thanks to Random House and NetGalley, but more importantly thanks to Dr. Serpell for her brilliant writing and analysis about Toni Morrison.  I will be revisiting this book, and it is one that I would share excerpts with students as well. Just an incredible read!





Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Everything Dead & Dying: An Inventive Twist on Zombie Horror

 Everything Dead & Dying by Tate Brombal; Artwork by Jacob Phillips

Author Tate Brombal
Artist Jacob Phillips

Many thanks to Image Comics and NetGalley for the advanced copy of Tate Brombal’s exciting take on zombie horror, Everything Dead & Dying. This comic was surprising for a few different reasons, and they were all good diversions from zombie horror. In fact, I think that this story presents the kind of survivor story where the competing goals and hopes of survivors become more of the horror than the actual zombies. Nevertheless, these pages are filled with decay, gore, and violence, all while providing an inventive and emotional rendering of this kind of horror.

The story focuses primarily on Jack Chandler, a man who lives in a remote rural farming community with his husband and daughter. We learn that Jack’s father left him the farm and land despite being estranged from him due to Jack’s sexuality. Through the use of flashbacks throughout the story, we learn more about Jack’s challenges to find acceptance in this small town with his husband and daughter. Although they face some discrimination, they eventually grow as a family and become a part of the greater community. Nevertheless, once Jack’s husband and daughter begin experiencing flu-like symptoms that seem to infect other members of the community, things change for Jack and the town of Caverton. Jack’s story is told through flashbacks, where we see the past through colorful and sunny panels that contrast with a kind of harsh, dark and bloody panels of today. Jack, seemingly immune from the virus that transforms residents into zombies, has decided to take care of the infected and feeds them to ensure that they no longer attack. Furthermore, as the resident zombies are fed, their muscle memory allows them to maintain their previous lives, following a bland routine of behaviors and actions that they carried out during their lives. This creates a kind of groundhog’s day like scenario where Jack lives both in the past and the present. His memories of the past, when his husband and daughter were among the living are intercut with the present. Although his family and neighbors have no language and can only communicate through grunts and guttural noises, Jack still provides for them, ensuring a level of dignity and humanity that others might find strange or even problematic.

One such group of survivors does encounter Jack’s family, initially killing Jack’s zombie mailman who meets with him on a regular basis. Sensing the threat to his family, Jack proceeds to hide them from this group, although the group wants to not only rescue Jack, but also see what kind of supplies and resources he may have to offer. Harboring a zombie family creates a standoff as Jack wants to maintain his memories and past, and not have an intrusion on his private life. I loved how the horror shifted from the zombies, who are relatively passive as long as Jack feeds them regularly, and the band of survivors, who want to shoot first and ask questions later. To me, those kinds of confrontations in the house in Night of the Living Dead or in the mall in Dawn of the Dead always were just as scary, if not scarier than the zombies themselves. Brombal’s storytelling is excellent, as he makes almost a disorienting use of flashbacks to help us understand the kind of mind state that Jack finds himself in, trying to push aside the grief and maintain some semblance of his life, keeping the town running and ensuring the zombies have a steady diet of flesh. Phillips’ artwork is equally jarring in the contrast between the past and the present. In particular, the depictions of Jack’s zombie daughter, Daisy, are really disturbing in the best way possible. While this isn’t necessarily a fun horror story, it does raise some great questions about survival and about our daily lives and activities in general. In particular, I also felt like it raised questions about nostalgia and the past, and whether we are looking to move ahead or whether we want to reside with a dead, rotting past. The story felt particularly relevant in today’s US political climate as there’s almost a kind of nostalgic infection that’s seemed to grip a part of the population. Although I doubt that this group will read this book, Brombal and Phillips have created a great twist on zombie horror that has everyday relevance. Highly recommended!