Category: Books & Comics

Werewolves set in type and inked in panels.

Book Review: “Fenrir” by M.D. Lachlan

M.D. Lachlan is the only author who’s made me involuntarily swear out loud twice. The first time was at the end of Wolfsangel, and now he’s done it to me again with its successor, Fenrir. I think you should give him a chance to do the same to you, but to properly explain why, I have to dance around spoilers for two books.

Fenrir is the second instalment in Lachlan’s exploration of the brutal cycle of strife, power and death prophesied to end (along with most of the world) when the Norse god Odin is killed by the monstrous wolf Fenrisulfr. You can certainly read this book without first reading Wolfsangel, but you’ll deprive yourself of the joy that comes from watching Fenrir‘s main characters rediscover who they were when they were alive before, in the pages of that first book. The echoes of those previous lives – glimpses of golden fields and icy ocean spray – will merely be beautiful, and will lack the joyful hints of recognition you might feel while scanning a crowd for a friend you haven’t seen in a few years.

Despite Fenrir‘s deep connection to its predecessor and its focus on the inevitability of fate, Lachlan isn’t one for foreshadowing (beyond the scope of the existing Norse mythology, anyway), and his poetic, almost detached prose belies his skill with unexpected and staggering plot developments. One such sucker-punch was the cause of my “loud cuss in a quiet place” moment, and it comes fairly early on in the story. I won’t give any specifics, but the scene involved an hitherto mild-mannered character accidentally being forced to rediscover one of his (or her, no spoilers) core competencies. Suffice it to say, motherfuckers die. This character’s sudden connection to her (or his) previous incarnation came so suddenly and took me by such surprise that I found myself making a fist and shout-whispering “oh FUCK” to the full cabin of an otherwise silent red-eye flight. These are the kinds of delights that Fenrir holds for people who know enough about Wolfsangel to groan at this terrible t-shirt suggestion I made to Lachlan on Twitter.

Fenrir side-steps the tropes often found in stories about prophecies and inescapable futures. Its characters react to the revelations of their (often terrible) fates not with rebellious bombast – there are no Sarah Connor moments – but with resignation, patience and, in the case of one schemer, an ingenious attempt to “hack” the whole group’s future lives by using one of the most powerful tools available at the time. Fenrir isn’t a “guess this character’s past identity” mystery or a Paul W. S. Anderson “SURPRISE loud noise” thriller, though. Once all of the characters are in motion, the narrative thread leads down a path of love, resignation and devotion that alternates between stoicism and aching melancholy. Fenrir is a thriller, but Lachlan always makes sure the reader knows – and more importantly, cares – what’s at stake.

If Fenrir has a shortcoming, it has more to do with the stage than the actors on it. There’s a lot of travel in this book, and while the terrain is described beautifully, the locations feel slightly disconnected from each other. It might be a natural consequence of Fenrir‘s setting (9th century northern Europe) being a little easier to identify (Paris is on fire, and the Vikings did it) than its predecessor’s, but the world never quite bloomed for me like I wanted it to. When Lachlan lets the characters rest, though, the surroundings are beautifully rendered, however briefly we might be staying there.

Beauty? Yuck! Don’t worry, for all the sun-dappled forests and verdant gardens surrounding them, the people inhabiting Lachlan’s Medieval Europe are still doing terrible things to each other. Returning after its profoundly creepy debut in Wolfsangel is an order of magic that rewards its practitioners for their suffering… or the suffering of unlucky bystanders, who become fodder for producing visions and carrying out little odd jobs like murder. In terms of sheer results it easily outmuscles the Christianity that spurs on the book’s Frankish faithful, and it even unsettles the spiritually mercenary Vikings. I don’t know if this concept comes from Norse history or if Lachlan just made it up, but it’s disturbing and does a great job of reminding the reader that secret knowledge and far sight come at tremendous cost. It’s also made me really nervous about certain kinds of birds.

The book’s other source of suffering (and the reason I’m able to post about this book on this site) is the werewolf. Everything I loved about the physicality of Wolfsangel‘s werewolf – the transformation, its playful ferocity – is back, but in greater quantity, perfect detail, and presented in a way that will make readers squirm with conflicted emotions. You will suffer as the beast suffers, exult with it as many (many, many) men die under its claws, and share in the disgusted horror afflicting the werewolf’s small but bright human core. Reading about Fenrir‘s werewolf is like reading about a sentient knife that knows it is sharp, and loves to cut.

