WILL THE FETUS BE ABORTED? BY AND BY LORD, BY AND BY: I just got the second installment of Alphonse: “Murder Sleep.”

Alphonse is a horror comic about a fetus who survives abortion; he knows, and thinks, and hates. My review of the first issue is here.

The cover of this second installment tells the story. A broken doll sits in horrifying suspense in front of the inevitable revenge: a carving-knife. All my Pet Sematary terror-feelers started tinglin’.

Alphonse continues to complicate the categories of abortion-horror I talked about here. It’s baby-horror and grief-horror at once–almost as if both sides had a point!

The art is lumpensympathetic. The grays are used to suggest a world of complicity and fog and nightmare. There are some well-chosen, sharp echo images: The light gleams and breaks against the ice in a glass of scotch the way it breaks against the display window of a cell phone. The overall aesthetic is a wash of gray with sharp black character-defining lines coming out of the quicksand.

The actual storyline is hard for me. This is the second installment, thus we’re getting more pieces on the chessboard; and I guess I don’t care yet about the new pieces. There are suddenly mafiosi (yes, with heavy irony and a pet white cat, but still) and some kind of conspiracy plot. This seems more… comic-booky, and you know what I mean even if you want to be defensive… than the basic wrongful-birth plot. So far I’m okay with the comedy-horror of the conspiracists, but I wish we had more sympathy for them. The first issue of Alphonse was striking in large part because of its relentless focus on suffering and complicity: No one was exempt from its punishing storyline. This issue, again solely because the conspiracy tropes are hit so hard, seems to exempt its audience from some of its horror. Not all the horror, by any means–the pro-life girl and guy are still really messed-up, and their dialogue is well-balanced and gives a real sense of how people suddenly dropped into an impossible, perhaps miraculous but also horrifying, situation might respond. But this issue seemed to have “villains” in a way which the first one didn’t.

It’s impossible to talk about this comic without talking about abortion. I think the first installment was less-polarized than this one. Nonetheless I think this comic understands the terror of pregnancy and childbearing. So far, I’m not sure this comic will work–especially if it goes too far in the conspiracy direction, which is what soured me on Human Target, since I honestly think conspiracy stories are the opposite of complicity–you don’t do conspiracy stories unless you think no one would ever do bad if they knew they were wrong.

But so far, I’d strongly recommend Alphonse to every horror-comics fan who doesn’t immediately reject it based on the subject matter. That isn’t a criticism. The politics of abortion are intrinsic to the story. There are at least a hundred reasons you wouldn’t want to read a comic in which that was a plot element. So far, though, I–as a pro-life Cat’lick dyke, who has never been in danger of pregnancy in all her ramblin’ life–think this comic is presented without sentiment, with sympathy for those who support abortion rights, and with… it’s hard to tell because of the particular storyline… but with at least some sympathy for women who abort. I think if you can read Alphonse as a story about abortion it makes sense; I don’t know if it makes as much sense if you read it as a story of one woman’s abortion. But the narrative hints that we will learn much more about Alphonse’s unwilling mother, and if that happens, I think it will go a long way to addressing my uncertainty about this approach.

Highly recommended; despite my qualms, I have to admit that nobody else is doing this, and someone should be. If you read this blog, you may be the sort of person who wants to support Catholic arts! This is a great way to do so!


Browse Our Archives

Follow Us!