Miranda Keller has been sent to the Miskatonic Valley to investigate a series of killer bombings targeting the community's elite. She's convinced that radicals are to blame. But her partner, Tom Malone, a retired Brooklyn detective, sees connections to a supernatural event in his past that left him scarred and scared, leading the pair to an occult conspiracy that pits them against forces from beyond this world.
I really have no idea what to make of Miskatonic at this point. I get the larger design of it all and the general approach, but the flow of it is something that I feel like I'm swimming against in order to connect with it. Almost like I'm wrestling with the book to get on an even ground with it. I like the concept and characters and the artwork is great. And I love the weirdness factor as well. But something about it continues to be just jarring enough that I can't get into the groove of it. This issue pushes us forward ever more with all the key elements and I'm intrigued to be sure, but it also has me wary with each new issue now. Read Full Review
Miranda Keller and Tom Malone go to investigate bombings in Miskatonic Valley. One believes it to be the work of people. The other believes it to be something otherworldly. Who is right, and will they survive the investigation? Read Full Review
The main weakness of the comic is that it's too caught up in living in Lovecraft's world to try to tell a coherent story, and what we are left with is a dull, unimaginative mess. Read Full Review
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