Despite its darkness and unflinching brutality, Fenrir is full of beauty, humour and exhilarating action. Fate casts a shadow over its characters, and a less skilled writer would let that shadow crush the story into a grim march of futility, but Fenrir‘s characters are bright even in the darkness. They laugh with broken limbs, cast riches into the sea, embrace God while gulping down bloody snow, and scheme to do better the next time they live. May we all do so well with our own days!

Buy, borrow or skip?

Buy, and see if it doesn’t make you swear out loud too. Lachlan’s Wolfangel series has usurped many of my favourite book series. The trilogy’s concluding volume is right here on my desk, and I’m starting it tonight.

“A Pack Of Wolves” Signed, Limited Edition Hardcover

From Grand Mal Press, “a small press publisher of genre fiction”: Three of Eric S. Brown‘s A Pack Of Wolves novellas collected in a signed hardcover. $49.99, limited to 100 copies.

For the first and only time, all the Pack of Wolves novellas, including the previously unpublished 3rd book, are collected into one hardcase edition signed by Eric S. Brown.

There’s a God damned spider in this Anathema #4 preview

Issue 4 of Rachel Deering’s werewolf horror comic Anathema comes out later this month, and she’s put a preview on her deviantART gallery to whet your appetite. The first five pages continue the series’ narrative of a soulless monster as it wreaks misery on those unlucky enough to encounter it – that is to say, Mercy gets bit by a fucking spider while she’s trying to do something nice for someone else.

Issue 4 features art by Christian DiBari and colors by Mike Spicer (both series newcomers), and will be available exclusively via Tiny Behemoth Press on comiXology. I quite like DiBari’s slightly bulked-up version of Mercy, but spiders… ugh.

Anathema #4, page 1

Zenescope’s “Grimm Fairy Tales Presents Werewolves: The Hunger”

Indie comics publisher Zenescope Entertainment is expanding its “sexy horror fairytales for adults” universe with the lycanthropic miniseries Grimm Fairy Tales Presents Werewolves: The Hunger. The 3-issue miniseries features writing by Mark L. Miller, pencils by Elmer Cantada and colours by Omi Remalante Jr. The Zenescope web site doesn’t actually have any info about the miniseries, other than “it is a thing you can buy, here is a preview of issue 1“, so here’s my synopsis, derived solely from the covers and the previews of the first two issues (all of which you can see below):

The action in Werewolves: The Hunger revolves around an “always in full moon mode” werewolf, a grizzled werewolf hunter with a singular name (sorry, it’s not “Cher”), ladies in peril and a sexy medical practitioner.

The first two issues are out now, and are available through Comixology.

Issue #1 Preview

werewolves-hunger-01-00coverA werewolves-hunger-01-00coverB werewolves-hunger-01-01 werewolves-hunger-01-02 werewolves-hunger-01-03 werewolves-hunger-01-15 werewolves-hunger-01-19

Issue #2 Preview

werewolves-hunger-02-00coverA werewolves-hunger-02-00coverB werewolves-hunger-02-00coverC werewolves-hunger-02-01 werewolves-hunger-02-02 werewolves-hunger-02-03 werewolves-hunger-02-04 werewolves-hunger-02-05 werewolves-hunger-02-06

Bone pizzas for werewolves, The Prettiest Merman & more in Monster Dudes #2

Monster Dudes #2 is out. Monster Dudes #2 is out! It’s the comic by Dave Scheidt and Matt Fagan that’s so nice, I had to tell you twice. This issue is a little lighter on werewolf action than issue 1, but Scheidt’s writing is funnier than ever, and Fagan’s art turns wordless episodes like “Merman Goes Shopping” into vignettes that literally make me laugh out loud. Plus, this cover makes me grin like an idiot every time I see it – these guys are doing work that presses every “yes” button in my brain.

Monster Dudes 2

You can buy a physical copy for $5 or a digital download / PDF for $2, which will hopefully go towards the Scheidt / Fagan Pizza Fund. You can also follow Monster Dudes on Facebook for news and exclusive artwork.

Gritty werewolf murder mystery “Mongrel: S.O.B.” Kickstarter & graphic novel

Mongrel Mongrel: S.O.B. is a three-issue comic by artist Andrew Mitchell Kudelka and writer Edward Dunphy, who describes it as a gritty murder mystery, “one part The Howling and one part CSI: Chicago, [that] pits a monstrous werewolf against a veteran Chicago detective.” The first two issues have already been produced, and you might even have them if you were at comic conventions like SDCC 2012,  C2E2 or DanCon. The last convention I went to was ECCC 2011, and the Internet’s a big place, so I didn’t know about Mongrel until Tah told me about it this morning, with characteristic brevity. The first two issues have garnered enthusiastic praise, and the werewolf action seems firmly based in the horror genre, which is why the Kickstarter campaign to fund the concluding issue and a graphic novel collecting all three is worth your attention.

