Link: I liked this look at all of Takehiko Inoue's covers to the collected volumes of Vagabond. That's some nice art there.
And, if you're curious, I decided to forego the weekly preview thing, since I didn't feel like talking about whatever was on there. I've been strapped for time lately, so we'll see if I keep it up or give it up entirely. Sorry, any fans of my oft-tiresome blathering. You'll have to settle for Jog, I guess. Or Caleb. Or somebody else, I'm sure.
The Squirrel Machine
By Hans Rickheit
One thing Rickheit does here to make the work so compelling is to present everything in a realistic style, full of minute, exhaustive detail:
His settings seem fully realized, packed with grittiness and dirt, decay and collapse. The people move through it believably, fitting into what seems like a normal Victorian-era town on first glance, until more and more strange imagery is floated before our eyes and we get creeped out at the entire thing. The two brothers, Edmund and William, don't present very good reader-identification figures, mostly approaching their world inexpressively, committing weird acts without much of a show of emotion at all. But that in itself is a bit of a damper for all the weirdness; if they go about their actions without any indication that it is extraordinary, then one almost thinks of it as normal, to some extent. But their creations are so inhumanly inexplicable, with intricate machinery (clockwork gears, pipes, tubes, tanks, light bulbs, and so on) connecting to bloated carcasses, aquariums full of dead things, or cages enclosing skeletal fauna. And their laboratories themselves become increasingly impossible, cavernous rooms and tunnels whose walls are bursting with arcane mechanisms that stretch below their house that seem to connect to exits all over the town:
There's also a semi-feral young woman who raises pigs, a town populace increasingly hostile to the boys' creations, a mother who disapproves of their actions but can't seem to bring herself to do anything about it, and another young woman who takes up with Edmund without much of a reason outside of animalistic attraction. And that's not even getting into the odd visions that periodically appear, the young girl who haunts the caverns, the rampant vaginal imagery, and the strange creatures that present themselves:
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