There are some stories where the graphic novel is a perfect medium. Sometimes words pale in conveying the gut-churning cosmic horrors and mutated bodies that permeate Mirka Andolfo’s Mercy: The Fair Lady, the Frost, and the Fiend. However, this work is more than just a hearkening back to when EC Comics could show blood and gore with impunity. Mercy also borrows from many different genres and explores a lot of different themes.
The story itself takes place in Washington State in the late
nineteenth-century. The town of Woodsburgh is still reeling from a mining
accident that claimed many of its citizens, including the mine’s owner. In
comes Lady Hellaine, a mysterious and beautiful stranger who, along with her
faithful butler Goodwill, have come with promises to help the community while
bringing with them an aura of mystery. However, Lady Swanson, the widow of the
mine’s owner and a shrewd business owner, does not trust Lady Hellaine, mainly
because Lady Swanson knows more about the otherworldly entities that forced the
mine’s closure. Add to this plot a serial killer/monster called the
Woodsburgh Devil, and the darkness seething in the mine as well as in the
hearts of Woodsburgh’s citizens threatens to unleash something terrible.
This graphic novel is for readers that like their genres
mashed up until they are their own unique genre. This story contains everything
from historical fiction to cosmic horrors to romance to familial relationships.
The undercurrent running through this tale, though, is identity. There are
monsters here that wear human faces and seem separate from these identities,
but the story shows that identity is not always cut and dry. Yes, these are
alien monsters, but in possessing the memories and experiences of those whose
skin they wear, do these monsters become capable of becoming human, with all
the messy and glorious emotional attachments involved? In other words, how long
before a perfect disguise becomes the real thing? Andolfo’s work as artist
shows no shyness in depicting these unique monsters, especially delving into body
horror as they mutate their human shells. She also uses the story to grapple
with heady issues that go beyond mere blood and gore. Yes, it’s an adult comic,
but not simply because it depicts sex and violence but because it tackles, if
not entirely penetrates, some thorny philosophical issues.
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