“Namesake” web comic: a review

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What if the fantasy worlds created by authors like L. Frank Baum, Lewis Carroll and others were real worlds? What if your name was “Dorothy” and you found you were suddenly able to travel into the fantasy world of Oz and you entered an adventure story in that world, just like your “namesake?” What if your name wasn’t Dorothy, but you were drawn into and trapped in the world of Oz, and expected to join the adventure as a new “Dorothy?” And what if there were others like you, “namesakes” of famous characters, who also have the ability to travel to these worlds, and who have formed a covert operation to fight a rival organization of other “namesakes?”

This is the fascinating premise of a webcomic called “Namesake“, created by artist Isabelle Melançon and writer Megan Lavey-Heaton. They have created a richly-detailed world of their own, one where certain people have the power to travel to the fantasy worlds created by famous authors through history, including worlds of myth and mystery. A world where special “writers” can change the world around them, and even create new worlds of their own, merely by writing on paper.

The story centers around Emma Crewe, a young woman who can travel to these worlds, even though she doesn’t have the same name as any of the protagonists of the stories of those worlds. She and her younger sister and her friends get caught up in the adventures of not only the fantasy worlds, but also the conflicts between an organization of Namesakes and Writers called “Calliope” and a rival organization called the “Rippers“, made up of Namesakes and Characters from stories. It’s a fascinating premise, and the characters of Emma and the others are realistic and sympathetic, even the “villains” aren’t all moustache-twirling two-dimensional “bad guys”, even if they might have been written that way at one time! One of the most enjoyable parts of reading this story is recognizing who the Namesakes and characters are from the original stories. Like many of the original fantasy stories, there are moments of terror where Emma and her “crewe” encounter horrible, life-threatening dangers from the stories, but unlike the original stories, a Namesake is not guaranteed to survive their adventure, and often unforseen factors enter the adventure.

The ongoing story is broken up into Books, with Intermissions which are side-stories, set in the past or present and involving characters down through the history of Namesakes, starting with Alice Liddel, the “Alice” of “Alice in Wonderland”. These Intermissions are a great way of building on and explaining events and actions by characters in the present, without suffering from the “wall of text” that some visual story creators use to accomplish the same thing. The archive of stories is well worth diving into, and the creators are very disciplined about updating on the schedule they have set for themselves, so the frustration of waiting for the next page is mitigated by knowing that it’s only a couple of days until the new one is published! There are also lots of links to things like artwork, a list of stories referred to in “Namesake”, and a lot of other things worth exploring the site to find.

In all, I very highly recommend this comic, and I hope Ms. Melançon and Ms. Lavey-Heaton are able to give us much more story for years to come!

Enjoy!

Plume: a supernatural Western webcomic

Plume comicAnd now another thrilling installment of my webcomic reviews!  Caution, there be spoilers here, best if you read the comic archive first… Continue reading “Plume: a supernatural Western webcomic”

A really neat steampunk Western fantasy webcomic, “Next Town Over”

About a year ago I was doing my usual roaming through my usual webcomic haunts when I saw an intriguing ad for a new webcomic. As is my want, I followed the ad link to a webcomic called “Next Town Over“, which turned out to be a comic with a Western setting, but with fascinating elements of magic use and of the strange pseudo-19th Century “might-have-been” technology called “steampunk.”

The creator of this comic is Erin Mehlos, who has a masterful grasp of the Western genre, including some right-natural dialog from the characters! It’s obvious that this comic is a labor of love, from a fan of Westerns to others of like mind, but she also adds her own spice to the story by introducing non-traditional elements. If anyone reading this is old enough to remember, I’d say the comic is very much like the 60’s TV show “The Wild, Wild West.” Like that show, most of what you see is familiar to the genre, but suddenly you’ll be caught flat-footed by a horse with a robot replacement leg, or a mysterious stranger shooting flames from his fingers! It’s a fascinating mix, and given her obvious love for the genre driving her to get the details right, it works very well indeed!

Her style is very beautiful, able to capture the settings and the characters in subtle detail. When you first see her panels, you catch the immediate action of the scenes, but look closer at the edges, and you find details that subconsciously add to the feeling of the page, as well as sometimes adding “backstory” to the main plot. Like a lot of the more artistic of webcomics, it obviously takes a lot of her time, and so she only updates once a week. It’s well worth the wait for the next thrilling installment on Saturdays!

The main story that she’s telling is currently on hold, but while she’s getting ready to resume, she’s telling a (so far) more traditional Western story. I suggest starting at the archives and catching up from there, first. She breaks her story into chapters, with each chapter set in a new town somewhere Out West, where one of the characters is pursuing the other from town to town (hence the name). Which one is “the good guy” and which one is “the bad guy?” That’s up to Ms. Mehlos to know and for us to figure out! There are hints, especially in the opening pages, but so far we haven’t been given any facts about their motivations. In typical Western fashion, both characters are closed-mouth to a fault, preferring deeds to words! We get whatever hints the author chooses to drop, but even then there’s some interpretation possible. The fun of a story told like this is trying to figure out just what the heck is happening, and what’ll happen next!

I highly recommend this comic, and I look forward to seeing where the author goes with it. It aims to be quite the rip-snortin’ ride!

NOTE to parents:  There is violence and language that you might not want to expose your small children to.