The sacrificers

Rick Remender

Book - 2024

Tomorrow is a harmonious paradise thanks to five families who make everything perfect... for the price of one child per household. Now, as that bill comes due, a son expected to give everything for a family that never loved him, and an affluent daughter determined to destroy utopia, must unite to end one generation's unnaturally protracted reign.

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COMIC/Sacrificers
vol. 1: 0 / 1 copies available; 1 person waiting
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics New COMIC/Sacrificers v. 1 (NEW SHELF) On Holdshelf
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Subjects
Genres
Dystopian comics
Fantasy comics
Science fiction comics
Graphic novels
Comics (Graphic works)
Published
Portland, OR : Image Comics, Inc 2024-
Language
English
Main Author
Rick Remender (author)
Other Authors
Max Fiumara (artist), Dave McCaig (colorist), Rus Wooton (letterer)
Item Description
Cataloging based on volume number one.
Physical Description
volumes : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cm
Audience
Rated T+ / Teen Plus
ISBN
9781534397897
9781534366817
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Remender (the Uncanny X-Force series) and Fiumara (the Amazing Spider-Man series) unite for a thrilling fantasy set in a kingdom whose prosperity relies on its terrible secret: every year, one child from each common family is taken from their parents and sacrificed. This ritual follows a religious law rigorously enforced by flame-headed King Rokos, though there's something even more sinister at the heart of the tradition. Remender skillfully divides the narrative between those chosen to be sacrificed (including the blue-feathered bird-being Pigeon and pious, placid Noom) and the high court, including Rokos's rebellious daughter Soluna. Moments of profound sadness are mixed with weird beauty thanks to Fiumara's phantasmagorical characters, who are both frightening and whimsical. The conceit will put readers in mind of The Hunger Games, Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas," and The Wizard of Oz, but Remender's keen attention to pacing and worldbuilding polishes it into a shining example of a familiar trope. Genre fans will eagerly anticipate future installments. (Apr.)

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