![]() Moore script, take it! As I wrote in another review of a similar book. If you ever get the chance to read an Alan ![]() The first volume of a book set that never happened. Maps, characters, and settings are all as accurate as possible, and while the reader might not ultimately agree with Moore and Campbell's thesis, From Hell is still a great work of literature. Looking more deeply than most, the author finds in the "great work" of the Ripper a ritual magic working intended to give birth to the 20th century in all its horrid glory. His characterization is just as vibrant as Campbell's even the minor characters feel fully real. Moore, having decided that the evidence best fits the theory of a Masonic conspiracy to cover up a scandal involving Victoria's grandson, goes to work telling the story with relish from the point of view of the victims, the chief inspector, and the killer-the Queen's physician. The web of facts, opinion, hearsay, and imaginative invention draws the reader in from the first page.Ğddie Campbell's scratchy ink drawings evoke a dark and dirty Victorian London and help to humanize characters that have been caricatured into obscurity for decades. Alan Moore did a couple of Ph.D.'s worth of research into the Whitechapel murders for this copiously annotated collection of the independently published series. ![]() ![]() The mad, shaggy genius of the comics world dips deeply into the well of history and pulls up a cup filled with blood in From Hell. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |