Mama Came Callin'
A Graphic Novel
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
"One of the most affecting graphic novels I've read in some time. You'll root for Kirah as she navigates a county's institutional racism, her mysterious family history, and brutal Gatorman murders, written and artistically rendered with care and love and righteous anger. Don't miss this one." –PAUL TREMBLAY, New York Times bestselling author of Horror Movie and The Cabin at the End of the World
A gripping graphic horror novel set in the Florida bayou, following a young biracial woman as she uncovers her estranged father’s role in a grisly hate crime.
Kirah was born from an improbable interracial relationship that, in central Florida’s infamous Asurupa County, defied all the odds. But her idyllic childhood was shattered by an urban legend come to life. The “Gatorman” was a nightmare on the lips of kids and grown-ups alike all the way back to Jim Crow: a monster with the body of a man, the head of an alligator—and a taste for Black children. That’s who crawled into Kirah’s window when Kirah was just five years old. According to the police, it was Kirah’s own father who put on that gator mask and tried to kill her.
Twenty years later, Kirah works hard to build a life unburdened by the traumatic events of her childhood. Just when it seems like she’s managed to find her stride, her dad, fresh out of prison, crashes back into her world with a chilling message: “He’s coming for you.”
Finally forced to face the hideous family history she’s been avoiding, Kirah sets off to discover where, and who, she truly came from. And the more she learns, the more disturbing the whole picture becomes. Turns out there’s a lot more to the Gatorman than Kirah thought, and even worse: he isn’t through with her just yet.
A clever hybrid of swamp noir, slasher horror, and social satire—and brought to life by Camilla Sucre’s vivid illustrations—Mama Came Callin’ is a story about family and legacies, both the ones we inherit and the ones we can’t escape.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Dwayne McDuffie award winner Daniels (Upgrade Soul) and debut artist Sucre delve into the hidden history of Florida bayou country in this satisfying brew of slasher and Southern gothic. Kirah, a young Black woman, works at the youth home where she grew up after surviving an attack by the Gator Man, a serial killer who has since passed into local legend. When the Gator Man resurfaces, Kirah's old wounds are reopened, not least because she's always believed the man behind the alligator mask was her estranged father. With the help of her colleague and friend Sedale and a Greek chorus of foster kids, Kirah sets out to solve the mystery once and for all. The mission takes the crew through swamps, to the bottom of a lake, and into the twisted history behind a local candy company. Along the way, they stir up old racial tensions and unresolved family traumas. Sucre's funky character designs and simple but atmospheric settings, with bursts of yellow cutting through eerie gray ink wash, set an appropriately off-kilter vibe. Fans of elevated horror will enjoy wading into this unpredictable swampland noir.