The modest $3,500 goal will cover artist fees and production costs for the graphic novel, and the backer rewards span the tried-and-true range of swag, including shirts, artwork, posters, advertising space, and several chances to be drawn into the final issue (either as a speaking character or a werewolf victim). They’re less than a day into the campaign and it’s already halfway funded, so some of those stretch goals (the most exciting of which is a Mongrel resin sculpture) seem likely, too.

I want to reiterate that I haven’t read either of the existing issues, but the first page of the first issue (below) is enough to get my pledge. If you’d like to learn more, hit up the Mongrel web site, Twitter account (@mongrelcomic) or Facebook page, and if you like what you see, kick in a few bucks!

mongrel-1-1

Nazi Werewolf Zombie Inferno!!!

Nazi Werewolf Zombie InfernoNormally I try to make my post titles a little more articulate than this, but I can’t imagine the phrase “Nazi werewolf zombie inferno” being spoken aloud in anything less than giddy, slightly wall-eyed enthusiasm, so that’s how I’m writing it. In fact, three exclamation points don’t seem like enough. I might add some more later.

Oh! Right, aside from being a sort of grindhouse zen koan, Nazi Werewolf Zombie Inferno is a 176-page graphic novel by long-time collaborators Karl Jull and Chris Bradshaw. I’ve only seen three pages, but it sounds like the sort of thing I’d devour in a weekend, probably while listening to Rob Zombie’s last three albums on repeat. Hidden Nazi gold, cannon-fodder mercenaries, undead werewolves and a guest appearance by the corpse of Josef Mengele? I hope Chillsauce is  taking notes for the next iteration of their werewolf hunting event.

Given that I haven’t read it and don’t have a copy yet, my only complaint for now has to be that the book doesn’t seem that easy to buy – I can only find it on Amazon US and Amazon UK, and it seems like the sort of thing that needs to be a $5 PDF on Gumroad. I’m also a little concerned that the “processed photos” style of art won’t hold up in scenes that aren’t mostly shadow, but Karl Jull has a background in three artistic disciplines concerned with light and contrast – painting, photography and filmmaking – so I’m betting he’s got the chops to make it work.

You can find more about Nazi Werewolf Zombie Inferno on the project’s web site, and here are three pages of lycanthropic action courtesy of Karl.

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Meet killer librarian Alexis LaPierre in “Wolf-Girls”

"Alexis" by viergacht

Last year I was lucky enough to have a short story I wrote included in the Hic Dragones anthology Wolf-Girls: Dark Tales of Teeth, Claws and Lycogyny, edited by Hannah Kate. “The Librarian”, which was the first piece of fiction I’d written in years, and which is also my first published work ever, is a short look at the changing fortunes of Alexis LaPierre (depicted above in full “please return your books on time” mode by the talented and generous Viergacht). Alexis becomes a werewolf at a young age and under tragic circumstances, and as she grows up, she finds that hedonistic escapism might not be the healthiest lifestyle for her (to say nothing of her victims). Here’s an excerpt:

Killing the pilot annihilated my delusions of animal nobility. I was no longer hunting solely for sustenance. People were food, but they were also a wonderful source of pleasure.

Given proper motivation, humans are capable of astounding cunning and endurance. I once stalked a man for nine hours along the shore of Lac La Ronge, breathing his fear and determination like the bouquet of an exotic wine. When he finally stood his ground, he had enough stamina left to break three of my fingers. His flesh was stringy, but I have enjoyed few meals more.

I was gone for eight years, ten months and twenty-three days. In that time I twice traversed the space between the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Pacific Ocean, devouring campers, hikers, forestry workers and runaways. I don’t know how many people I’ve killed. If that seems strange, ask yourself how many cigarettes you smoked last year, or how many times you’ve masturbated. Some forms of self-indulgence aren’t quantifiable.

I had seceded from humanity, but I couldn’t maintain my isolation forever. Needled by an inexplicable desire for human contact that didn’t end in violent death, I would shed my feral form and hitchhike along the Trans-Canada Highway, gravitating to the nearest city.

These pilgrimages were always novel at first. Despite my separation from the world of people, I blended in – another hollow-eyed young woman with a donation-bin wardrobe no particular place to be. By day I wandered, transfixed and over-stimulated by the prismatic textures flowing from the city and its people. At night I ate transients, prostitutes or security guards, then slept in dingy motel rooms paid for with money taken from their bodies.

