Best Wytches Vol. 1 By Jock
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Ebook About ""It's fabulous. A triumph." -Stephen King"The most terrifying comic you've ever read." -MTV NewsWhen the Rooks family moves to the remote town of Litchfield, NH to escape a haunting trauma, they're hopeful about starting over. But something evil is waiting for them in the woods just beyond town. Watching from the trees. Ancient...and hungry. Collects WYTCHES #1-6.More praise for WYTCHES:"Dark and brutal... Wytches are like nothing horror fans have ever seen" -USA Today"In Wytches, the Image Comics series Snyder co-created with the superstar art team of Jock and Matt Hollingsworth, the writer isn't just completely reinventing witches-through the story of the Rook family's dealings with the titular monsters, he's diving deep into very real fears about being a parent, and the ugliness that hides in all of us." -Entertainment Weekly"An awesome and at times terrifying tale." -IGN" A great read.... the art is outstanding and certain panels may give you nightmares." -iO9"If you read the first 4 pages of WYTCHES, there's no turning back. Scary as fuck and impossible to put down. Bravo." -Joe Hill, Locke & Key"Monumental." -Bloody Disgusting"Snyder has tackled horror before, but Wytches sets out to be an entirely new level of scary. Aside from the fact that the monsters in the book are terrifying (artist Jock has done an amazing job realizing the creatures), Snyder's vision of witchcraft is as much about the deepest fears parents face as it is about spooky monsters in the woods." -Complex Magazine"Book Wytches Vol. 1 Review :
It's not fashionable these days to see intelligent horror... meaning horror that also pays attention to the emotions and experiences of its characters. Scott Snyder's Wytches seemed to offer that when I first noticed it on my Amazon reading list, so I went in with high hopes. This story most definitely did not disappoint. The plot is fairly basic - beastly creatures tormenting a family in New Hampshire. As I read it, though, something unexpected came to the surface; a story with emotional depth that stayed with me long after any of the scares or gore of the story.The main characters in this story are Charlie and Sailor Rook, a father and daughter who have been through emotional hell even before the story starts. Charlie and Sailor are still dealing with the recent accident that has paralyzed matriarch Lucy when an added trauma is heaped on top of them; the death of a teenage girl who had been bullying Sailor. The family decides that a new start in a new town is what they need to heal, but the traumas still follow them (as we see when kids in Sailor's new school ask her if she killed the now deceased bully). Of course, this is a horror story, so the move stirs up more trouble in the form of the misshapen, flesh-eating wytches of the woods. It seems that someone has 'pledged' Sailor to these monsters in exchange for having them fulfill their deepest wishes.The story follows a familiar path, with Charlie fighting to find and free his daughter from their grasp. What sets this story apart is the emotional weight that Synder handles so deftly. Sailor appears to suffer from an anxiety disorder that Charlie struggles to understand and alleviate for her - while Charlie himself struggles with alcoholism that has made him a absent in his daughter's life. A parent reading this novel may very well identify with the deep fear and anxiety that both Charlie and Sailor suffer through - that is, how to keep someone that you love more than life itself safe in a dangerous world. As the tale motors along towards its finale, a Sophie's Choice type of dilemma is presented, and it is an emotional gut punch that far outweighs the horror of the story.In fact, it may be this choice and its implications that is the real horror of Wytches. One fault with the story is that it may not explore this question as deeply as it could have - but again, for it to be revealed and played out the way that it was may have better suited the story. In the end, Wytches seems to say that its not monsters that we have to fear, but each other. I love Scott Snyder's writing. I'm obsessed with Jock's art and have spent too much money on posters of his work. I'm also recently in love with horror–ˆwith the itch of familiar fear it creates in your head, the chill of realization that hits you when you realize the monsters might not be the scariest thing out there––so you can imagine that I was really excited to (finally) sit down and read this first volume of Wytches.Except, I didn't love it. It's obviously a deeply personal story for Snyder, and his connection to the themes the comic wrestles with is clear and easily the greatest asset the book has going for it. The fears, the anxieties, the paranoia that Snyder injects his horror with are so familiar and raw that they easily make an impact on the reader. It's just...as much I loved the themes and the worldbuilding of Wytches, the characters failed to make a real impression on me.The motivations of the Rooks family are great, and again, offer a strong foundation that the core themes of the story get to build off of. But the explanations for those motivations and the ways they manifested themselves lacked...something. I can't even put my finger on it, but there was some piece, some sharpened edge that was missing, and its absence made the characters feel more like tools for plot progression than actual, individually driven people in their own right. I was still invested in the story, but not on account of the characters, unfortunately, but on account of wanting to see how Snyder was going to continue grappling with the themes of the book.While the story was a bit muddled, thankfully Jock's art is, as always, sharply powerful. His framing, expressions, and general eye for the most grotesquely upsetting images play a huge role in giving tangible form to the ideas Snyder's script deals with. What's didn't work for me, unfortunately, was the coloring, or more specifically, the watercolor "splashes" that occupied literally every single page of the book. These bright, colored splatters were effective occasionally––especially early-on when the actual Wytches are still kept in the shadows––but when the action picks up and the reader is supposed to be on the edge of their seat...I wasn't.The splattered colors were distracting and actually made it difficult to read what the characters were doing on the page. It pulled me out of the story and the (otherwise effective) horror, and that's disappointing. Hollingsworth colors are good otherwise, and he adds an impressive level of mood and general discomfort into Jock's artwork, but the splatter effects felt overdone and self-indulgent, which is a problem since they're apparently a staple for the comic's general aesthetic.Still, I enjoyed Wytches, and am eager to see where Snyder, Jock, and Hollingsworth take it next. The ideas and thematics Snyder works with feel distinctly personal, and it's that level of sincerity that gives his script just enough energy to overshadow a cast of characters who never felt fully realized. Jock's art is also great––his design for the creatures is especially unsettling––but I hope that in future installments of the series his art is less shrouded in the distracting color-splatters that seemed to keep me *out* of the book, instead of in it. Read Online Wytches Vol. 1 Download Wytches Vol. 1 Wytches Vol. 1 PDF Wytches Vol. 1 Mobi Free Reading Wytches Vol. 1 Download Free Pdf Wytches Vol. 1 PDF Online Wytches Vol. 1 Mobi Online Wytches Vol. 1 Reading Online Wytches Vol. 1 Read Online Jock Download Jock Jock PDF Jock Mobi Free Reading Jock Download Free Pdf Jock PDF Online Jock Mobi Online Jock Reading Online JockRead Online Queen Takes Knights (Their Vampire Queen Book 1) By Joely Sue Burkhart
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