I got this comic for my birthday, and though very much intrigued, I was completely unfamiliar with it. On some level, I still am. This is a very poetic comic in many ways; the Southern drawl, the Bible verses and the dramatic drawing style go remarkably well together. However, it's a story that won't let you get too close. You feel like an observer, and the few characters are very reserved.Neither do I ever feel like I know where the story is going at all, and that's both a good thing and a bad one. I suppose what I'm saying is: It feels like a beginning of something, but I'm not sure how well it works as a standalone volume. I guess I'm a bit undecided. Well I have not much to say about this comic book. It is nice to see a heroine that actually can kick some ass but I think sometimes she is a bit too good to be believable since she has no superpowers as it seems and some events are a tad too convenient for my taste. Also while the drawing style is fittingly creepy for the story some stuff is just thrown into the story without any explanation which might make reading this a tad weird. I guess this is mostly due to the fact that this book plays after the Dancy Flammarion books "Threshold" and "Alabaster" where probably some stuff from here is introduced and explained.But all of this doesn't make this a bad story or anything, it is ok. It simply couldn't get me invested and I think its no book fitting as an introduction to the character of Dancy and her world.
Do You like book Alabaster: Wolves (2013)?
Good reminds me a lot of preacher in a way maybe it's just the whole angels thing.
—muna94
"From the art work to the story it had me completely. Couldn't put it down.
—Stephanie