This would last a week or two, and then one morning I would wake choking on panic and loathing. The subsequent flight from the city – half-naked sprints across municipal golf courses and forest-edged subdivisions – was always punctuated with oaths to never return.

Months would pass, sometimes as much as a year, before the desire found me again, but it always did – a distant voice echoing among the trees, calling for a girl who went camping with her family and never came back.

If you’re interested in reading more of The Librarian, plus 16 tales by other authors whose contributions make me feel exceedingly lucky to be included, you can obtain a copy of Wolf-Girls from the following places:

Thanks to Hannah Kate and Hic Dragones to having me, Tandye for tolerating me while I was writing the story, Viergacht for illustrating Alexis, and you, the Werewolf News visitor, for reading my blog and indulging this not-entirely-shameless self-promotion.

Ask yourself: isn’t it time you picked up Anathema #3?

Anathema issue 3I didn’t plan on going back to post about anything that happened during my Christmas Coma, but I’m willing to make an exception for Rachel Deering because she’s prone to violence and incredibly strong. Issue 3 of Rachel’s comic Anathema came out at the end of November, and now it’s time to divide you Werewolf News readers into three groups: a) those who don’t have it because they don’t know it’s out, b) those who already have it, and c) those who don’t have it because they think heartbroken-rage-fuelled werewolf revenge quests aren’t “cool”.

Those in the first group may remedy the situation by exchanging $1.99 for a PDF of this comic here, at Rachel’s online store. I have one of these PDFs and I have to tell you, two bucks is a good value for this many pixels arranged in such a pleasing configuration. I don’t read many comics digitally, but I feel like the image size in this one is like three times the size of the other officially-released comics PDFs I have. I re-read the comic on the train today and I was getting dirty looks about it from a lady who could see my screen from the other side of the car. I don’t know what her problem was – doesn’t everyone like a lesbian make-out scene?

To those in the second group, I say to you: well done! Let us reminisce in the comments or on Twitter about the streamlined writing from Deering, the terrific work by new artist Wes St. Claire, the time Gideon was all “get on my horse” and Mercy was all “okay but you’re riding Tuco-style“, or the throw-away comment “it’s fine. I could use the space.”

To those in the last group, I don’t know what you’re doing here. Did you get lost looking for this?

Malört Förlag’s scholarly & musical resurrection of Swedish werewolf folklore

Malört Förlag (Wormwood Publishing) is a Swedish publishing house “specializing in texts about the fantastic, the numinous and the aberrant”, and as if their area of focus didn’t sufficiently distinguish them from other niche publishers, for every book they publish, they also issue a soundtrack. Writer, editor and Malört Förlag co-founder Per Faxneld recently shared with me the details of a book they published this past summer – on the second full moon in August, to be precise – which scholarly werewolf fans will find interesting: “a definitive and luxurious edition” of Ella Odstedt’s 1943 study of Swedish werewolf folklore Varulven I Svensk Folktradition (The Werewolf in Swedish Folklore).

Varulven book

Odstedt’s book contains accounts of people who fell victim to spells that imprisoned them in wolf form, women who attempted magical remedies for the pain of childbirth and who were then punished with werewolf infants, and of practitioners of witchcraft who could voluntarily assume wolf form. This 416-page edition of “Varulven” is limited to 777 copies and contains two appendices – essays by contemporary scholars, and reviews first published in response to the original edition. It comes with a dust jacket and bookmark ribbon, and contains original illustrations by Timo Ketola.

In keeping with their desire to release a soundtrack for each book they publish, Malört Förlag has also released “Werewolf Songs – Music Inspired by Swedish Folklore“, a digipak album + booklet containing 11 exclusive songs about werewolves. You can listen to a selection of songs from the CD here, courtesy of UK music magazine The Wire. The album is available to purchase by itself (English), or as an accompaniment to the book (Swedish / Google-translated English).

Werewolf Songs

My limited knowledge of Sweden is derived from Stieg Larsson’s books and a week spent with friends in Vetlanda in 1997, none of which gives me the experience (or more practically, the knowledge of Swedish language) to fully appreciate this book. Nevertheless,  as someone who loves literature, werewolf mythology, and finely-crafted objects, I have to acknowledge the fine work that Per Faxneld and his colleagues at Malört Förlag have undertaken to make Ella Odstedt’s work available in this way, particularly with such care and passion that they would commission an entire album of music to accompany it.