DC Comics
Review: Ever After #8
By Philip Schweier
July 25, 2017 - 15:29

DC Comics
Writer(s): Dave Justis, Lilah Sturges
Artist(s): Travis Moore
Colourist(s): Michael Wiggam
Letterer(s): Todd Klein
Cover Artist(s): Tula Lotay



everafter-008.jpg
Imagine if the TV show Once Upon a Time went dark, in a Stranger Things sort of way. And then throw in a heaping helping of the Columbine tragedy. That’s what you have in Fables #8.


A divorced mom, trying to keep her teen-aged son safe and healthy; but when you work for a secret agency tasked with hunting down Fables – magical beings – safe just doesn’t enter into. Especially when he and his buddies find your secret stash of magical weapons. Hmm. What would a teenage boy do with such tools?


The set up is good, consistent with what I remember of high school, if perhaps a little clichéd. But such clichés exist for a reason (because teenagers are dumb and shallow). Travis Moore’s artwork has a basic, serviceable quality to it, but it adds to the malevolence of the story. Kind of like those movies when the short, middle-aged dork in the glasses and bowtie turns out to be a total badass.


I haven’t been following Fables, but #8 makes the perfect jumping on point for new readers. It offers a primer of some of the peripheral characters (at least, I think they’re peripheral). But they clearly play a key role, if not now, then in the future.


Rating: 7/10


Related Articles:
Review: Ever After #12
Review: Ever After #10
Review: Ever After #9
Review: Ever After #8
Everafter: From the Pages of Fables #11
Review: Ever After #7
EverAfter #6
EverAfter #5
Review: EverAfter #4
EverAfter #3