Synopses & Reviews
A new graphic novel from the reigning king of gothic humor.
It was the morning of Paisley Curtin's sixteenth birthday when she realized her town was doomed. Just one week before, a traveling carnival had rolled into the quiet hillside community of Obidiah's Glenn and right away things began to get weird. The carnival itself was strange enough, with its seedy sideshows and sinister exhibitions, its Room of False Mirrors, its dangerous Gallows Hand game and the monstrous caged creature called the Tom-Geek.
Then parents in the town began to get sick, followed by the teachers, doctors and the sheriff's department. The children of Obidiah's Glenn become suddenly wild, roaming about at night with crazed looks in their eyes. Paisley realizes she had to do something to stop what she saw happening but there wasn't anyone left in town who seemed to be able to help. So she sends a letter to someone she hoped might listen, someone who would know what to do a friend of her late sister's from college, a self-styled girl detective with a questionable reputation named Judy Drood.
Her only hope is that Judy will arrive in time to save her town and to prevent her from ending up as yet another exhibit in the dark carnival's Hall of Embalmed Abominations
The Grave Robber's Daughter is another fast-paced, delirious ride from the author of the critically acclaimed The Chuckling Whatsit ("A masterpiece" Rue Morgue Magazine) and marks the return of Judy Drood, Girl Detective, last seen thwarting the murderous plans of a group of demented college professors in Sala's 2005 epic mystery-thriller Mad Night. The Grave Robber's Daughter is filled with Sala'sunique blend of horror and whimsy that will please his many fans and new readers alike.
Review
"Sala's angular, high-contrast, Charles Addams-meets-Chester Gould artwork and John Waters-ish dialogue guarantee a ludicrous good time." Booklist
Synopsis
The arrival of a mysterious traveling carnival spells disaster for the peaceful community of Obidiah's Glenn as the adults in town fall ill and the children begin to run wild, and the only hope lies in sixteen-year-old Paisley Curtin, who enlists the aid of Judy Drood, a self-styled but disreputable "girl detective" who had been friends with her late sister. Original.
Synopsis
by Richard Sala
In this original graphic novel, when the carnival comes to town, parents in the town of Obidiah's Glenn began to get sick, followed by the teachers, doctors, and the sheriff's department. The children of Obidiah's Glenn become suddenly wild, roaming about at night with crazed looks in their eyes. Sixteen-year-old Paisley Curtain realizes she has to do something to stop what she sees is happening - but there isn't anyone left in town that seems to be able to help. So she sends a letter to someone she hoped might listen, someone who would know what to do - a friend of her late sister's from college, a self-styled "girl detective" with a questionable reputation named Judy Drood. Her only hope is that Judy will arrive in time to save her town, and to prevent her from ending up as yet another exhibit in the dark carnival's Hall of Embalmed Abominations
Synopsis
A new graphic novel from the reigning king of gothic humor.
Synopsis
It was the morning of Paisley Curtin's sixteenth birthday when she realized her town was doomed. Just one week before, a traveling carnival had rolled into the quiet hillside community of Obidiah's Glenn and right away things began to get weird. The carnival itself was strange enough, with its seedy sideshows and sinister exhibitions, its Room of False Mirrors, its dangerous Gallows Hand game and the monstrous caged creature called the Tom-Geek.
About the Author
Richard Sala grew up in Chicago and now spends his time in Berkeley, CA.